PLEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 65
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Friday, December 1, 1972
41 New Courses To Be Offered Spring Semester
See Story page 5
U.S. Plans Skyjacking Detectors
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Nixon administration is developing a plan to fold skyjackers by requiring enforcement of airport boarding gates for all flights.
The plan also would require all passengers to walk through weapons detectors before boarding. In addition, all carry-on luggage would be searched.
"We are working toward having a law enforcement officer present at each boarding gate from one-half hour before boarding through the boarding process on domestic flights, and one hour before on international departures." Transportation Secretary John A. Vole said in a telegram Thursday to Sen. Clifford P. Case, R.N.J.
THE GREATER MICHIGAN WOODWORKING EXPO 1974
At present, the FAA said, police are
needed at dormitory boarding rooms only if
needed to provide security.
A spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration said that several of the program were still being worked out.
On another feature of the plan, Volpe said, "Walk-through weapons detectors are being delivered to the airlines as fast as possible. The system has such devices at all boarding gates."
SUPER SCREWING
Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING
Current rules require the use of weapons detectors or frisking only when passengers fit a behavioral profile found to be common to most hijackers, the details of which are
He said that the administration could not support legislation to create a federal air transportation security force within the FAA.
Under the new plan, Vole said, "The airlines will be required to operate weapons."
The FAA spokesman said a special program was being prepared to provide local police with proper training for airport security. The Safety Institute in Oklahoma City.
He also said that plans for financing the program had not been completed. One of his partners was a lawyer.
Silversmith
Byron Sneegas is the director of silversmithing for the Kansas Free University. Sneegas said he had taught 167 people in two and a half years he has been with the
Free University. He described the class as a mind, hand and eye discipline which the student, as well as the teacher, could incorporate to achieve for themselves, in order to learn to carry them. It was motivated to carry on in silvertsmithing, it had all been worth it.
Rogers to Continue Duties
WASHINGTON (AP)—William P. Rogers will continue as secretary of state in President Nixon's second administration, but his top-level staff will be filled with new faces, the White House announced Thursday.
Ronald L. Ziegler, the President's press secretary, told reporters that Nixon would retain the 59-year-old Rogers in the interest of continuity in foreign policy.
Pressed on whether the decision to keep Rogers meant that the same relationship between the White House and the State Department in making foreign policy would be achieved by a good friend of Rogers is a good friend of the President. Their relationship is pretty well in place."
Henry A. Kissinger has been a dominant policymaker in foreign affairs and adviser to Nixon at the White House, particularly in the Vietnam peace talks. Rogers has played a role in building such a settlement in the Middle East and a national reduction of military forces in Europe.
Ziegler announced that Kenneth Rush, now deputy secretary of defense, would be
nominated to succeed John N. Irvin II to be
the President of the No 2 man at the State Department.
William J. Casey, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, will be nominated as undersecretary for economic affairs.
Gleger said that William J. Porter, a negotiator at the Paris peace talks, would be undersecretary of state for political affairs, succeeding the veteran U. Alexis
Sources said that Johnson, who is due to retire in about a year, might have been offered the job of ambassador to South Vietnam.
Johnson, who was offered a "major new assignment" in the international field.
Ziegler said Nixon had known Rush since his student days at law school. Rush is a former ULS. ambassador to West Germany and a professor of defense secretary Feb. 7, 1972. He was
Nixon, S. Viet Envoy Confer Unexpectedly
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon held an unexpected second meeting Thursday with South Vietnam special envoy Nguyen Phu Duc as signs increased that a climax is near on setting a final allied position on peace negotiations.
The meeting was held shortly after the Pentagon said the White House would make no more formal announcements on withdrawn of U.S. troops from South Vietnam.
Duc was ushered into the President's one hour meeting at 10 a.m. amd. afternoon, the South Vietnamese official left 35 minutes later. Shortly after, Nixon left for a long weekend in Florida.
White House spokesman Gerald Warren said the Thursday meeting with Duc, who is South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Xuan, said the situation is "very serious" to review the entire sipuation in Vietnam.
ALTHOUGH Warren said the second session had been scheduled some time ago
the White House said Wednesday the President would only see Duc once.
That statement was made following the President's 2½-hour meeting with Duc Wednesday afternoon and as the Saligon representative started another hour-and-48 minute session with presidential adviser Henry Klissinger.
Immediately after leaving the White House, Duc and his party arrived at the State Department and took part in a 90-day visit with Secretary of State William P. Rogers.
No official on either side would comment on any of the Thursday meetings. Warren declined to go beyond the White House's session in describing the second meeting.
PRESIDENTIAL press officer Ronald L.
Gleason of the American Journal of
medical and dental science session frank
and detailed in the paper.
The White House said that the 27,000 troop ceiling set for Dec. 1 had been reached and
These negotiations resume Monday in Paris with Kissinger's return to the French capital, where North Vietnamese negotiator Ho has been waiting since last Saturday.
South Viet Financiers Prepare for Cease-Fire
The Defense Department added that the end of formal announcements would give the United States added flexibility in negotiating with North Vietnam.
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The Pentagon added, however, that the Vietnamization program would continue, indicating some American forces would be involved. But although in necessarily small numbers,
acknowledged that it would not make the
country more stable had it in the past
accompanying future policies.
SAIGON (AP) -South Vietnamese government officials and business leaders are preparing detailed recommendations to the UN or economic crisis following a cease-fire.
Vietnamese planners said the motto of the top-level effort was "be prepared" for everything—and then hope that nothing happens.
"Our immediate objective is to maintain stability and maintain confidence," said on behalf of the group.
The planners have set up six committees whose names spell out the major postwar effort. (All committees are held in April.)
The planning is a joint effort of the Ministries of Economics, Finance and Planning and the National Bank, with about 800 members in various meetings and offering suggestions.
"After a cease-fire, the most crucial time is the first three months as far as finance and economics is concerned. If there is a downturn in those months, then confidence will build up."
The planners explained they were working under the assumption that they would never have to meet people's minds after a cease-fire announcement and possibly in the government
ment: stabilization, human resources mobilization, credit, monetary and banking problems, foreign trade, foreign aid and development and taxation and finance.
in the next few weeks each committee, composed of several government experts and two or three businessmen, will meet and consider research and position papers for their discussion documents. They will try to come up with recommendations to such problems as:
IN THE WAR zone North Vietnam's invasion of the South entered its ninth month Thursday with a much-diminished level of enemy presence. The North strikes the demilitarized zone.
—How do you combat strikes that could paralyze the country?
How do you prevent the drainage of partial government tax money to the enemy?
—What is the government policy going to be on foreign trade and foreign investment and should the currency remain at the same rate or be devalued?
—If there is panic, how do you cope with a run on banks?
The Seiag command reported 49 enemy-initiated incidents in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. Thursday and said this was a two-month low.
The planners have a month to finish their work and the government leaders have the authority to direct them.
While daily numbers fluctuate widely, reported enemy attacks have subsided by about one-fourth this fall and in the last two weeks have hovered around the 60s daily.
One reason officials gave for the decline was a shortage of ammunition. Some officials theorized the enemy commanders would be sending developments in the peace talks.
U. S. and South Vietnamese officials had claimed that North Vietnamese units were as much as 50 per cent under strength and also short of supplies.
An UNUSUALLY long wet season in the Ho Chi Minh trail area of southern Laos was said to have held up the southward flow of men and supplies. U.S. B2 bombers have been dropping north from North Vietnam to try and keep stockpiled material from reaching the trail network.
In Saigon, the U.S. Command announced that no Americans were reported killed in Iraq and Syria from any other causes. It was the first zerodata report since January 1965, when there were fewer than 24,000 U.S. troops in Iraq and America was just beginning its bulldown.
Center Treats Hurt Hands
The South Vietnamese command claimed
1,986 enemy soldiers were killed last week
and put government losses at 480 killed,
1,821 wounded and 166 missing.
Kansan Staff Writer
By MALCOLM TURNER
Karen Karosas, Lawrence Senior, severed a nerve and has no feeling in her right hand. Doctors say with treatment she may remain 85 per cent of the feeling.
"Fantastic," and "amazing" were among the adjectives that Karosas used to describe
Regent Post a Topic Of Women's Caucus
"There will probably be some discussion of the recommendation," said Eileen Gold, 1709 Louisiana St., who is a member of the council decided to back the recommendation. "I probably will send a letter to Gov. Dockery to urge the chapters of the caucus to do the same."
The policy council of the Kansas Women's Political Caucus will meet in Lawrence Saturday and is expected to discuss a recommendation that Karen Graves of Salina be appointed to a vacant Board of Regents position.
Graves was recommended last week by a bipartisan group of women. She was a delegate to the 1972 Republican National Convention where she took a leading role in the organization of the Kansas Republican Women's Caucus.
Regent Chairman Jess Stewart, Wanego, and Thursday he didn't know who the boss was considering for the position but said he would welcome a woman on the board.
the Hand Rehabilitation Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
A Republican must be appointed to be pillow left by the death of T. J. Griffith,manhattan in order to maintain the regents 54 split in between the two major political parties.
"Those guys are amazing." Karosas said. She was describing the care and treatment she received at the Hand Rehabilitation Center after she accidentally pushed her right hand through a plate glass window 16 weeks ago.
"A woman regent would be very acceptable to me," he said.
Spokesmen for Gov. Docking have said repeatedly that it was the governor's policy not to make any announcement before making an appointment.
When asked if female representation was needed on the board, she said that a woman can be very helpful.
"A won-or-wr could certainly add an insight
element of consideration that a man could
understand."
Stewart's own term as a regent expires in late December, as does Paul Wunsch's of Kingman. He said that he had not yet decided whether he would like to continue.
“If and when the governor makes his decision, I imagine he will notify me of his wishes,” he said. “I will make my decision then.”
Stewart said his family would be his main concern when he did make up his mind.
"I have a very young family and the job I
have time consuming and heavy work that fat-
taste requires me to be said."
Wunsch said Thursday that he had no comment on the possibility of accepting a deal.
Although the center began operation last May, it was officially dedicated earlier this week. The center has treated many such cases with 'temporary' along with many more difficult ones.
The dynamic hand splint was developed by Ketchum while he was a surgeon in the Navy. He said the idea came after seeing stiffness of stiffness in hands after injuries.
THE PURPOSE OF the hand center according to Dr. Lynn D. Ketchum, associate professor of surgery and director of the center, is to "advance medicine." But the center year-old plastic surgeon said, the center was to motivate people to use their hands.
Ketchum, who started residence at the Medical Center in 1968, has been instrumental in the development of the program and has developed a machine which he calls an "electric dynamic hand salut."
One way to do this, Ketchum said, is by creating an atmosphere to bring people
"During this period of time I saw hands get stiff and decided this was very important to prevent once it had developed," Ketchum said.
THE SPLINT IS a device in which the hand and forearm is placed. Once secure, the tips of the fingers are glued to wires that flex the fingers automatically. The machine runs continuously and completes three cycles every minute.
Other instruments that are used in the center range from the complex to the
simple ones. Of the more sophisticated machines is the Electromograph (EMG). The EMG measures two things for doctors, production velocity and nerve impairment.
One of the simpler machines and considered antiquated to modern standards is a hand printing press. Although it is old, it offers good exercise for people with hand disabilities, according to the center's staff. Every piece of the center's $15,000 worth of equipment is there to aid people with hand disabilities.
THE HAND CENTER is staffed by three surgeons, including Dr. Ketchum, four resident doctors, one occupational therapist, one hand rehabilitation therapist and two bio-technicians who develop, improve and maintain equipment.
The center averages seven or eight patients a day, Dr. Ketchum said. An average patient, he said, completes three sessions a week at the center. The time a patient spends in the lab depends on the problem. Sessions are usually short.
LE. Ketchum said the center treated a variety of cases, but he estimated two out of 10 patients were suffering from arthritis. The effectiveness of the hand center has proven itself over the last six months, Ketchum said.
THE CENTER is successful. This was demonstrated by an insurance company survey that found $100,000 in expenses could be saved by the center, Ketuchan hand rehabilitation center.
In order to know just how effective this program is at the Medical Center, Ketcham said they were studying the possibilities of a two-step computerization process that would be a profile of a patient. Through this system, he said, the aim of treatment to determine types of approaches for treatment of hand injuries.
T. H. D.
Kansan Photo by MALCOLM TURNEP
Dr. Ketchum Adjusts the 'Dynamic Hand Splint'
... The splint is used at the Hand Rehabilitation Center ...
2
Friday. December 1. 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By the Associated Press Dole to Resign
KUResidenceHallOptionsDecided
TOPEKA-Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said Thursday he planned to resign as national Republican chairman but he hadn't decided when. In a telephone interview with Topeka radio station WREN, Dole said from August 1984 that he would Tuesday with President Nixon and told the President he had no interest in a possible cabinet post. Dole said his only interest was in seeking re-election in 1974, and the President "wants me to win." The senator said Nixon asked him to "take a hard look at the Republican National Committee" and recommendations with the President in a couple of weeks. "I didn't intend to continue with the charismatch if it interfered with my Senate duties," Dole said. "This is especially true in the next two years with the extra effort I will have to make for re-election. So I guess it should be done by the president should leave the chairmanship. That hasn't been decided yet."
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas Administrative Housing Committee (AHC) accepted an all-women option. We allow Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall to reserve one wing for sophomore women. The remaining wings of GSP Hall and all of the women's retain the all-fashioned, all-women option.
William Balfour, vice cchancellor for student affairs and AHC member, said that although the option had been stipulated that GSP and Corbin be made freshman-sophomore women hallors, a night with the option should be held for winters to wind to be reserved for sophomore women.
The decisions on all of the residence hall option proposals were made by the AHC after two days of meetings with the Contract Coordinating Committee.
The options for Ellsworth Hall will remain the same as the current options. According to Bailour, the committee would be allowed to take over of the year the ball coed for the 1973-74 school.
Hall remains the same as originally planned. The option provides for a limitation of freshmen to 20 per cent of total student enrollment, and the third bird of Haskinier residents are freshmen.
THE CONTRACT option for Hashinger
McColum Hall will be closed to freshmen and an international student center may be
According to Fred McEhlenean, assistant dean of men and adviser to the Contract Coordinating Committee, the addition of an international student center to McColm Hall would require more discussion and thought throughout the remainder of the school year.
The guest hours for Oliver Hall have been liberalized. Open hours for Oliver will be from 4 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. The original contract option provided 24-hour guest hours on weekends.
LEWIS, TEMPLIN AND Joseph R.
LEWIS, TEMPLIN and will all retain their current contract options.
Lewis is an all-women, all-class hall,
providing special senior and quiet wings.
DUBLIN-Prime Minister Jack Lynch's government Thursday flung an ultimatum at its divided opposition: vote for tougher action against the rocket of Washingtoi Irish army or faced the people in national elections. The leader of the provisional, Sean MacStifoin, jailed and weakened by 12 days of fasting, meanwhile appealed to the Irish people to take to the Army or support his plan. Ireland had its greatest days in kicks Thursday.
Military Justice
WASHINGTON - A bi-racial Pentagon task force Thursday supported charges by blacks of discrimination in the administration of military justice. The panel also recommended charges to deride and recruit of more offenders and recruitment of more black lawyers. The panel recommended that the system of selecting military jurors by commanding officers be revised to eliminate possible errors in jury selection. More than 100 recommendations were proposed by the military-civilian panel for dampening racial strife.
Irish Ultimatum
Flames Kill 9
ATLANTA—Nine persons died and 32 were injured when fire broke out during the early morning hours Thursday at a newly built home for the elderly here. Panic, sleepiness and a dark, smoke-filled hallway were among the factors that caused the building to collapse. The stumbled over bodies as they groped through the pitch-black, smoky hall. One body was found in an elevator stalled on the seventh floor.
Senates Quickly Adopt Revisions to '70 Code
In two quick sessions Thursday both the University Senate and the Faculty Senate met separately to complete adoption adoptions of revisions in the 1970 Senate Code
The University Senate adopted three revisions to the code in its 10-minute session while the Faculty Senate adopted three amendments in a slightly longer session of 15 minutes. There were no dissenting votes in either senate on the revisions.
The Faculty Senate became the third university governing group to adopt the mail ballot. The mail ballot may be used in lieu of a majority of Faculty Senate members.
The All-University Senate and the University Senate (Lawrence campus) already had decided to use the mail ballot requested by one-third of the members.
Another adopted amendment provided for the Faculty Council to meet in April and September, with the majority of the membership to constitute a quorum. Previously two-thirds of the membership constituted a quorum.
The final amendment to be adopted provided for representation on standing committees of the Faculty Senate for women and members of minority groups.
The University Senate also passed an amendments and a motion of women and members of minority groups to standing committee of the University Senate and the University Senate.
The University Senate approved procedures for amending the new Senate constitution, and passed a copy of the University Senates of both Lawrence and Kansas City campuses, may
amend sections of the new code, which
presents to the University Senate, by
partying with the faculty.
The University Senate (Kansas City campus), the Faculty Senate and the Student Senate (Lawrence Campus) may vote when it pertains specifically to their own matters.
Robert Fried, professor of physics and astronomy and a member of the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), reported to the University Senate about the progress of SenEx on the Affirmative Action proposal. He said SenEx was going through the AfA committee action comma by comma before subheading of mendation for changes to the Cannelier:
Friedau said SenEx had received 10 to 12 written recommendations pertaining to changes in the Affirmative Action plan from groups such as the American Association of Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee of the Faculty Senate.
Friedau said the SenEx recommendations were now being typed and would be sent to the Chancellor within one week. The Council of Deans also reviewed the proposed Affirmative Action plan and sent a statement to the chancellor,
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Wednesday that after he received the recommendation from SenEx, he would nominate affirmative Action Board for consideration.
Friait said that after the Chancellor had approved the Affirmative Action plan for KU the plan would have to be approved by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The plan will then be subject to amendment.
KANSAS
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
The superb sound of this group will win your fancy!
The Red Baron
804 W. 24th 842-4366
P.S. Don't forget to snatch up your Finnigan and Wood tickets while they last! At Kief's and the Red Baron, now!
★
KANSAS
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
The superb sound of this group will win your fancy!
The Red Baron
804 W. 24th 842-4366
P.S. Don't forget to snatch up your Finnigan and Wood tickets while they last! At Kief's and the Red Baron, now!
Now Open: BODY BIZARRE
featuring
Biodegradable—Organic products
Protein & Herbal Shampoos
Bubble Baths & Bath Oils
27 Glycerin & Castile Soaps
Vegetable Sponges
48 Essential Oils
Creams & Lotions
Massage Oils Lip Balm
BODY BIZARRE
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E
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featuring
Biodegradable—Organic products
Protein & Herbal Shampoos
Bubble Baths & Bath Oils
27 Glycerin & Castile Soaps
Vegetable Sponges
48 Essential Oils
Creams & Lotions
Massage Oils Lip Balm
BODY BIZARRE
19 W. 9th 842-5056
Fire Damages Lawrence Home
Fire devastated a one-room house at 218 West Second Avenue, no. Thursday, according to the lawyer.
JRP is an all-men, all-class hall
Escoute to the house, rented by T. Emsale, manager of Rose Keyboard Studio, animated by firemen to be $4,500. The girls are Mrs. Ia F. Rogers, 2132 Learned St.
The AHC will immediately begin writing the residence hall contracts, said McEilenhe. He said the contracts should be available by Jan. 1.
McEthanie said the committee's discussion about the contract rules and regulations resulted in no major changes.
It was suggested, however, that a handbook be printed for hall residents to help explain the rules and regulations included in the hall contracts, McElhene said.
The special options for Templin include the remodeling of rooms to form two-room rooms, remodeling of the cafeteria and lounge, and the addition of special study rooms.
Templin will remain an all-male, all-class hall. Although representatives from Templin were present at the meeting to discuss special options for the hall, these options will not actually appear in the contract, according to McEllenie.
Damage to the contents of the house, including furniture and musical equipment, was estimated at $4,750.
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
PIONEER
The Malls Shopping Center
9
C
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GRATEFUL DEAD
Europe '72
3 Record Set retail $9^98
Warner Bros.
KIEF'S Price $488
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Warner Bros. Req. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95 Off
Earn $100 a month and a Marine Corps commission through the Platoon Leaders Class.
Eligible college men
ASK THE MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION TEAM IF YOU QUALIFY FOR ONE OF THE PROGRAMS THE MARINE CORPS HAS TO OFFER, THEY WILL BE LOCATED ON YOUR CAMPUS IN THE MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING ON THE 4TH OF DECEMBER 1972 FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
can earn $100 a month
each month of the
regular school year. It's
chance to learn to fly
like a $900 annual
The PLC also offers a
few good men the
free. The Corps pays
scholarship.
the entire cost of
civilian flight instruction . . worth about $800.
All PLC leadership training takes place during the summer when it can't interfere with your college career Upon graduation PLC members are commissioned Second Lieutenants.
海马
The Marines are looking for a few good men.
HOB HOB HOB
Women's Boots
Sbicca & Imports
NOW $15 & $20
Regular price to $35
Women's Sport Shoes
Cannie & Moxees
NOW $8
Were to $18
Men's Shoes
& Sport Boots
Dexter & Bass
NOW $15
Entire Stock Included
Were to $27
sale
Eight West Ninth
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1, 1972
3
house,
ment,
Kansan Photo by MALCOLM TURNER
George Livingston Volunteers Time to Headquarters Incorporated . Money from United Funds may pay for a full-time administrator .
Headquarters Seeks Co-Director
By STEVE SEIBEL
Kansan Staff Writer
Headquarters Inc. might be using funds granted by the United Fund to hire another full-time paid administrator, according to a study by students at a student and director of Headquarters.
"Right now we're seeking the funds to hire another person to share the administrator's responsibility," Silber said recently.
Headquarters, which rents a two-story frame house at 1632 Kentucky St., is open 24 hours a day to anyone needing help with a problem or a place to stay for the night.
Siber, the only full-time paid member of the Headquarters staff, said the group has received a grant from the United Fund. Silber this grant from the United Fund would be approximately a third of next year's budget and was the first outside help Headquarters
HE SAID THE extra full-time employee would share his responsibilities as director. According to Silber, the new employee might be in charge of soliciting support from the community and might supervise the training of new helpers.
Although Headquarters has always been funded by donations from people in the Lawrence community, Silber said he an-
gled the University to establish the University of Kansas Student Senate.
He said that the outside help would be needed since Headquarters' budget had risen from $14,000 to $24,000 in the past year. The number of calls received by Headquarters has tripled and the number of helpers doubled.
George Livingston, Plainville graduate
student and volunteer counselor at
Heardquarters, said that of the
three students, two were UWU faculty.
"I would estimate that about 80 per cent of our help is from KU, but lately there has been an increase in older people helping here," Livingston said.
He said that it was surprising how many older people were calling in for help now, but he wasn't sure if they were really there.
LIVINGSTON SAID he thought Headquarters was receiving more calls because more people knew about them now than when it was first started.
Silber also said Headquarters worked in personal crisis aid. He said a personal crisis might be a personal problem, an institutional problem or a social problem. He said that Headquarters also tried to treat depression or anxiety, "such as depression or anxiety."
ONE PROJECT IN which Headquarters is currently involved is the drug analysis program. Individuals in this program samples of drugs for quantification analysis. He emphasized that Headquarters usually did not try to determine what type of drug was present and had bad effect it might have on the individual.
Silber said that about 100 people a month contacted Headquarters for drug information. In addition, Headquarters provide drug crisis aid for individuals on a bad trip or overdose, he said. Silber said that Headquarters averaged about two to
three people a night looking for a place to stay overnight.
Silber said that 60 people had already gone through a 50-hour training program to become helpers at Headquarters, and about 50 others were working on different tasks. For the community, 25 people from the community were serving as consultants and directors, he said.
Headquarters is currently looking for more helpers to be trained over the midsemester break. Silber said that during the next two or three weeks he would interview anyone who might be interested in helping at Headquarters.
SILBER SAID THAT most of the helpers worked about five to ten hours a week.
Health Post Nominations Due Today
Today is the deadline for nominations for a new director of Student Health Services, James Rosser, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and chairman of the health director search committee, said Thursday.
Rosser said that more than 20 nominations already had been received.
The search committee was formed in October after Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, president of the board, past seven years, announced his plans to retire this June. Rosser said that letters announcing the vacancy and minimum requirements for applicants were sent out on Friday.
A subcommittee headed by Dr. James Campbell, Watkins physician, was established to survey present staff members of the Student Health Services to determine qualities and characteristics of a good health director.
The information compiled by Dr. Campbell was presented at a meeting of the health director search committee Thursday night. Rosser said.
"The survey," he said, "gave us some insight into areas we had not yet discussed in determining criteria for the new health director."
The survey will be used to set up a
searching and choosing
candidates for the post.
Rosser said that the search committee would meet again next week to finalize an evaluation system and to set up a schedule for preliminary screening of applicants.
Large Selection of
Christmas Gifts
for the Whole Family
We Wrap for Mailing
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Formerly Eirling's
Open Night Starting May 30
Luber GIFT SHOP
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Formerly Friars
Bank Americard
the Bootlegger
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We Honor Master Charge
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Open 10-9 Mon-Sat.
Dunhams—
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Almost a must for those cold, snowy winter days. In waxy leather or brushed buck. For both gals and guys. Give a pair a walking chance.
Royal College Shop
For a keep warm from summers street
JAYHAWKER TOWERS
KU
APARTMENTS
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APARTMENTS
xxxxxxxxxx
1603 West 15th
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING SEMESTER
All offices paid Auto parking included
All Utilities paid
APARTMENTS
Surrounded by the
K.U. Campus
300
2 Bedroom Apartments
Not more than 5 minutes walking anywhere.
Tenant Storage Rooms on each Floor
Incinerator dump on each floor
Modern kitchen with disposal Luxurious carpet on all floors
Your own thermostat for heat and air conditioner
Heated swimming pool
Tenant, Storage, D
Two elevators in each building
All-Brick walls and steel reinforced floors for fire protection and quiet
Complete laundry in each building
Outside exposure for each 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
THAI ASSOCIATION
presents
"THAI NIGHT"
On December 2,1972
6:00-9:00 p.m.
AT WESTMINSTER CENTER 1204 OREAD AVENUE
THAI FOOD will be served with various kinds of entertainments. Special highlights of the evening are:
—Sword play
— Classical and folk dances
Movie
TICKETS $2.50 PER PERSON
AN OPEN LETTER TO KU STUDENTS
meadowbrook
President's Office, Meadowbrook
13 & Crestline, Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Dear Students,
THANK YOU. Thanks not only for being such great people, but also for leading Meadowbrook, a fine reputation on "The Hill."
To express our appreciation, we host a special open house for you this Sunday (Dec. 3) from 1 to 5 p.m. We'll have a studio, one-bedroom and two-bedroom apartments on display. PLUS -
- FREE REFRESHMENTS
- ART AND CRAFT EXHIBITS IN EACH DISPLAY APARTMENT AND
- $25 OFF THE FIRST MONTH'S RENT TO OUR FIRST FIVE
NEW RENTERS
To find the display apartments, turn west on 15th Street and follow our signs.
We like KU students, so some out this Sunday,
visit the library and we say, "Living in the best
costs little more."
Bob
Cordially,
Bob
Robert L. Pickering
President
Commonwealth Theatres
NOW SHOWING
One of the biggest and brightest surprises of the movie year is Diana Ross.
-Brice Williams-
Playboy
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
Eve 7:15 & 9:45
Granada
TALKING...BIG...AUTHORITY
"BOOT HILL"
THE TRINITY BOYS
ARE BACK!
Weekday - 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Sat. Sun - 3:00, 4:50, 7:30
& 9:30
Varsity
BRAIN ... Tiegemann 1965
Fri. Sat. Sun. Only! "CHILDREN"
PLAY WITH DEAD THUNKS
Plus - Two Bonus Shockers
Show starts at 7:30
Sunset
BRAIN ... Worthington 1989
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1045
@
Roman Polanski's
MOVIE INFORMATION
MACBETH
图象
FREDERICK KING, ALEXANDER LISCHER
BAD COMPANY
Eve 7:30 & 9:20
'BAD COMPANY'
IS GOOD COMPANY.
GO SEE IT!"
842-4000
—Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News
"Shakespeare translated the way he would have liked it to the Roman Poliski in his novel 'Aeneid'.
Eve 7:10 & 9:40 / Adult 1.50
Mat. Sat.-Sun. 1:45 & 4:10
Hillcrest3
NOW! Hillcrest Ends
Tues.
GEORGE C SCOTT IN
"RAGE" PO
!
It was their mistake, but his son!
Eve 7:30 & 9:20 / Adult 1.50 Child .75
Matinee Sat. Sun. 1:25 & 4:00
The Hillcrest
NOW!
THE Hillcrest
Ends
Tues.
THE HILLCREST
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
Night at 12:15 Adults 1.50—No Refunds—
No One Under 18 yrs. Admitted Proof of Age Required
IT'S TIME TO RELAX (?) AT OUR
PLAYBOYS DELIGHT!
No Outside Beverages Allowed
The EROTIC ADVENTURES of
ZORRO
4
Friday, December 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Wallace in GOP?
Hints are coming from George Wallace's staff that the governor might consider a switch to the GOP before the 1976 elections.
If Wallace did make such a change, the American political picture would be altered significantly. A Wallace-led Democratic party is almost beyond the realm of political possibility. Even in an effort to regain the center ground apparently lost in this year's election, it is inconceivable that the Democrats would enough to the right to please Wallace or to make Wallace palatable to the majority of Democrats. If Wallace does remain in the party, though, he could influence the party platform.
It is possible that Wallace, too, realizes the improbability of such a case. The president of Nixon have moved closer to Wallace than most people would have
believed. A Wallace move to the GOP, then, would bring the governor closer to his natural political territory. And it is also possible that he decided that a third-party victory is another political impossibility.
The American voter, however,
doesn't think or vote along conserve
issue or be concerned. He votes
in favor of the candidates—as the last election should prove.
A Republican party boasting Wallace and Spiro Agnew couldn't help but move further to the right. This may lead to a stance of the two conservatives in Washington, conservative and liberal parties, as they are in the British system.
A Wallace move to the GOP could only further cloud the already unclear prospects for the 1976 elections.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
Concern for the Aged
Whenever Social Security benefits were increased in the past, landlords took advantage of the good event by raising rents. The most recent increase in Social Security benefits for retired persons was a substantial 20 per cent, and it looks this time as if the elderly will be able to keep it. The Internal Revenue Service initiated a national rent watch to prevent landlords from taking the extra money Congress placed in the budget on the elderly, a permanent spokesman says that this rent watch has prevented many rent increases and has caught many landlords who were not intimidated by the government's new interest in the elderly.
There has been evidence of a recently awakened sensitivity to the problems of the old. An increase in the number of magazine and newspaper articles about the elderly and their problems, conferences sponsored by the government and new legislation testify to a growing recognition of the old in this country. The phrase "a youth-centered culture" is a cliche that has been used to describe American culture and society. That may be true. Living in a community such as
Lawrence probably makes it seem more accurate than it actually is. But this society does consist of more than the young.
This awakening seems so sudden that I have often wondered why it happened. Perhaps the middle-aged group, which had a large percentage of the political and financial power in this country, decided to make a few provisions for its old age than its parents or grandparents did. A more noble explanation would be a growing awareness of the respect that all people deserve and a sincere concern for everyone's well-being. It could be that death, which is so much closer to the old, is no longer as frightening as it once was. Therefore, old age is no longer a stage of life that should be ignored until it happens.
Whatever the reasons, perhaps this national concern for the nation's elderly will give those people a better chance to enjoy life. A country that boasts of its affluence, its high standard of living and the longevity of its citizens has a shallow boast when one-fourth of its elderly citizen lives in what the government considers poverty.
Mary Ward
Garry Wills
Capital Punishment Rejected
My favorite conservative, a Dr. Samuel Johnson, was a “bleeding-heart” liberal on the matter of slavery. He would be put the whole matter in one grave, a sorene sentence, “Past times give us little reason to hope that any reformation will be effective in medical haze of our fellow beings.”
That puts the emphasis where it belong—on those who, periodically, indulge the mood for this havoc, quite apart from the doctor. George Gallup, finds our nation entertaining one of those moods again. Support for capital punishment has risen in the last six years from a minority to a majority (2 per cent).
But what of its effect on others, the so-called "deterrent" argument? Dr. Johnson sensed and modern studies confirm—can he get unequivocal proof that the death sentence actually deters.
In terms of effect, the death penalty does get rid of a public menace. But it also has the drawback of allowing for no possibility that the menace will turn into a decorous citizen, will reform. It also leaves no room for abuse and inscrutinion conviction process. As a means of sequestering a menace, the method has severe drawbacks.
"The gibbet certainly disables those who die upon it from infesting the community, Johnson
said, but their death seems not to contribute more to the reformation of their associates than any other method of separation."
Most violent crimes—rape, murder, beatings—are not premeditated. They are done on the spur of the moment, with evidence that is available. Evidence supports the view that weapons control would reduce their incidence more than executions could. Yet public approval for state execration rises just when thoughtless violence occurs, and that the animating emotion is vindictive, not self-protective.
Even Dr. Ernest Van den Haag, one of capital punishment admits that studies conflict on the determent effect of the death penalty. He says no hard case can justify an on any curvature of that effect.
But he makes an argument oddly publicized without criticism by a man who prides himself on his character. Buckley, Jr. Dr. Van den Haag acts from the 50-50 probability that capital punishment will (or will not) deter. Even that is a convincing estimate, but gift it to him.
Then he argues that if the sentence deters, one guilty man's death will save the lives of all men. The other possibility is worth the risk, he then argues, of a failure to deter. Given the choice, wouldn't you
take the chance of life for several innocents as opposed to any one guilty man's life in tail'
The flaw in this argument is that it focuses on numbers and the question of guilt. Assuming the criminal dies, there is a chance (whether an equal chance I won't argue for the moment) that the real issue may serve life. But the real issue is that assumption, and is skipped over to reach the professor's more tractable points.
The real issue is not the numbers of people involved or their (relative) guilt. There is a qualitative difference between the deaths being compared. They are not comparable in numeric terms because they are not the same kinds of things.
The murders to be prevented are purely hypothetical. We don't know whether or why they will commit these crimes, but we are real and immediate, and our own
act. Dr. Van den Hang asks us to support a real death on the grounds that once it occurs it may prevent one or more deaths we are not sure of at all. But the no justification for committing such an act is the fair certain that most actuaries act hypothetically) have will otherwise wise. Dr. Van den Hang's game of state-endorsed Russian roulette does not reflect this moral dimension of the problem.
(C) 1972, Universal Press Syndicate
WEST
GERMANY
DETENTE
White House Ties Aid Ad Firm
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON--Since the Los Angeles managers of the giant J. Walter Thompson advertising agency went to work in the White House, the agency has increased several accounts dramatically.
It may be merely a coincidence that President Nixon drew three from his top aides from the White House, staff, H. R. Haledman, formerly
Four years ago, the Thompson firm's federal business was "made available to provide "counsel, advice and assistance" to the Marines. This year, the company should collect information from the federal government.
merchandized 7-Up as the "Uno-
cola." Appointments secretor
Dwight Chapin made his mark
hawking bug killer and floor wax.
And press secretary Ronald Ziegler
started as a Diana Island guide
handled the Diana Island
account for the Thompson
agency.
A number of J. Walter Thompson executives took time off to work for the Nixon campaign both in 1968 and 1972. Most were working on the new federal accounts. A few stayed in government.
The ACTION agency, for example, has three ex-Thompson hucksters, Ronald Gerevas, who heads the public affairs branch;
Nissen Davis, who oversees "special projects"; and Robert Druckenmiller, who is in charge of the advertising branch.
At the Interior Department,
Pamela Coe, a young advertising
expert from J. Walter Thompson's New York office, is now advising Interior Secretary Rogers Morton R.
There's no evidence of improper intervention by these people to get contracts for their former firm. More likely, they would favor favored J. Walter Thompson in hope of impressing the powerful
Thompson trio in the White House.
The Food and Drug Administration, for instance, recently awarded the Thompson agency a contract that should be worth about a half-million dollars. The circumstances were curious if not downright suspicious.
But this season, the FDA bigwigs waited until late August.
James J. Kilpatrick
then asked 13 "qualified sources" to bid for the job. Five companies responded and J. Walter was awarded the contract for $137,600.
Federal procurement regulations require civilian agencies to advertise for bids, or at least make a prompt, official announcement of an award on all deals exceeding $5,000.
WASHINGTON—NBC's "Today" show has been exploring the state of the nation's press, with a well-balanced and articulate panel kicking the topic around. Such discussions sedum get anywhere, but they serve a purpose if you know early morning viewers, back home in kitchens, to think for a while on the great issue.
The Press Is Free Enough
Jefferson set forth this concept superbly in the Declaration of Independence. No one has ever said it better. A free people, he rights; and to "secure these rights," governments are instituted among men." But the founding fathers recognized that government itself, if it were not protected by laws, hence the Constitution. Hence the Bill of Rights. Out of these concepts and guarantees and safeguards flows the continuing self-examination that all citizens must guests this week. What of our rights? Are they secure?
The great issue, of course, is the preservation of a free society. That is what答案 is supposed to distinguish feature of our political system, making it different from all the rest, lies in our concept of the proper relationship between the people and their government
The answer, as far as the press is concerned, is yes. Never in our history have the people known a word like "library" or "ideas were more accessible or more freely expressed. Two factors, apart from nearly universal literacy, account for the need to use technology and channel information.
press does not have. One is the obligation to be fair. On the whole, for all the moaning and groaning that one hears, I am sure that there has been free speech that has been remarkably secure.
PETER S. MURRAY
The phenomenal changes in technology have been accompanied by equally dramatic changes in their presence. There is a tendency among my colleagues, most of them gloomy fellows by nature, to dwell excessively on a few matters of law they don't like—the Pentagon shootings and the suspector of censorship by prior restraint, and the recent ripple of cases involving the prosecution of reporters for refusal to identify their sources. These are serious problems that ought to be kept in perspective.
James J. Kilpatrick
The changing law of libel has freed a whole generation of scientists to use its inhibitions once felt in the cover of books and figures. The changing law on libel.
Viewing the law as a whole, as it affects a free press, one sees a far more encouraging picture.
The great change in technology, of course, is television, a medium of communication. It has never dreamed of it. It is that TV occupies a peculiar position under the First Amendment—not women's child but his step-child. It restricts law at the written
obscenity has freed a generation of writers for the expression of ideas, ideas that many persons find distasteful and shocking.
But if we of the press enjoy greater freedom than ever, the complaint still is heard that we are not absolutely free. Of course not. An absolutely free press, a print that is free to print, never has existed and ought not to exist. The same Constitution that guarantees a free press also authorizes prosecution for violation of copyright laws. The First Amendment offers no protection to the publisher or broadcaster who maliciously destroys a person's property or right to speech gives no more a right to expand his views by sound truck at 3 o'clock in the morning.
ideas that could not have been expressed just 20 years ago.
There has to be a balancing. In the Farr case in Los Angeles, the press to print has to be balanced to balance the courts to preserve a fair trial.
Such conflicts are an incapable part of the tensions of a free society. We resolve them as best we can, then move along.
Come the menum, perhaps, all the people's freedoms will be perfectly in balance. No such menum is in sight. But one looks back to the time of John Adams, or to the more recent leaders of the United States, old clam-schatter, and this much is clear: In terms of First Amendment freedoms, our free people have come a long way.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Newsroom—UN 4-4810
Business Office—UN 4-4358
America's Pacemaking college newspaper
NEWS STAFF
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year started holidays and festivals; no prior publication is required for publication. The acceptance rate for all students without regard to age, sex or national origin (Icelandic, Japanese, Filipino, Korean, Greek, Vietnamese, Italian, Spanish) is 98%. A transcript must be submitted in accordance with the instructions.
There was no such announcement of the J. Walter Thompson contract, as FDA admits it could lead to "unique and compelling" circumstances made it necessary to rush the deal. In other words, they wanted to get the toy safety team in time for the Christmas rush.
Editor News Adrder .. Sunanze Shaw
BUSINESS STAFF
Editor ... Scott Spreeter
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A
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Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should include a signature. Letters must be submitted in accordance to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and contact information.
TRUE TO HIS NATURE THE MYTHICAL PHOENIX MUST MOUNT THE BURNING PYRE!
Griff and the Unicorn
火
By Sokoloff
HOLD IT, MAC!
YOU GOT A PERMIT
FOR THIS FIRE?
HOLD IT, MAC!
YOU GOT A PERMIT
FOR THIS FIRE?
"PERMIT"? I DON'T
NEED ANY PERMIT!
I AM THE LEGENDARY
PHOENIX!!
RIGHT. AND I'M
HENRY KISSINGER
"PERMIT?" I DON'T NEED ANY PERMIT!
I AM THE LEGENDARY PHOENIX!!
RIGHT. AND I'M
HENRY KISSINGER
SOROLOFF
Universal Press Syndicate 197
4
For their $137,600, the tax-
payers will get a 14-minute color
starring baseball pitcher
Tom Seaver and actor Arnold
Stang; four television com
mercials; six radio com
mercials; four magazine
kitaining printed matter,
photographs and a slide show.
The FDA failed to note, however, that the "compelling" circumstances were created by its own tardiness. Christmas, after all, comes at the same time every year.
We contacted a production company experienced in government work to find out whether the price was right. The company, after studying the data, decided to produce the same package for $5,000—less than one-third what Thompson will get.
The Thompson contract, furthermore, contains some hidden benefits. Not only will the firm offer a wide range of services but it also won the rights to do two other public service advertising campaigns for FDA. The fees will be negotiated later, but insurers and the contract to approach $500,000.
The Marine Corps, meanwhile, has also increased its payments to J. Walter Thompson. After the retirement of former White House, the Marines jacked up their contract with the advertising agency from $160,000 to $270,000. In fiscal year 1972, it hit $800,000. In addition, they have budgeted a whopping $3 million for the Thompson firm. The J. Walter Thompson agency, in response to our requests, gave us a written statement.
"The estimate of $3.5 million in government business," said the statement, "amounts to only four-fifths one per cent of the agency's estimated worldwide billings" in 1927.
The agency stressed that it had "engaged in open, competitive battle over the years" and that, in addition to the successful Marine Corps and FDA buds, it had lost a $25-million post service contract.
Other advertising agencies, the statement claimed, had a higher volume of federal business.
Copyright, 1972.
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
s to the it this the ingently ger-g's theian his form.
Friday, December 1. 1972 - 5
41 New Courses Planned for Spring
By MYLA STARR
Kansan Staff Writer
University Daily Kansan
Students interested in oceanography, popular music or the impact of technology on the future will be able to take courses on these subjects the spring semester.
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Forty-one new course listings,
representations and internships, have
been offered by the Office of
Among courses that will be offered for the first time in the spring are two American studies courses: AMS 188, the History of American Literature; and AMS 187, American Novels as Social History.
American studies 186, a survey of American tastes in popular music, will approach popular music as a key to the cultural development. The class will be limited to 25 students.
THE SECOND NEW American studies course is a review of various American novels with an emphasis on their reflection of the historical period in which they were written. Enrollment in AM S 186 will also be limited to 25 students.
The humanities department will expand its offerings by four courses this spring, including
The first of the new humanities courses, Dante's Divine Comedy (HUM 55), will focus on Dante's vision of man finding peace in a corrupt world.
The student taking humanities 100, Humanism, Technology and the Future, will investigate the impact of technological advances on human values. The possible impact of technology
A SECOND HUMANITIES 100 course to be offered in the spring is Images of Women in the Humanities. Instructors from different departments will teach the course and will examine the role of women in art, literature from ancient to modern times.
A charter flight to London is tentatively planned as part of the new humanities 150 program.
on the future will also be explored through science fiction.
For two and a half years Byron Sneegas has spent more than 10 hours a week and has contributed about $300 for a class which is not accredited and for which there is no pay. He teaches a silversmithing class for the Kansas Free University.
By PAUL HUI Kansan Staff Writer
Sneegas, 50, works as a machinist for the University of Kansas and doesn't have any illustrious teaching credentials; he doesn't hold a college degree. He is not even a math student by strict definition of the term, according to Carlyle H. Smith, professor of desim.
Without sanction from the University's silversmith department or any other formal recognition, Sneegas teaches the class purely for the fun of it.
Machinist-Silversmith Pays to Teach Class
Students are not required to pay any fees.
Having an interest in silversmithing was enough to warrant oneself a place in the class, Sneesas said.
Sneegas said devotion and previous experiences were his only qualifications. He said that he had been interested in silversmithing since his junior high school days and had been a free-lance silversmith for many years.
SNEGESAID he had taught 167 people during the two-and-one-half year period. They have produced about 600 pieces of art work.
Student ages vary from 11 to 70, with the students in the college age bracket. Sweeps age
Because students have indicated to him, Sneegas said, that they would like to learn silversmithing as a hobby the silver-making is approached as a hobby craft class.
"We only request that they bring themselves and their materials to class and from there we structure whatever they have in mind." he said.
A field trip to the church of St. Mary Aldermanbury, built in London in the 17th century and reconstructed in Fulton, Mo., is also being considered.
Sneegas said students were allowed to do the type of silver sculpturing they wanted to produce. Sneegas emphasized the need for a movement between the students and himself.
"The silversmithing as we teach it at the Free University is much more than a therapeutic arrangement. It is a mind, hand and eye discipline which the student as well as the teacher can incorporate to achieve for themselves," Sneegas said.
HE SAID THAT he also aimed to develop in the students a great assurance or conformance from having the projects that they develop on their hand and mind being recognized by others.
Of his role as teacher in the class, Sneegas said, he didn't think teachers should ask questions to which they already knew the answers. Rather, he believes that teacher and student should seek to ask each other questions which both of them needed the answers for. He doesn't believe in preaching to students.
"When the tools are placed on the table and the student says What do you use them to do?"
Sneegas described his silversmitting class as a type of escape mechanism for those involved in it. For himself the creative atmosphere in the class accounted to a kind of fantasy world, which Sneegas said was healthy.
"IT HAS ALWAYS been a personal philosophy of mine that when the work that I do begins to repeat itself, it's time to exercise some mental gymnastics."
His class is uninhibited by the rigid practices of taking notes, preparing for exams or working for a grade. Consequently, he prefers to teach as teacher and student to create Suesas said.
However, he pointed out, there was no shortcut to mastering the art of silversmithing. He said he would recommend a formal systematized training to anyone who seriously wanted to become a professional silversmith.
In evaluating the past performance of the class. Sneezes said.
"I think that if 167 people have already demonstrated the desire to learn silver-smithing, then indeed it has been very successful."
Five interdisciplinary courses are scheduled to be added to the Liberal Arts and Sciences 48 series in the spring semester, according to the Registrar's Office.
The University of Kansas Black Student Union (BSU) is sponsoring a rally and march at 1:30 p.m. today in memory of the two students killed Nov. 17 during a student demonstration on the Baton Rouge campus of Southern University.
The march is scheduled to begin at the Kansas Union and end at Strong Hall.
BSU Rally Today For 2 S.U. Students
Mickey Dean, Sandersville, Ga., junior and president of BSU, said black groups at Southern University had asked other black students around the nation to organize local marches.
technical" approach to the environment through the use and construction of mans.
The University of Kansas Opera Workshop will present a comic opera, "The Secret Marriage," by Domenico Cimarosa, at 8 p.m. Monday in Sawyersouth Breathtail Hall.
MORE SPECIALIZED courses that will be offered in the spring include several ENGINEERING Courses.
Farcical Opera Starts Monday
The opera, a farce, concerns the problems of a father who attempts to betroth his secretly married daughter to a rich, English nobleman.
Kenneth Smith, professor of voice, staged the production and Lynn Schorinck, vice graduate student, and Ann Schorinck senior, are in charge of musical direction.
English 180, Literature and Film, will study the relationship between literature and film and will include an investigation of adaptation of prose to movie scripts.
A career in law... without law school.
if you are a student of high academic standing and are interested in a legal career,
A representative of The Institute will visit your campus on: TUEDAY, DECEMBER 5
Meetings and interviews will be held in the Kansas Union. Governor's Room. There will be group meet-ups at 4:00 p.m. for those interested in learning more about the program, or can be scheduled at 30 minute intervals from 10:30 a.m. to 12 noon and from 1:00 p.m. until 3:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday as Union Student Union Activities Office Billetin Board.
When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers in work which is challenging, responsible and stimulating. Lawyer's Assistants are now recruited to the Institute for Paralegal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice and a higher starting salary than you'd expect as a recent college graduate. Here is an example as a professional with financial rewards that involves with your developing expertise.
Chinese Communist Readings in English, (OL & L 80), will explore contemporary Chinese Communist fiction and prose and provide an overview of major policy implications of these writings.
NOTE: If the above date is inconvenience for you,
please call or write The Institute for information
THE NEW PROGRAM will be comprised of topics and problems in contemporary prose, poetry, film, art and drama and will feature works that are as reflections of modern American society.
The Institute for Paralegal Training 13th floor, 401 Walnut St. Phila, Pa. 19106 (215) WA 5-0905
For scientifically-oriented students, introductory courses in oceanography and map making will be offered for the first time spring semester.
Funds for establishing the program have been requested from the National Endowment for the Humanities by Centennial College.
If the application is accepted, preference will be given to Centennial College students.
Introduction to Oceanography, geology 109, will be a study of the natural oceanic environment and man's disruption of it. Geology 88 Marine and isotope science
Geology 48, Maps and Mapping, is a "non-
Information on new courses was requested from all departments by the department on Sept. 13. All information received will be published in the Official Spring Timetable.
OTHER NEW COURSES tentatively scheduled are the History of Art and the History of Art Sbjn., history of art 102, seminar *Problems in Art History*-American Phobias, seminar *Problems in Art History*-Painting and Seminar in Special Problems in Art History-*Painting and cell biology* 102, from 1948; physiology
Anthropology 118. Kirmal & Social Structure, characterization of cultures; development of anthropology as a discipline; architecture 22. Architectural Fundamentals and Characteristics of Architecture, study of the world; study of the Elegance of Filibusters I & England.
Literature to Music; Musik 66, readings and Exercises
Literature to Music; Musik 66, readings and Exercises
German 132. Introduction to the Germanic Languages.
German 132. Introduction to the Germanic Languages.
Historian in Workplace Slivery and
Antislavery; Histoire de la Slave Trade and
Antislavery; Nation: Comparative Approaches to Modernism.
Histoire de la Slave Trade and Antislavery;
Nation: Comparative Approaches to Modernism.
Mathematics 3. introduction in Toutes in Mathematics;
Seminar in American Philosophy; science in
Archaeology 121, history in Archaeology 121,
to the use tools of the astronomer; history 108, Toutes in
Medieval Men and Women; history 108, Toutes in
United States; history 108, Toutes in United
History 138. Toptes in History of the American Women.
History 139. Toptes in History of the Portuguese World.
Hoyle, history 139. Toptes in History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire; history 137. 130. Century Rusts and the Portuguese World; history 137. 131. Elizabethan Empire.
TAK
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE!
Except on Wednesdays. (National Taco Day) Offer expires Dec. 20
1720 West 23rd Street
MOONCHILDREN
Nov. 30 - Dec. 9
8:00 p.m. UN 4-3982
K. U. EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
"I dreamed I saw
Joe Hill last night.
Alive as you or me.
Says I, but Joe
you're ten years dead.
I never died says he." *
"Joe Hill"
Paramount Pictures Presents A Sagittarius Production A BO WIDERBERG FILM
THOMMY BERGREN Writer, Director and Producer by BO WIDERBERG the song by JOAN BAEZ
GP
In Color A Paramount Picture
© 2014 Thommy Bergren. All rights reserved.
AL HAMADI AL BAYATAL
Woodruff
60°C
7:00 & 9:30
Dec. 1 & 2
STUDENT PRINT & DRAWING SALE
Also Some
STAINED GLASS
CERAMICS
JEWELRY
WEAVING
December 1-3 SUR Gallery
Italian Spaghetti $100
All you can eat . . .
Includes salad & garlic toast
Offer valid Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 1, 2 and 3, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
This is the same wonderful Italian Spaghetti you got at eGo's last spring. Uncle Miltian (eGo) now has his own place and to help you get re-acquainted he's offering his famous home-made Italian spaghetti dinner special, all you can eat for only $1 including salad and garlic toast.
Open 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. Monday thru Thursday. Open all night Friday and Saturday. Closes at 11 p.m. Sunday.
Uncle Milty's Cafe 23rd & Barker 843-9816
ALEXANDRA CROSSMAN
Mon-Fri 10-9 Sat 10-6
THE LAYERED LOOK BY
GOOBAH The MALLS Shopping Center
6
Friday, December 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Campus Briefs Fellowship
The Interversity Christian Fellowship, Campus Crusade, Campus Christians, the Navigators, Baptist Student Union, Kappa Phi and the Mustard Seed will meet together for a fellowship at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Flu Shots
Students who got their first flu shot six weeks ago should report to Watkins for their second shot, said Dr. Raymond Schwegler, of Watkins Hospital. The shots are free.
Pre-Engineering
The School of Engineering is sponsoring a pre-engineering college student campus visit Saturday. Visiting students and faculty will be encouraged to student representatives in the morning. In the afternoon, optional visits can be made to the Computation Center, Nuclear Reactor Laboratory, Information Center, and Scholarships will be available to the visitors.
Engineer Staff
Applications now are being accepted for staff positions for the School of Engineering publication, *National Engineer*. Interested contact Lyman Levais at 842-3544 or 844-3695.
Indian Crafts
The Lawrence Indian Club will sponsor an American Indian arts and crafts show 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
Paintings, jewelry, beadwork, featherwork and artifacts will be on display and for sale. Indian bry fry bread, corn soup and beans from the basement of the community building.
Former Judge Critical Of Juvenile System
HIKING BOOTS
By SANDY HUNTER
Kansan Staff Writer
"There is no juvenile justice system in Kansas. What we have is 105 counties going 105 different directions," Washburn University professor of law and former Probate and Juvenile Court judge, Donald Roland said Thursday.
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Roland, speaking at the 10th annual seminar on juvenile delinquency prevention and control, addressed Juvenile Court judges, probation officers, social workers, law enforcement officers and students in "The Future of the Juvenile Court."
PRIMARILY LEATHER
Juvenile Court judges face a variety of problems, he said. For example, a judge is totally dependent on outside sources of information from the county commissioners made by the county commissioners.
"Often times the court lacks resources to make reasonable decisions. There are increasing caseloads with no increase in funds." Roland said.
Another problem is that a judge is up for re-election every two years and is subject to attack from all sides, Roland said. A judge is subjected to hostility from the press, the general public, the Supreme Court and opposing candidates.
812 Massachusetts
In addition, the Juvenile Court is at the bottom of the judicial hierarchy with no requirements for obtaining the judgeship in most counties, he said. As a rule salaries are low and court employees do not have tenure.
He said that functions of the court were difficult to define and that statutes were formed in broad vague terms. It is the only case where such a rule was caseload, he said, therefore a Juvenile
court judge can decide what cases he will hear.
Juvenile Court judges have the statutory duty to make a preliminary investigation, Roland said. They authorize the petition to be filed before a hearing, set the hearing date and preside over the hearing. They also determine the disposition of the case.
Rights recently established for juveniles include the right to be notified of the charge against him, the right of counsel at a parole hearing, and the right to remain silent. He was acquitted in 1975 but that juveniles had the rights of "due process of law," afforded to criminal cases.
Juvenile Courts come under civil law in Kansas. Roland said the courts were beginning to give juvenile courts the processes of law prescribed for criminal
In the future, according to Roland, a narrowing of the juvenile courts' jurisdiction
"We don't need to go to a criminal system (or juvenile). Other alternatives are available."
Roland said juvenile courts should not be a dumping ground for society's ills. They are not suited to run prevention programs and rehabilitation systems, he said.
The new judicial article in the Kansas Constitution calls for a unified court system. Roland said he hoped the juvenile court system would come under the jurisdiction of the district courts, which would also be the Juvenile Court system in Kansas.
He said the court's function must be defined in limited terms. It should be a system to provide services to children and not a "curse-all" for children's problems.
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festival of the arts
festival of the arts
Monday-the production of Kurt Vonnegut's "Happy Birthday,Wanda June"
Tuesday-the musical innovations of Robert Moog and the Moog synthesizer
Wednesday-the comedy of David Steinberg-the songs of Jimmie Spheeris
Thursday-the contemporary criticisms of drama critic John Lahr
Friday-the movements of the Eleo Pomare black ballet troupe
Saturday-the sounds of B.B. King
Festival coupons available at enrollment for 6.00 and at the SUA office after enrollment. Individual night tickets worth 10.50.
Festival of the Arts1973 April 2-7
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1, 1972
8
7
No Commodore Starter Under 6-5
Tall Vanderbilt to Test Fast'Hawks
By DON PFANNENSTIEL Kansan Sports Writer
It will be Vanderbilt's tremendous height to the university of Kansas' speed when the two teams face each other Saturday night in the Jayhawk's 1972 basketball season opener at Allen Field House. The tip-off is scheduled for 7:35 p.m.
The Commodores not only have a 7-4 center listed as a probable starter, but they also feature a 6-7 guard. In their starting lineup no one is less than 6-5.
Coach Roy Skinner and his Vanderbilt squad were in a rebuilding season last year, but they still managed to finish with a 16-10 record by winning six of their last seven starts. At times last season the Commodores looked impressive with triumphs over NIT entry Memphis State, Bradley and rugged Illinois.
Skinner, a 12-year veteran at Vanderbilt, has 10 return lettersman this season, including two to the U.S. national team.
Junior Jan van Breda Koff, a 6-7 guard and possibly the tallest backcourt man in the country, will team up with a 6-8 junior Bill McNeill to be the forward position will be senior Red Freeman, who averaged 11.7 points a game last season despite being hampered by a pair of bud ankles. Skimmeraid Freeman the first full speed for the first time in two years.
Vanderbilt, which opened its season Thursday night against Louisville, will be led by its leading scorer from a year ago, 65 points. Washington, the Hammpton, who averaged 17.3 points a game.
Steve Turner, 7-4, or 7-4 Ray Maddux will start for the Commodores at the post position. Turner sat out last season, while Hale Gibson scored 8.1 points and 12 rebounds per game.
In presson poll the Commodores were invoked with Kentucky and Tennessee to wilt their heads, and the governor's
KU coach Ted Owens will be entering his ninth season as head coach Saturday. He has a winning percentage of .734 on the basis of a 160-58 won-loss record.
pionship. Vanderbilt returned the most experienced team of this trio.
Against Vanderbilt, Owens said, he will not change the line and it will remain the
KANSAN sports
it can be a disadvantage and work the opposite way."
three-guard offense that was used Tuesday in the intrasquad game. The three guards were all on defense from a 24-point performance in the intrasquade game; sophomore Dale Greenlee; and sophomore Marshall Rodgers. At sophomore Warner Wilbrow and sophomore Rick Suttle.
Owens said KU would not change its style because of Vanderbilt's height, but he said he might have to add another forward to the lineup.
"I might use Dale Hasele, Tommie Smith or Mike Fidellek for extra Rebounding power," he said, "but otherwise, we will not adjust any other way.
In recent years, the Jayhawks have played some of the toughest schedules in the country and this year is no exception. The team should perhaps be the toughest player ever.
Saturday's game between KU and Vanderbilt will be the first meeting between the two schools. A crowd of 12,500 is expected at Allen Field House.
★★
"I will be a very difficult game," he said.
It would be to our advantage if we win
the game. I don't know.
The University of Kansas track team worked to establish times and organize events during an intraassay meet Thursday night in Allen Field House.
Probable Starters
"This is not a high pressure meet," said to crackouch Bittmanns. "We wanted it."
Kansas (0-0)
Timmons said he was also interested in organizing the facilities and officals for future meets at KU by having the meet at KU, which was the only meet this semester.
Kim Tivato, 6-2, guard
Dale Greenlee, 6-2, guard
M Marshall Rogers, 6-2, guard
Rick Suttle, 6-4, forward
Rick Suttle, 6-4, forward
Meet Shows Progress Of KU Track Squad
The following were the first place winners in the meet: long jump, Danny Sealy, 23' 5"; mile, Jim Eault, 4;11.6; 60-yard dash, 37'; mule, John Campbell, 36'; Sullivan, 11.4; triple jump, Roger Jones, 45'; 4' 44; yard-dash, Mark Lutz, 52.5; 4' high hurdles, Greg Gandreve, 7;4 high jump, Randy Smith, 6 '8'; shot put, Rudy Gueneman, 9'; pole vault, Terry Potter, 15 '6'.
Timmons said he thought that the one and two-mile runs produced good scores and that the long jump and high jump were improving rapidly.
Timmons said the team was off to a slow start this year because he was at the Olympics, but he said there were some good times for a meet at this time of year.
VANDERBILT (0-0)
Jan van Breda Kolff, 6-7, guard
Bill Logan, 6-5, guard
Hayley Maddox, 6-8, or Steve Turner, 7-4,
center
Red Freeman, 6-7, forward
Terry Crompton, 6-5, forward
VANDERRII.T (0-0)
will hold interviews for a committee to work on an SUA Concert to be held Saturday, January 27th,1973 in Allen Field House. The artist to be announced at a later date.
Student Union Activities
Any student interested in working on such a committee is asked to come in to the SUA office, to sign up for a specific interview time.
INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD ON MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1972 from 7:00 p.m. until all have been interviewed.
Game Canceled
The junior varsity basketball game between the University of Kansas and Highland Community Junior College scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Saturday at Knoxville Regional Athletic Club. According to KU head basketball coach Ted Owens, KU did not have enough players ready for the contest because a number of players were injured.
13 Volleyball Squads Undefeated
The last men's intramural volleyball games for the regular season are scheduled to be played today. Out of the original 74 teams, 16 have dropped out of competition. Of the remaining 58 teams, 13 are undefeated.
Voleball is the last intramural sport for the fall semester. Next semester, the intramural basketball season will begin. Basketball is the biggest men's intramural sport. Close to 100 teams might be competing.
Next week the playoffs begin for volleyball, Trophies will be awarded to the division, league and high championship team and will be held in fraternity team and one independent team.
FRATERNITY "A"
Dylsaken 1
The volleyball standings are:
Division 2
Bate 3-0
Taylor Tian 5-0
Sig Elm 1-0
| | Division 1 |
| :--- | :--- |
| ARL | 40 |
| Kappa Sig | 38 |
| AAT | 29 |
| Pall Gau | 28 |
Division2
DU ... 22
PKSigma ... 22
Division3
Division 4
FRATERNITY "B"
Diviade 1
Division 3
INDEPENDENT "A"
Division 1
Division 1
Beta 2
Beta 3
Beta 4
Beta 5
Delta 2
Delta 3
Division 4
Beta 1 ...3.0
Delt 2 ...3.4
SA51 ...1.2
Acelea 2 ...1.8
P.K. Sigma ...1.3
Midfax I
Pelton I
Pelton II
Polite C
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DIRTION 1
APCP 5.1
Bushannon 4.9
Pearson 6.2
Great Thorpe 4.9
AFROTIC 6.2
Batonfield 4.8
DIRTION 2
The Bumpus 4.0
Country Humphries 4.0
Waltershaw 3.4
T.A. 4.0
INDEPENDENT "B"
Division 1
Division 1
Organic Chemists 4-0
Biochemist 4-0
Pdl Della Rappa 3-0
Israel 3-0
B-18 3-0
The酵母菌 3-0
Division 2
Court Jesters 4-0
R U C D 3-1
R U C D 3-1
NROTC 3-1
Division 4
Sparky Spermor .5-0
Spencer .5-0
Parker .5-0
Hassinger Hall .5-0
Hassinger Hall .5-0
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OUR LORD OF RADIANCE AND LOVE
PRIYADEKANTA MURATI
Shri Guru Maharaj Ji
How do we recognize the living Perfect Master? We can listen to the testimony of His disciples, if they indeed have been shown light, then spontaneously they will radiate that light. We should be able to feel their excitement. But what isn't an ultimate test because the knowledge of God isn't an ultimate test because we missed by an unreceptive taker. If a person receives the knowledge of a Saturation expecting some phenomenal other-worldly vision to appear, he very likely will be disappointed. God is something which has existed within us all along, we have been unaware of it, and because of our ability, we have not known where God lives. The Force within us, in our wandering we have straymed from that source, and have had to be led back. God is there in all glory and completeness, but we have to wipe the dirt off our mind so that we can see it clearly. We have to purify our heart so that we can live truly. God is the God of our existence. The name of God is a very subtle vibration, and that vibration will lead us to Peace and understanding if we choose to follow.
We are the most FORTUMATE People, By Guru Maharaj JI's Supremest grace Mahatma Fakiranand realized disciple, will speak of the Sacred Knowledge Maharaj JI has come to reveal. Tonight . . . Dec. 1, 7-30 Kansas Union.
MUSIC BY JIM HENRIKSON
For more information, Lawrence, contact us at
841-3894 842-1284
Division Headquarters
1302 Brush Creek Blvd., K.C.Mo.
(816) 753-8475
The band on the left is a group of musicians performing on stage. The band members are dressed in formal attire, and they appear to be engaged in a musical performance. On the right is a group photo of four individuals standing together, likely posing for a group photo or promotional photograph.
Columbia Recording Artists
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BILLBOARD MAGAZINE
"Not that the Hendrix concert was an entire waste.
The lead-in group, Ballin'jack, exhibited real talent."
CASHBOX MAGAZINE
8
Friday. December 1. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Weekend Scene
'Moonchildren' Play to Be Presented
THEATRE
MOONCHILDREN: The University of Kansas Experimental Theatre will present Michael Woolley's comedy concerning eight American college seniors who share an off-campus apartment during the mid-1980s. At 7 p.m., The University of New York. The play will be presented 5 p.m. today. DeC. 9 in the Experimental Theatre of Murphy Hall.
MUSIC
BALLN'JACK: A group who made their debut two years ago on Columbia records with a sound similar to Chicago. Tonight and Saturday, Red Dog Inn.
CHIANG CHING: The dancer-actress is one of three artists from mainland China performing in the United States. She was named best actress in China in 1966. Ching Ching will present a dance concert 8 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
MOVIES
MACBETH: A bold interpretation of William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" by the talented director Roman Polanski. Hillcrest 1.
RAGE): George C. Scott directs and stars in this drama about a man alone against a giant robot. (2016)
LADY SINGHS THE BLUES: The story of singer Billie Holliday, featuring an outstanding performance by Diana Ross. Granada Theatre. (See review on page 9).
(See review on page 9).
CHILDREN SHOULD INT PLAY WITH
GUIDES IN PREDECEDENT YEAR, SINGLE Drive In.
GUIDES IN PREDECEDENT YEAR, SINGLE Drive In.
BOOT HILL: The 3rd film from the folks that brought you "They Call Me Trinity" and "Trinity Is Still My Name." Varsity Theatre.
JOE HILL: The story of Joe Hill, a union organizer in an era when union was a dirty word. Tonight and Saturday, Woodruff Auditorium.
Union Board to Consider Freeze on Minority Funds
The University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Board of Directors is expected to discuss the Kansas Union's contributions to the university's enterprise (SES) during its meeting Saturday.
SES, a tutorial service for minority students, has recently come under fire for allegedly not serving all minorities on campus.
The Student Senate has requested that the Union freeze its funds to SES until SES reorganizes with other campus minorities upon its financial records to the Senate.
All five board committees—fiscal and financial affairs; personnel; policies and practices; public relations; program concept and building use and merchandising policies and practices-will submit reports, according to the agenda.
This will be the first meeting of the 31-
January in September, when the committees were
formed.
The board, which is the governing body of the Kansas Union, replaced the Union Operating Board during reorganization this year.
OTHELLO: The most widely-acclaimed performance of Shakespeare's play, Sir Laurence Olivier stars in this film of the musical adaptation. Sunday, Woolfruff Auditorium.
Students Display Art In 2nd Annual Show
Drawings, serigraphs, lithographs and intaglio art work of KU students are currently on display at the Kansas Union Gallery. The second annual student show opened Thursday and will continue through Dec. 12.
Most of the art work is for sale, according to Mark Pierce, Seward, Neb. senior and SUA board member. Sales are handled by the individual artist, Pierce said.
Final Interviews For Principal To Be Monday
A series of interviews with applicants to replace departing Lawrence High School Principal Bill Medley will be completed Monday, according to David Kendall, Lawrence assistant superintendent for personnel and instruction.
The interviews, originally scheduled to end Nov. 27, had to be extended for one week because one of the applicants could not appear until next week.
Watkins Staff to Sell Crafts, Bakery Items
A "Make or Bake" sale sponsored by employees of Winkley Memorial Hospital, will be Dec. 4, to raise money for the new University Health Center.
The sale of bakery items and crafts made by the employees will be conducted in the front lobby of the hospital from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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SUNDAY, DEC.
SUA fine
SUNDAY, DEC. 3
SUA fine arts
presents
a dance concert
by actress/dancer
CHIANG CHING
from mainland China
8 p.m. University
Theatre, Murphy Hall
Admission: $1.00
Tickets on sale in
advance at SUA
office and at the
door Sunday
sponsored in cooperation with
International Theatre Studies Department
You are invited to attend the
University State Bank
US
OPEN HOUSE
NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4 during regular lobby banking hours. Enjoy hot cider and donuts, and
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1. 1872
9
Fantastic 'Lady Sings the Blues' Tells Story of Troubled Holiday
By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Reviews Editor
"I Lady Sings the Blues" is the story of Billy Holle, a singer in the 1930s who had to wait for a film to be screened; the film is also a screen debut for Diana Ross, another singer. The interesting story of Holiday combines with the singing and acting talent of Ross to produce a fantastic movie.
The film plays with Holiday being booked at a New York jail on a narcotics charge. As her cold turkey begins, the film flashes back the story and the history of Billy Holiday begins.
Holiday jumps through a series of jobs till finally she lands one as a singer in a dummy club. For a year she sings in the club and then goes on tour throughout the South. It is a special holiday that meets the two enemies that will plaque her entire life—racism and narcotics.
THE REMAINER of the film deals with Holiday's battle against racism and her fight for life against narcotics. Her singing sings loudly to the front-stage battle she is waging.
Diana Ross is Bille Holiday. Her film debut is going to be a much heralded one, "Lady Sings the Blues" gives her a chance to fall back on singing quite often, but it is an opportunity that is unneeded with the amount of acting talent Ross displays.
The role of Billie Holiday is a demanding one and Ross handles it as a veteran. She has been a hard worker around her one moment and the next is as deadly experienced as you can get. Ross assumes the role so perfect that to the viewer she is Billie Holiday, who is the Diana Woods of audience.
AND THEN THERE is the singing of Diana Ross. This is her bread and butter so the excellent performance she delivers is expected. Ross goes through about a dozen sounds that capture the spirit of Billie Holiday even though Ross used her own sweet voice, rather than a mellow copy of Holiday.
Among the best songs of the film are "All of Me," "God Bless the Child" and "Strange Fruit." The scene surrounding "Strange Fruit" is one of the most bitter of the film, but also the most revealing look into the life of Billie Holiday.
It's a triumphant film debut for Diana
boss-acting and singing—and a doubt the
main theme of this movie.
Another excellent performance is turned in by Billy Dee Williams, who previously starred as Gale Sayers in the television production "Brian's Song." Williams is
'Rage' Theme Is Well-Intended But Falls Short
One man against science and progress is a common theme, but one that requires a good deal of talent to be used successfully in an environment where almost produces a powerful film. Almost.
George C. Scott, who seems to thrive on diverse roles, plays a modern-day Wyoming sheep rancher, whose son becomes the victim of a military experiment.
The action starts when Scott wakes up one morning while camping out and finds his unconscious and bleeding from the nose. At the same time army officials discover an experimental nerve chemical had recently been released over a civilian area.
Fearing public reaction, officials try to cover the incident. Scott is kept under sedation and told that his son is all right—until he finds out otherwise. He then escapes, filled with shock and sorrow, and seeks revenge.
The strength of the movie comes from the acting by George C. Scott, who made his debut in *Annie*.
Scott's *performance as a father who loses the one thing that means the most to him, his son, is excellent. The only criticism that he has is that he overacts in the sentimental scenes.
The major weakness of "Rage" is a lack of credibility. Mistakes are always possible and the results could be catastrophic, but it is hard to prove this with a reaction such as displayed by the players.
Although "Rage" displays an obviously well-intended theme of one man alone against the inhumanity of scientific progress and military disregard for life, it falls short of the powerhouse it could have been. There is a "1984" scare about "Rage," but it could have been a much more important and powerful film.
MAGIC LANTERN MOVIES
Presents Eugene O'Noll's
THE LONG VOYAGE HOME
A 1940 Film Classic
Directed by JOHN FORD
Tonight 8 p.m.
Lawrence Public Library
Auditorium
7th and Vermont
Holiday's boyfriend and he turns in a sensitive performance similar to his role in the movie.
ANOTHER PLEASING surprise of "Lady
Yvette" is Holiday's tryst with Pryer, who plays Holiday's piano player.
Pryor has gained some fame as a stand-up comedian, but finds himself perfectly suited for a screen role. When the film sinks into its depressing moments, it's Pryor who brings just the right touch of humor to the situation.
Sid Melton turns in one of his better performances in "Lady Sings the Blues." He's cast as the owner, of the club at which he plays. Melton's unfamiliar role for Melton—it is identical to
The only flaw in "Lady Sings the Blues"—and a very minor one—is the film's length. The majority of the film is depressing and a two and one-half hour presentation is a little too much. The film drags slightly at the end and due to the sheer exhaustion of the audience.
the character he portrayed in the old Danny Thomas show "Make Room for Daddy."
"Lady Sings the Blues" is a beautiful film about two of the ugly facts of the world—racism and narcotics. "Lady Sings the Blues" is also the music of Billie Holiday. If that were not enough to make it a winner, it has one of the most talented corps of actors that's around. "Lady Sings the Blues" is one movie you shouldn't miss.
Movie Industry Cashes In On Religious Renaissance
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—Movie audiences in 1973 will be able to view three new versions of the Jesus story that are far removed from their original "gigs" and "The Greatest Story Ever Told."
The most eagerly anticipated of the new films is "Jesus christ Superstar," which is now finishing its shooting in Israel. It is, of course, the movie version of the rock opera that has proved a gold mine in theater and concert versions all over the world.
MCA, which already has earned millions through the original cast album by its subsidiary Decca Records, said it hoped to make more movies through its Universal Pictures.
Norman Jewison, who also directed "Fiddler on the Roof," began filming
"Superstar" in mid-August. He chose 30 different locations in Israel. These were not the true locales of the Christ story but places that could double for 1st century Palestine. The film is scheduled for a June, 1973 release.
Columbia has been filming "Godspill"
that the musical based on the book
of Matthew Patterson.
"Godspell," most noted for its song "Day by day" has been filmed in a modern setting.
The scheduled release for "Godspell" is Easter. 1973.
An enterprising producer named Larry Buchan expects to beat both musicals to the nation's theaters with a dramatic film, "The Rebel Jesus."
LATIN AMERICAN WEEK presented by THE LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION with THE SUPPORT OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB. Latin America: Reality and Tendencies
PROGRAM:
- EXHIBIT Mon., Dec. 4th till Wed., Dec. 6th
MAYMAN ROOM
- PANEL "OBSTACLES TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN AMERICA"
Mon., Dec. 4th, 7:30 p.m. FORUM ROOM
* LECTURE ON VALLEJOS POETRY (Latin American Literature)
Wed., Dec. 4th, 7:30. Big Eight Room
The invited speaker for this lecture is Prof. Escobar from the Spanish & Portuguese Dent
- PILM ON THE STURGLEGE OF THE LATIN AMERICAN PEOLE
Thurs., Dec. 7th, 7:30. Room Forum
* MONOLOGUE BY ADELA AND WRAP UP SESSION "NOW WHERE WE GO"
Fr. Dec. 9th, 12:00. Rooms
- LECTURE ON LATIN AMERICAN, PALESTINE & VIET-NAM POLITICAL SITUATION BY GERALD CHALIAND, French Writer highly knowledgeable on the issues of Latin America, Palestine & Viet-Nam.
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| Black Olive | 1.45 | 2.55 | 3.45 |
| Sausage | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Hamburger | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Pepperoni | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Anchovy | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Mushroom | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Special | 2.05 | 3.45 | 4.35 |
| Extra Ingredients | .20 | .30 | .40 |
FREE DELIVERY Call from 4 p.m. 'til 1 a.m. Mike's now has FASTER SERVICE
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
10
Friday, December 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Music Groups to Perform Verdi 'Requiem,' Vespers
Several ensembles of the School of Fine Arts will combine on the next two weekends to produce two music spectacles, the "Feminism" and the annual Christmas Vessens.
The combined University choruses and choirs with the University Symphony Orchestra will perform "Messa da Requiem" by Robert Hoehford and the Hoch Auditorium. They will be directed by
James Ralston, teaching associate and director of choral activities.
The combined choirs and the orchestra will perform in the 48th annual Christmas Vespers 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Dec. 10 In Hoe attracts over 5,000 people to the carriage.
Both the "Requiem" and the Christmas
Wespers are open to the public without
charge.
Independent
COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Open
24 hrs.
per day
DRIVE IN
AND COIN OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
7th & MISS.
843-5304
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
19TH & LA.
843-9631
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
1215 W. 4th
842-9450
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
928
Mass
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
843
8500
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
928
Mass
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
Three "stocking stuffers"
from Sony
Sony TC-40 Miniature
Battery-Operated Action-Corder
with Built-In Condenser Microphone
$9995
Sony TC-45 Deluxe Miniature
Battery-Operated Action-Corder
with Built-In Condenser Microphone
and Automatic Shut-Off
$11995
Sony TC-55 Sub-Miniature
Battery-Operated
Action-Corder
with Built-In Condenser Microphone
and Automatic Shut-Off
$13995
Small enough to
fit snugly into
hand, purse,
attache case, or
Christmas
stocking. Sony
Action Corders
make great
holiday gifts.
Besides featuring
Sony's famous
built-in condenser
microphone, each
model is full of all the
quality and dependability
that's made Sony the
first and last word in
tape recording.
TASSE
SONY SUPERSCOPE You never heard it so good!
Finnigan and Wood
DEC. 7, 8, and 1
[THURSDAY-SATURDAY] 9-12 p.m.
Advance tickets
at Kiefs, Red Baron, various
locations throughout K.C. and Topeka.
$2.50 advance $3.00 at the door.
at the ... of course
804 W. 24th 843 4357
F
♠
M
The swimming pool is surrounded by a fence with a large gate. The building has three stories and multiple windows. There are no other significant features or landmarks visible in the image.
Malls Olde English Village Apartments
2411 Louisiana Street Lawrence Kansas 843-5552
unique design . . . interior roominess . . . wall to wall carpeting . . . air conditioning . . sound conditioning . . all electric Frigidaire kitchen . . dishwasher . . disposal . . fireplace . . saunas.
Come see these surprisingly inexpensive luxury apartments
afternoons weekdays and weekends
Welcome K.U. Alumni and Friends
2. E0 05
3. E0 10
4. E0 15
5. E0 20
6. E0 25
7. E0 30
8. E0 35
9. E0 40
10. E0 45
11. E0 50
12. E0 55
13. E0 60
14. E0 65
15. E0 70
16. E0 75
17. E0 80
18. E0 85
19. E0 90
20. E0 95
21. E0 100
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 1, 1972
KANSAN WANT ADS
11
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00 each additional word: $.02
Five Days
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan to the staff of our office to color, creep, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFICATION TO 111 FLINT HALL.
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes... Now on Sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
1.
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't,
you're at a disadvantage
We pay top dollars for good clean Volkwagen
we pay top dollars for clean Volkswagen
call Carly Askew Volkswagen, 847
(212) 630-5880 www.volkswagen.com
Eliher way it comes to the same thing—"New
Civilization or Civilization." Campus Marquee,
Town House. City Hall.
BAGLIERS - We have *m* big cuffs and pletsal
bags. The ones for the head are slightly larger.
WHOLEHOUSE - a (nast part of 'camper') look.
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd on Highway 94. The shop is a beautiful Antiques, collected, used furniture and thou-
ldour of other items to we have made for you. Our collection includes furniture in being colored and white potsets with Golden Dilicina and bonning apples. We also have brown potsets with golden popcorn, red bells and yellow grapes, elderberry berry and anemone fruit, cinnamon berry and brainer apple. Open 9-15, seven day
848-319-3898 Alfrey Allerhand
BAGHIES—We have ten with big cuffs and pleats to accommodate the new Clampaha look. THE BAGHIES—We have four with big cuffs. THE BAGHIES—We have two with big cuffs.
Must sell 192 Kawaihak Mach II (350ce) 3 gyl-
mous, 6 mm thick, thousand mile make.
Make an offer. Call Bill 843-726-3160.
Moving—must sell quick 1960 Great Lakes, 12" X 63", bedside washer, dryer carpet, skirting. More vivid and nice rilee $800 or less reason of old 841-8431, ailike for Terry. After 12" 841-8972.
PULL-SHAGGY HUNGARIAN SHEEPDOG PUPPIES
ATTLE BUNDLES OF LOVE, LOVE ACK
BUNDLER CROSSED PULLI
PULL OLD ENGLISH CROSSED $ C. E. VAN
MENSOUR, GLOUCH. KA, K605 813-124-9
12-4
196 WB Viw. New engloch, transmission and tires
Max J. Friesen. Engloch. Kan. Phone 685-2752.
www.wbviw.com
72 Kawasaki 175ce刀, absolutely perfect, 67-5
miles, will sacrifice, 843-380-870.
Mobility home—BR, 13 & 46. Hacienda, air conditioned park, park entrance. Hardwood park, community park, park entrance. Park, carport, storage room, park entrance. P
Ford Van-1926. 1862 Brand new engine. Body rough.
Correct. Perfect to mast self in.
841-2846. 1856.
12-5
A fine Persian sheepkin max-coat. For a good price. Call 842-8523 late evening.
135mm Auto-Vivitar telephoto lens. Excellent condition. Best offer. 842-8985. 12-1
Corrugated boxes, assorted sizes for mailing or
shipping. Smith Paper, 1922 Mood Board. Press
843-2544.
1915 Chevy Impala. dr. H.T. VS, PB. Pt.Ac.
1915 Chevy Impala. dr. H.T. VS, PB. Pt.Ac.
Good condition. good $20 or best offer. 841-236-
841-237
Nassim Hall contract for sale. Available in-
mputations. Contact Peter Miles
843-621, Room 728
Labrador-Doberman mix puppies. Black with markings. Excellent in good conditions. Good to good in good condition. 841-309-8898
Tired of where you live? Try something new!
For the first week, contact for second semester. Call Sue at 842-805-9651.
Call Sue at 842-805-9651.
Marlin 30-30 lever action rifle, with case and box of
horses. 860, 843-1747. 12-5
MBG 65 Very good condition, new cloth, new
cover. MBG 84 Very good condition, new cloth,
new cover. Leave message. Will accept.
No returns.
Men or boys mk4 AMF bicycle, near new,
$35. (Sold new for $60). $85-1747. 12-5
Bkls-180 = 180 cm Hard Jubilee Look New vanden bindel
36x15x19cm. Hard Jacket, size 12, 15"
Great condition. Hqd 843-7410
72 T250J cycle, 3 helmets, turp. 6 speeds.
shaped shape, slim under warranty, $80.5
1747. $104.
Need bread 2 Team electronic speakers, 2-way
audio cables 3 Audiobooks 10 old. Retail
audibility, guarantee 15册.旧书零售
audibility, guarantee 15册.旧书零售
China Mina. 3/4 length fur coat. Real good complement to a record player with a separate multi speaker record changer with a subwoofer.
1955 Plymouth. $50. 842-6795.
3 month old Wulfurter owner, with bench, warranty. $1500 new. Sell for $182. 943-747-12-5
PARFISA MINI COMPACT ELECTRICAL ORGAN
Handheld device, handdome, IP4-5
Steve Calve at 634-823-4888, IP-4-5
1864 and 90 Chevys. Take your pick or take look at
1865. Cameron Motor M138 1857 W 23rd Rd.
65 West, Cary, NC 27501
170d Disk pickup, F250 3/4 ton, 4 good. farm
driver. 197d Motor comp. Motor Campus Motor.
842, 843-3900. 12-5
1955 Austin Healey 1900-0.6, 4. and both top-
teams with 2 wins. First $150. Second $150.
First $350. Second $350.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
CSC
LOYOTA ENHUMEN
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
185 Mustang停用,6 cyl. 3 spd. good condition.
195 Mustang停用,6 cyl. 3 spd. good condition.
Motor MART, 1318 W. 23rd, 842-3903.
Motor MART, 1318 W. 23rd, 842-3903.
Dual Showroom amplifier: 100 watt, 2 D-140
at 8 p.m. condition $150. Call 641-793-2100
after 8 p.m.
One national计谋 for dinner. Desperate to will,
will give a discount. Call myne.券, $12-50
or $14-18.
Unique, handmade Christmas gifts—Loren Levi cake mix, Loren Levi cake mix, all kinds of home baked goods; pumkin breads, cholls, and more. Original puff pastry, plain cheese, and more. Plastic, plant-based, non-expensive, bottle gardening gift.
Two former Mr. Guy employees to sell personal dressrooms. Latest fashion at lowest prices. Look like new. Sizes suit=42-48, 41; thirty=37-45, 44; mid=49-54, 45; shirt=10-12, 13-15. Mike or Mull. #B43-7560. 12-5
19 MG Midjet, MH24, 4脏, 6qd, maga, goods
Mari, 1518 W. 12k, 842-825-365, Campus
Mart, 1518 W. 12k, 842-825-365, 12-5
Drake SW-14, 11-Band short wave receiver lease
Drake SW-24, 11-Band long wave receiver lease
Rahabigh bicycle less than 6 months old,
not using a cable.
Drake SW-38, 11-Band short wave receiver lease
1 male Naismith contract for sale. Room 1023.
1-340-747. 12-6
2 female Naimanah contracts for spring semester.
3 female Naimanah contracts for need to be授業ed
1248 or Lindsay or Chrissy
Two Lampshades and a staircase. Two Good-
Condition Umbrellas tilted to the rear. Offer:
Upscale 750 deck and sneeze screen. Eon-
492-7431, 822-7431. Umbrella 750 deck and
sneeze screen. Eon 492-7431, 822-7431.
1 Nailmith contract, girls. Spring semester, 72.
Must sell immediately. Call 845-1588 anytime. 12-6
Realistic STA-120 receiver 2 optimus 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
Air conditioner—Westinghouse, 110 volts, 5,000
watts. Air conditioner with new wires,
for $110. Margaret, 843-909-6980.
The Museum of Natural History Gift Shop has a
large selection of art, books and memorabilia.
Come in soon, when the selection lasts. 128$
$10
Sony stereo 32GB HP-460, 165 watts, dual TV
810GB iPhone 6s Plus, 16GB iPad 6s,
810GB iPad 6s Plus, 16GB iPad 6s Plu
1965 VOLVO P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
model. 1965 Volvo P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
model. 1965 Volvo P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
model. 1965 Volvo P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
model. 1965 Volvo P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
model.
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Enjoy a wine rack, a wine rack, a wine rack, one Room full of Jawahirk gifts. Price to fit the slimest budget. You've got to UPPER DERK to believe it. 12-11 in IH-24
How about giving a unique Christmas gift, especially during afternoons at 8:34 or evening at 9:34?
1970 green Schwinn Varsity 10 speed. From and
from the bottom of a hill. Swimming time:
841.841-2.500 after 5.000 p.m. 12:46
Stereo set-up: Dyspnea A-25 speakers and amplifiers. Invincible, excellent condition. Best offer. 12-7
Records for sale. Blues, jazz, rock, folk Cheek
Records and Saturday Richard Music; 12-1
9th. 12-1
V2 WV student snow tires and wheels. White
walls $W5. Call 842-3019 after 5 p.m. 12-5
Withdrawing from KU. Must sell. Gate House Spring semester contact. Call 842-7377.
Kittens, 8 wks. old, free. Call 842-1702 or stop by 1000 Ohio
12-7
Over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that isal. You over avoid rash, the Christmas that is
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant
pump. Give it to children for Christmas! The
15 W. 9th P. 12-12
The largest handcrafted jewelry selection in the
world is provided by The Hodge Pledge. 15 W. Phrs.
10-12
Attention Audiphelis 2 Acoustic, Research 42 HK
1986, Audible. For each pair of students, warranty $H_2$ for the pair, M' furantium $H_3$ for the pair.
1965 Ford LTD. 4 DR. Ht. B-P. S.P. A-C, nearly
good condition. 843-181-8000 at 8:00 p.m.
1843-181-8000
86 Jawirin BST. relegandent metallic green, full
color. 94-505-3888 on 4 weekday, anytime Sat.
94-505-3888 on 4 weekday, anytime Sat.
FOR RENT
**TRAILRIDGE**
- 1.1% - 2 bedroom apartement
- equipped kitchen, private bath/bakery/hallway
- free parking
RENTAL HOUSING. For the up to minute listing
at 127-856-4300, Lawrence, Lawrence,
Lawrence Rental Exchange, 852-250-6900.
Studio eight—rooms with a view. $62.50, every paid, no deposits. 139. W. 7th. 12-11
-Wide selection of girls
-Cash & carry flowers every day
826 Iowa 842-1320
Alexander's
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
-Wide selection of gifts
Wkdays 8-5:30 Sunday 10-3
YARN--PATTERNS
NEEEDLE-PROT-RUGS
CANVAS--CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 4th
BAR 841-2656
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRUPED OF STEEP
TOOL FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRUPED OF STEEP
GOTS? A 2 bedroom, bldg. apartment, FAR UPSTREAM
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking paved for free; Cab:
free; private bathrooms available; rateable,
furniture available; roommates
rateable;
Apartments, furnished, clean, with walk to wall parking, outdoor storage in street parking. Borders KU., and near low-rise residential streets.
Suschnack room for rent second semester. Private
room with balcony. $120/month. Purchase $1
$month, no utilities. Call 843-7605 after
season.
CIRCLE REALTY
One Spring semester contract for Jawahir Tow-
man and new campus and new campus, 12-43-8918 at 6:00 p.m. (6:00 p.m.
493-8918)
Contact Realty Reach, 700 Maus, 845-697-7, BR duplex rooms and 1-3 BR apartments. Price start at $450.00 a month. All are available for immediate availability. After hours call Grawl Strength 8f
Unfurnished apartment for rent. Jayhawk Towers.
Available Spring semester. 162-8, 12-1
***
Homes for rent, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more than welcome. 843-3600. tf
For rent to 4 responsible girls, Available Dec. 1.
Complete 2床 4 bedroom furniture furnished apart-
ment with built-in desk and chair a
month plus utilities. Phone 843-8832 for iPad
and all days Saturday and Sunday. At 927
Oakland.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now a bedroom, and offices, furnished and unfurnished with woodwork. Heating and cooling heating and air, pool and gym. Most utilities include laundry. Call 843-8229 or see at 170 W., 19th, apt. 5B.
Unfurnished apartment, single bedroom, A.C. on
30800 with room $110/month; Call 212-796-5480;
after 8 p.m. on 6/14.
Downtown furnished apartments. One or two
people prefer private rooms to be入住.
Two rooms are required. Mass, 500.
Apt. for rent — 3 rooms heated and air conditioned. Suitable for two Close to campus. 12-458-8500.
Quitting school—must substate my 1 bap. arm, quit the job, and return to school. No monthly. All paid学费 will be payed in the course of the school year.
2 bbmh. 2 bhm luxury hatch Bus. service; wow-
sweep, full bus service. $18/month,
utilizes partially, partly. Come by Compu-
tors for a complete tour of the facility.
Reserve your room or apartment now for two
weeks at KU. BUZ 8405-5007 after 490 or BUZ-8406-6065 12-1
12-1
Studio spt. available now. Completely furnished
furnished office w/ kitchen, laundry,
marketing, graduate student, $105, utilities,
and commuting.
HAIPINFEN is living with friends in an en-suite room and board from $45. Ask for Riich, $48.
Live in the country next semester. Four bedrooms,
one bathroom, one closet. Available now a week
one Bed, one 12am, one 1pm.
Mail resume to: Barbara E. Lefkowitz, Rentals
206 West 87th Street, New York, NY 10024.
Nice one bedroom apartment. Furnished, close to
Nice call for details anytime. 843-106-96.
Call: (843) 225-5728.
To submit: 2 bedroom apartment in Jayhawk
room. Address: 1854 Wood Ave, quaint,
council. Call 841-3364 anytime.
Take over lease 6, bedroom house, 2 full baths
$300 a month, near KU. KU 825-388-
evenings.
Apartment for rent. Comfortable. 2 bedrooms, furnished, all utilities. Excellent location on Ohio, 1 block from campus. Take immediately or at aemple. 843-6657. Sexy Marce or Crazy Gorge.
Want to substitute gut from Jan. 1st-May 20 Larger
options? Compare your utility bill with all utilities
all utilities except electricity, $179 monthly.
*Please see the back of the list for more info.*
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
ment, you might think possible in these beautiful apartments on the campus of Washington University shopping and school-Fraser Hall is only 10 minutes away from the indoor game rooms, or just sit by your fireplace, while learning for second semester. Furnished or un-
leasing for second semester. Furnished or un-
leasing for second semester. Comes on us.
241. Louisiana, 843-522-923.
MUST SURREASE FOR SECOND SEMESTER
MUST SURREASE FOR SECOND SEMESTER
nice view utilities paid We will take
nice view utilities paid We will take
Apartment to sub-lease. Jan.-August. Santee
Cabin to sub-lease. $120. No phone stop on
125 Indiana, Nana.
Apartment for rent, one block from Union, suit-
tioned, available JA 1st, 1st furniture. 12-
416 - 891-266.
All beautifully furnished
Shag carpet & drapes
A fitted kitchen
Fold down & permanent beds
Built in kitsch & study lamps
Most have built-ins in all buildings
Most have utilities paid
Most have pest control - trash pick up
1000 Parking lot
MEADOWBROOK
84 Studios
$140 - $145 - $150.
24 Our Productions
Pare open spaces
Basketball areas
Walmart = swim
Football area
Softball areas
Playgrounds
Day Care Center & pre-school
Museum
Living in the best costs little more
No Traffic fumes or noise
70 Acres
24 One Bedrooms $160 - $170.
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare & make your move to
...
15th & Crestline 842-4200
800 feet west of 15th & Ives.
THE HLE in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Must rent two bbm. 12pt air, fully carpeted.
Must rent a bedroom for baby girl. Beginning January 1, 2015. Please call 842-4657 - 1395.
Open晚 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843 7685 — We Deliver 9th & 11th
Join the Ridges Community and you'll find a lot of great stuff to do. There is lots more, like West Lawrences, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments.
Room for rent. Share bathroom and kitchen. $50.
842-8865. 12-1
Pursued 2 bedroom, for rent, W30 W240,
furnished room, kitchen, dining and restaurants. Available, shopping center, and restaurants.
1 bedroom apt Quiet, skirt carpet, wood paneled
2 bedroom apt, glass doors, 12-7
180 Kentucky. No P. M. 841-2645.
180 Kentucky. No P. M. 841-2645.
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment Wednesday night at jam session. All those interested in attending may book online by clicking on **Sanctuary**.
WANTED
Quitter country living-1 female roommate wanted
from a non-married couple with 6 months plus utilities. Available Dec. 1, 843-964-0220
Considering a move 2nd suspectnet Need an ear to listen. The police call loud-quiet, "Call 841-3683, Tom or Joy?" The police call loud-quiet, "Call 841-3683, Tom or Joy?"
Need 1 to 2 female roommates for second seminary;
need 3 to 4 female roommates for third seminary; each plus electricity. Call 853-4634 after p. 90.
**REQ:** A minimum of 3 bedrooms.
Two female roommates need to share house
addresses and $23.90 this month. Utilities #8152, 612-4,
8153, or #8154 must be paid.
Two men to share a two-bedroom apartment in
Cincinnati, Ohio. One possible Cable.
12-5-0 for further information.
One female roommate to share two bedrooms, $80 monthly; ACC, close to bus line 12-11. 841-269-3555.
Need to submit comfortable, spacious 2 bedroom
flat in the heart of Chicago 2-4 occupants,
utilities paid. Call 618-796-3401.
Formal female roommate wanted to share Jakewek Townsend with her and give him great living. Any questions call us.
Female roommates meet. Quiet, comfortable
apartment at Pan 25. Call before 2:00 p.m.
(314) 968-7100.
girls needs to share apartment with other girl
children. $75 per month, furnished.
Call 642-5079.
Need new papers typed? English education grad u爷
760-756 fc a page, minimum 8. Call 643-8697 after
inquiry.
Band for High School Christmas sem-formal
event. Operates for 12-3pm, operator and
operator for Vinnik 12-19 after 5 p.m.
18-7
Adventurecentric and amorous types to try our new
destination to delight the senses! At the Hodge Pond
destination, please contact us.
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67 month
for 2nd semester. Call 843-8619. 12-12
3 three-studios, but fun-loving girls need room-
studio and good own room; on an on-board
$6/month rental that's $199 per week.
NOTICE
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
for compartment information and 1-492-380-
5000 at www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com.
Tony's 66 Service
tune-ups starting service
Be Prepared!
S
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE sirloin
Delicious Food and Sweet Sauce with Complete Menus
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our music is and has always been in good food
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Forest Blvd.
29
Raw River Bridge
Phone:
Straits
Stradeia
95
NORTH SIDE
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
151 Michigan St. B-Bar, B-Bar. B-Bar-Bar in an
Morgan Stanley building. $75. A slab to have here $40. Large rib plate
$75. A slab to have here $40. Large rib plate
beef sand. Bs. Round of beef sand. $10. chicken
beef sand. Bs. Round of chicken sand.
Sun and Tue. Sand. VI phone 2-810. $515. Mt. Bluf.
B-Bar.
RADIO AUDI STEREO WAREHOUSE The finest
laboratory in the world. Island, Kalam, Kamota 60441 Phone 824-201-471
and 824-201-549.
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
For Tree Birth Control information for preg-nancy, call 800-273-4441 or visit www.Winners Center. E-mail ibell4441 if you answer calls to Winners Center.
BAGGIES — We have om with big cuts now but we can do the new one too, the big cut of computers. BLEEK — The new one (or a set of computers).
Choice locker beer. Aged and guaranteed. Sides:
Wholemeal Meats, 31st and 84th, Ivory, 12-12
Whitelegs Meat, 31st and 84th, Ivory, 12-12
Students! Have your Xkax key card at Dauan
miles from the campus in Carry. 12:53
miles from the campus in Carry. 12:53
TYPING
"MEDALS FOR KILLING MEN-DISINHORON-
Help us eliminate such perverted attitud es. GAY
Help us eliminate such perverted attitud es.
Meets Mondays 7:30 p.m. Union.
Brae B-112 Union, 844-6800. Work with
Lawrence
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of kits
of $6. Come down and visit with us
W. 9th. 12-13
Thesis and dissertation typing, term papers, research articles, and book reviews. Electric pics or elite 6 eyes cameras. Call us at (212) 538-7010.
Extremely high quality work done by manuscript
writers in the Washington DC area. 842-565-605,
messenger@davis.edu. Much experience with
publishing.
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own
Experienced in typing theses, disertations, term papers, other mips. typing. Have electric typewriter with plex tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Have typed a marked, corrected PhD. 843-854. Mrs. Wright
Expert manuscript typist with through knowledge of spelling, punctuation, and grammar will read the term papers, etc. at years experiences. Electric typewriter, 8 p.m., 10 a.m. or between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. 12-8
Typing, my home. I.B.M. Selective plea. Prompt dissection of an interstitial pressure. Proceeding dead automatically.
Typing on elite electric typewriter in my home.
Typing on noise. No themes please. Mr Hairy 12-12
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12
Friday, December 1, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Nixon Delayed Peace, Editor Says
Banning Garrett, chief editor of the newspaper "War Bulletin" and producer of the movie "The Pentagon Papers," said Thursday he would be the lead in the war in Iraq.
Garrett's appearance was sponsored by several international student groups and is being held in the United States.
"I feel there is a 50-50 chance that Nixon will sign the peace treaty," Garrett said.
Garrett accused Nikon of postponing the signing of the peace treaty last October because, he said, Nikon wanted to keep the war going until after he was re-elected.
"This was the third time Nixon blew the chance to attack us," Garrett said. Nickimon had ended the war in 1968, but did not because he wanted the United States to get out of the war with a nuclear weapon.
"Nikon knew that Vietnam was the vocal point of the world and that if the United States lost, prestige and power in the world might be lost," Garrett said.
"Nixlon blew a chance at ending the war this year during the elections in
Vietnam by allowing Thieu to crush his opposition.
"If Thien would have lost to a pro-Commistian candidate, and he probably would have, then Nixon would have gotten out of the war by saying that the U.S. was following the edicts of the Vietnamese people."
Garrett, who has been to North Vietnam and gets many reports from there, said the North Vietnamese were powerful and would fight as long as they saw necessary.
"The North Vietnamese people have confidence and the strength to win against them."
"They will go on forever because they don't fear the wombing anymore and they feel better."
Kansan Applications Available in 4 Offices
Garrett said the North Vietnamese have been negotiating from strength in the Paris Agreement.
Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions for the spring semester may be obtained in the offices of the Student Senate or the Student Senate office and 105 Flint Hall.
Applications should be returned to Dana Leibmeng, assistant dean of the School of Law at Columbia University.
"They have the confidence of battlefield victories and they don't trust the United States."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year. No. 66
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Head Start Week Is This Week
Monday, December 4. 1972
See Page 8
Spanish Jet Crashes; 155 Persons Die
SANTA CRUZ DT ENTERIFIER, Canary islands (AP) - A chartered Spanish jetliner carrying a group of German tourists crashed shortly after takeoff from this resort island Sunday killing all 155 persons on board.
It was the worst crash in Spanish civil aviation history and the seventh time this year that more than 100 persons died in a single-plane crash.
The four-engine Convair 990A Coronado belonged to the Spanish charter airline Spantax and had 148 passengers and a crew of seven.
All the passengers were German, 73 men and 75 women, and the crew was Spanish, 82 men.
The plane took off normally from Los Rodeses airport on its way to Munich, but when it reached 1,000 feet, one engine burst into flames. airport officials said.
HAVE MORE OUR OWN HEROWS JUSTICE
The plane plunged to the ground between the civilian and military airports on this island in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of North Africa.
Rescue squads quickly reached the burned plane but found only one survivor, a woman. She died shortly after being admitted to a hospital.
The passengers on the flight were part of a Bavarian bus operators' federation that had been vacationing on the Spanish island. They had arrived at Santa Cruz on Saturday after a cruise from Casablanca, Morocco, aboard a Greek ship.
The plane was plotted by Capt. Daniel Hanley had six years' service with Snantax.
Washington Speaks to Protesters
. . 300 march to protest S.U. killings . . .
In Bonn, Traffic Minister Lauritz Lauritzen ordered a West German commission to help investigate the crash. Spanish government and airline authorities began an immediate investigation of the crash.
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
The bodies of all the German victims were put in coffins to be flown to Munich.
The number of dead made the crash the fourth worst single crash in the world. The worst aviation disaster on record is the crash of a Soviet Ilyushin jet airliner in October near Moscow in which all 176 persons on board were killed.
BSU Blasts White Racism
Two University of Kansas black student leaders urged blacks at a rally Friday to stand together against "white oppression and racism."
Mickey Dean, Sandersville, Ga., junior and president of the Black Student Union (BSU), and Ron Washington, acting Director of the Supportive Educational Services (SES), spoke to the predominantly black crowd of 300 in front of Strong Hall.
The rally, a memorial for two black students killed at Southern University Nov. 17, followed a march from the Kansas City campus and the march were sponsored by the BSU.
Dean said the killings on the Baton Rouge campus were more than just isolated incidents. He said they were part of a political movement in Louisiana. States which is "racist and immoral."
The rally, which was called at the request of black student groups at Southern U., would let people of Lawrence know what blacks are thinking, Dean said.
"Too many people think blacks in Lawrence don't care anymore about what's going on," Dean said. "They think just because we haven't been out in the streets since 1970 that we don't care about our brothers and sisters, but they're wrong."
Dean pointed to the size of the crowd at the rally as an indication of the concern blacks have for their situation. He said that some people expected the rally than some people expected.
Both Dean and Washington stressed the importance of a strong BSU and SES on the KU campus. They accused the administration of not liking BSU and SES and wanted to crush them by varied means, including giving the organizations enough money.
Washington said BSU was the organization which had accomplished the most for blacks at KU and if it was eliminated, blacks would be in trouble.
Washington spoke to the crowd on the present situation of blacks in America and around the world. He charged that the president was white superiority and repression of blacks.
"America is red from its red neck down to its feet and so it's as big as it' s big white."
Washington told the group that blacks must adopt a new policy of solidarity.
“Our policy is that an injury to one is an injury to all,” he said.
"The rest of the country, as well as Lawrence, is big blue country cause we are all in love."
Dean urged that those present at the rally keep informing others about the black situation.
North Viets Demand Unity; Talks Resume
SAIGON (AP)—On the eve of resumed peace talks in Paris, North Vietnam issued a position statement asserting that all of the UN members had standing an end to U.S. influence in the South.
The statement was issued Sunday as an editorial in the official newspaper *Nanbian* Dan.
It accused the United States of disregarding a pledge to respect the Vietnamese people's right to self-determination and advanced its version of this right, which it likened to "the principal pillars of a house."
" only one of these pillars is pulled down, the entire house will collapse," the woman said.
It also called the Saigon government's insistence on North Vietnamese troop withdrawals insistent, and added: "To satisfy the demands of the war, I aminal the agreement, and prolong the war."
THE EDITORIAL asserted that the Washington-Hanoi draft agreement on a cease-fire announced last month was made public in a letter to the U.S. senate namingese people's sacred inviolable national rights and the South Vietnamese people's right to determination which the U.S. side had endorsed.
"The United States must end its military involvement and intervention in South Vietnam. We should declare and went on to say that to restore peace, the United States must adhere to the law."
"The South Vietnamese people shall decide their political future themselves democratically, general elections; the United States committed to any political tendency nor to any personality in South Vietnam, nor does it seek to impose a pro-American govern-
"OUR PEOPLE'S rights to democratic freedom will be ensured; an administrative structure called the National Council of National Reconciliation and Concord of three equal segments will be set up; the national army will be sent out step by step through peaceful recess."
The Vietnamese words expressing administrative structure impLIED a government. The concept of the council's role and the wording of that concept have been sticking points in negotiations since the Vietnam War. The Washington emissions not a government but a body whose powers would be limited to arranging elections.
Henry A. Kissinger, President Nixon's top
foreign affairs adviser, returned to Paris Sunday night to resume private negotiations with the North Vietnamese on a Vietnam cease-fire.
KISSINGER MADE no statement on the substance of the talks he will have with the Hanoi Pollinator member who has been his opposite in secret meetings during the talks.
Kissinger held his last meeting with Tho on Nov. 25 and at that time it was agreed they would meet today for their 22nd session.
Immediately before leaving Washington, Kissinger had two long telephone talks with
President Nixon, who was at the Florida White House at Key Biscayne. The President plans to maintain direct contact with Kissinger during the talks.
More than five weeks have passed since Kissinger said "peace is at land." During the past week pressure seemed to have weakened in South Korea, allowing of South Vietnam to accept a cease-fire.
Dispatches from Saigon have indicated that the South Vietnamese government may now be resigned to seeing a cease-fire agreement signed and that Premier Tran Phuong hold Cabinet members and high-level department heads to prepare for this eventuality.
Apollo Lift-Off Hinges On Aerospace Strike
BULLETIN
The Boeing Co. and 60 aircraft workers reached agreement on a contract Sunday night and erased the possibility of a strike by the pilots. The plane planned launch of Apollo 17 to the moon.
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)-Sikh aerospace workers extended Sunday a bargaining deadline until midnight and a federal mediator expressed optimism as intense negotiations continued to avert a strike that delayed the Apollo 17 launch Wednesday.
"I still feel very optimistic that we will avert a stoppage," said mediator William A. Hose as negotiations recessed until the day. "My hop is that we can settle tonight."
Sunday morning, the nounion workers, who are represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical and Stage Employees will set a p 4.9 m.CST deadline for a settlement.
At that time they said they would vote on the latest offer by the Boeing Co. If it were rejected, they said they would begin picketing.
BUT AFTER an hour-long bargaining session in the room, LATSE extended the offer to seven hours.
After a two-hour meeting Sunday night, the workers were summoned to a meeting to discuss a new Boeing offer, and another negotiating session was set for 11:30 p.m.
Women to List Regent Candidates
At the launch pad five miles away the countdown was on time, aiming for blastoff of the final Apollo mission at 8:53 p.m. CST Wednesday.
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
AFTER THE all-night session, mediator Rose said: "There was progress during the night, I'm anxious to get it wound up. I'm hopeful for an agreement."
The space agency said they executed high acceleration maneuvers to adapt to the gravity forces they would undergo when the Saturn 5 rocket lifts off.
The workers involved perform such jobs as illustration, photography and technical drawing.
council, but she said that the council had never backed a single candidate for a lawmaker.
The policy council of the Kansas Women's Political Caucus, meeting in Lawrence Saturday, strongly rejected the endorsement of a single candidate for the vacant seat on the Kansas Board of Regents.
Carol Cline, Shawnee, chairwoman of the council, said Graves would be among those charged with the case.
The Lawrence chapter of the statewide Caucus had endorsed Karen Graves, 36, of Salina, for the regent position in a letter to Docking Nov. 20. It had been speculated that the policy council might endorse Graves also.
The council voted instead to urge Gov. Docking to select any qualified woman for the post and then to submit a list of six to 10 candidates to the governor.
The council thought that they should not make any demands upon the governor,
It was at that time that IATSE announced the 4 p.m. deadline.
"We are blowing the whistle on the negotiations," said JATSE attorney Bernard Mamet. "We have been meeting all through the night, and no settlement has been reached yet. We will continue to meet, but not for long."
Cline said the council thought that to endorse a single candidate would hurt the chances of a woman being placed on the Board of Regents, since the governor might interpret the single endorsement as pressure to appoint a particular person.
"Anyone has the right to recommend a candidate," she said.
While the labor controversy continued, Apollo 17 astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, Harrison H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans T38 jet planes for the second straight day.
"Our job is not to say. You must appoint a woman," said Ruth Rubb, a member of the council from Clay Center. "Our job is to supply a list of qualified candidates."
Cline stressed that the policy council was not critical of the action taken by the Lawmaker.
All of the members of the Lawrence chapter submitted names of possible candidates to recommend to the governor that Harper was chosen from that group, Harper said.
NANCY HARPER, 73 Mississippi St., a member of the Lawrence chapter of the Caucus, said Sunday she was not disap- pared. The council did not specifically erase Graves
The letter to Docking, which was drafted at the meeting, was signed by all 16 members of the policy council, representing the five legislative districts in the state.
If a settlement was not reached by 4 p.m., Mamet said, a strike vote would be taken and, if the decision is to strike, pickets could immediately at gates to Cape Kennedy.
Harper said the Lawrence group was concerned that Docking might appoint a successor to the Regent seat of the late Thomas Griffith of Manhattan soon, and wanted to make a recommendation immediately.
The documentation workers are not essential to the launching, but the space agency said the possibility of other unions honoring picket lines was the main concern:
MAMET REPORTED Saturday that agreement had been reached in such fringe areas as layoff notices, overtime, health and working conditions, but that disagreement remained on the major issue—wages.
The workers originally sought a discontinuance of 30 to 50 per cent pay cuts received when Boeing took over a space center support services contract last year, but they said they would compromise. Negotiations began last April.
Boeing and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration have filed charged against IATSE with the National Labor Relations Board.
Boeing charged the union with bargaining in bad faith, and NASA requested a restraining order on grounds that a strike would be a secondary bovett.
The secondary boycott claim is based on a NASA charge that the Boeing workers have threatened to stop the launching of Apollo 17 mission. The government agreement would cost NASA $11.3 million.
Abortion Laws Still Plague Legislators, Counselors
For many pregnant women the decision to abort an unwanted pregnancy is a stressful and difficult one, and states across the world are finding legislation just as difficult.
Abortion legislation is still a subject of controversy around the nation, and different state abortion laws vary in degrees of strictness.
A change in the Kansas statute on abortion came about earlier this year. The abortion originally required a woman to obtain a prescription for an accredited mission was granted by an accredited hospital for abortion. This was changed by a district court decision. The change provided the consent of the attending physician and it was necessary for a therapeutic abortion.
According to Lawrence Memorial Hospital Administrator Charles Denston, the law in Lawrence Memorial has been changed to require a medical abortion therefore possible to obtain an abortion at
The average price range for hospital costs for this operation is $175 to $200 for a one day and one night, the average stay for a therapeutic abortion patient, said Deniston. This price does not, however, cover the doctor's fee for performing the operation or for this operation at Lawrence Memorial can be between $400 and $500.
Lawrence Memorial with only the consent of the attending physician and the patient.
SUSAN LOMISKA, an abortion counselor who works through the Women's Center at KU, said that New York had the highest rates of abortions in the States. She estimates that a woman referred to a New York clinic for a therapeutic abortion can expect to pay about $250 for the operation and plane fare and $25 for the pays a stand-by rate for the plane fare
Lominska said that she was doing research on the cost of going to Washington, but she doesn't want it.
immediately available legally, she said,
that the total cost might be about $225.
She added that in Wisconsin the abortion law was being contested, and that it now was possible to get an abortion immediately there.
California and Hawaii are two other
countries, Lominska, where it is possible to
catch a dolphin.
Some states allow abortions, Lominska said, after interviews with the hospital board. Lominska said she thought this procedure seidum was worthwhile, because it took time, was expensive and harassing for the woman.
IN THE PAST Lominska usually has referred women coming to her to a clinic in Kansas City. There they usually can get an aid immediately for about $15 if they are students.
She said, though, that as of last week she had stopped referring women to this clinic if they could afford to go elsewhere, because she had been dissatisfied with the services
being provided by this Kansas City clinic
almost always gives therapeutic
abortion.
Lominska said that in this Kansas City clinic, the doctor who performed surgery performed as many as 50 abortions a day on weekdays. She said that Saturday, assisted by two osteopaths, he performed approximately 80 abortions. He also said that she would be able to provide binary prizes for the abortion according to the patient's financial status.
"We have a good, clean clinic here and we supply good medical coverage." Patrick
THESE PRACTICES have influenced her to begin a boycott of this clinic when it closed.
Patrick said that the clinic tried to two doctors performing surgery on weekdays and had had as many as four on duty Saturdays. She said that the doctors performed an average of 30 abortions on weekdays and 50 to 60 on Saturns.
Janet Patrick, director of the abortion clinic referred to by Lominska, said that she was not aware of the boycott and could not understand the reasons for a boycott.
She also said that the average cost asked for abortions was $150 at the clinic.
IN LAWRENCE and the Kansas City area, as in other parts of the country, abortion referral agencies and counseling services have been established to aid women with problems that legislation cannot cover.
In Lawrence women who need abortion counseling can reach a counselor by calling Headquarters or the Information Center, and in Boston, the Information Center would call her on another line and connect her with the woman before she hung up. An appointment could then be made to meet at the Women's Center. If an appointment is needed, she tries to meet with women within a day.
Abortion counseling, both at a Kansas City clinic to which she refers for patients
abortions directly before the abortion and at the referral agencies attempts to heighten the woman's awareness of the abortion and her own emotional status concerning it.
THE COUNSELORS try to make sure the woman is aware of alternatives to abortion, such as marriage, having the baby and placing it up for adoption or rearing the child as a single parent. They attempt to discover the circumstances surrounding the woman's pregnancy in order to gauge and guide the counseling session.
Because of the emotional stress suffered by some women before and after abortions, the counselors say they think it is necessary for women to be open-minded and undergoing on abortion.
Has a woman been pressured into abortion by family, friends or the man involved; what is her relationship with the man involved how does she feel about this?
See ABORTION LAWS on page 6
2
Monday, December 4. 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By the Associated Press Anti-IRA Law
DUBLIN—President Eamon de Valera, once chief of the Irish Republican Army, signed the Republic of Ireland's tough antiguerilla measures into law Sunday amid a spate of bomb scares that left Dublin jittery after a weekend of violence and political crisis. Top men of the outlawed movement were killed by an apparent immunity over. The amended Offences Against the State Act provides that a senior police officer's officer that a man is a member of an illegal organization is enough to put him behind bars.
EPA Gas Rule
WASHINGTON - The Environmental Protection Agency probably will postpone for another year the issuance of regulations to phase out the use of lead in gasoline, EPA sources have reported. But EPA soon will revise rules that bar the use of grade of lead-free gasoline nationwide by mid-1974, EPA said Sunday. EPA officials now think lead eventually should be removed entirely from all gasoline. If it is removed, lead probably would be recycled costly petroleum "aromatic" to maintain regulation regulated by pre-1975 cars.
Westwood
ST. LOUIS—The Democratic Governors Caucasus asked national party chairman Jean Westwood to resign Sunday and voted to endorse former treasurer Robert Strauss as her replacement. Strauss had sought the governors' endorsement in advance of next Saturday's meeting of the Democratic National Committee, said the governor, who did not know but be told of race and would continue to fight if Strauss remained in it. She said she had the votes to retain her job if it comes to a showdown.
Swiss OK Pact
BERN-Swiss voters gave resounding approval Sunday to a free trade treaty linking their neutral country with the European Common Market. The treaty will eventually grant Swiss industrial products duty-free access to a consumer market of 300 million people already absorbing about half of Switzerland's total exports.
Good Grooming
CHICAGO-Monkens have a sense of social grooming which is responsible for their own unique kind of dental hygiene, in part due to the University of Edinburgh and Stanford in California. He conducted a study of the behavior of seven chimpanzees.
Two Arrests Made For Sale of Drugs
Two University of Kansas students were arrested Friday night on warrants for alleged drug violations, the Douglas County Sheriff's office reported.
Ross A. Stratton, 21, Harpendon Hertz, la. senior, was charged with illegal sale of phenyclidine on Oct. 17 and Edward J. Ogden, 19, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, was charged with illegal sale of cocaine on Oct. 20.
Each man was released on $5,000 bond.
State Legislature Electing Officers Today;'73 Session Starts Jan. 9
The 1973 Kansas House of Representatives and Senate will meet today for a one-day session to select officers for the 90-day session beginning Jan. 9. Groundwork will also be laid in the organization of committees for the regular session.
The House and the Senate will formally convene at 10 a.m. in their respective chambers, including the secretary of state, and her deputies will formally announce the November election of candidates to the Senate.
While two of the races for party leadership are already virtually decided, there is still some doubt in many, notably the races for House majority floor leader, speaker pro tem of the House and Senate majority floor leader.
in the race for Senate majority leader, the frontrunner, Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge, is being challenged for the position by Sen. Robert Storye, R-Topkea.
IN THE RACE for speaker pro tem of the house, the battle is between Rep. Ansel M. Roberts and Keenith Howard, RoWerland Park. Tobias appears to have the edge in a close race.
The race for House majority floor leader pits Rep. Donn Everett, R-Manhattan, against Rep. James Maag, R-Dodge City. Members to have the edge in another close race.
On the House side, Rep. Duane S. (Pete) McGill, R-Winfield, is expected to be named speaker of the House. McGill, 50, elected to the position last fall, this fall, is expected to be formally named by his Republican colleagues today. If selected, McWill will replace Rep. Calvin Strowg, R-Abiline, who lost in the GOP for lieutenant governor last summer.
On the Senate side, Sen. Robert F. Bennet, R-Prairie Village, appears to have the president pro tem's spot clinched. If selected, Bennett will succeed Snee. Glee Smith, R-Larned, who did not run for re-election.
REP. R.C. (PETE) Loux, D-Wichita, is host as Democratic leader of the House.
There is still some question as to which of the 13 Democratic senators will replace Sen. Harold Herd, D-coldwater, who lost his seat Nov. 7; as Senate Democratic seat
The two houses will convene only for the certification of the electees and then will recess in order for the Democrats and Republicans to hold separate caucuses to
The Board of Class Officers is urging students to contact state legislators during Christmas break to make them aware of the problems of higher education in Kansas.
John Hackney, Wichita senior and class president, said he hoped to have more than 10 legislators contacted by University of Kansas students.
Hackney said interested students were being advised to talk to the legislators on two main topics. The first is how the legislators see the situation regarding higher education in Kansas at the present time and what they plan to do about it.
For the second advised topic of conversation with legislators, it was suggested that students describe their personal grievances with the University, such as losing professors to better-paying universities and closed classes.
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choose their candidates for the various positions and discuss reorganization.
Following the caucuses the House and Senate will reconvene and choose the speaker and speaker pro tem of the House to govern. Since these positions are filled by a majority vote of the members of the House and Senate respectfully, the GOP, with a solid majority in both houses will be able to select members selected in the 'GOP' caucuses.
The Senate is expected to elevate its president pro term to president of the Senate and create a new position of vice president because of the constitutional amendment which removes the governor as president of the Senate.
THE AMENDMENT is under court challenge and the Senate may wait until the Kansas Supreme Court rules on the validity Supreme court before electing a vice president.
Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions for the spring semester have been obtained from the offices of the dean of medical science at the Student Senate office and 105 Filii Hall.
When the legislature reconvenes on Jan. 9, some of the important issues facing the legislature will be whether to submit committee recommendations to drink and gambling; what is to be done about a new school finance act to replace one declared unconstitutional by a Johnson County District Court judge; which is to be done with the $17 million federal revenue sharing funds; how to
finance increased state aid to schools; what to do with a proposal for no-fault insurance in Kansas recommended by a joint House Senate study committee; what to do about an avowed attempt by Gov. Robert Docking to get his 1967 property tax归 retracted and the governor proposed a proposal by the House Senate committee for a one-half decrease in the state sales tax to provide property tax reduction for local governments.
Applications For Kansan Due Tuesday
Applications should be returned to Dana Labbegood, assistant dean of the School of journalism, by noon Tuesday in 105 Flt. Applications for job positions should sign up for an interview on a schedule outside of 114 Flt. Interviews will begin Tuesday afternoon.
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3
Union Board Requests SES Report
By KATHY TUSSING Kansan Staff Writer
The University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Board of Directors adopted a proposal Saturday requesting Supportive Educational Services (SES) to provide full information by Jan. 10, 1973, on their policies and finances and to affirm their support for the SES program by the fall semester of 1973. SES, which receives funding from the Board, was established to provide tutoring, scholarships and loans for minority students.
The Board also adopted a proposal requesting a modification in the ceral malt beverage policy of the Kansas Union. The directors requested that the Union management be permitted to sell 3.2 per cent ceral malt beverages in selected food service areas and also to groups for their social functions.
The proposal concerning SES was submitted to the Board by the fiscal and financial affairs committee of the corp. The report, in which the information requested of SES is:
- FULL INFORMATION on the policies and procedures of the program, including the criteria for selection of tutors and the criteria for admission of students to the program.
SESS affirmation of its intention to include all minority groups on a regular basis in its decision-making process.
-SES exploration of all possible methods or extending its services to all minority groups.
—A full report on the use of Union allocated funds, including payment of administrative salaries in the program, for the spring semester, 1972, the fall semester, 1972, and a projection for the spring semester of 1973.
DICK WINTERMOTE, executive director of the Alumni Association and fiscal and financial affairs committee chairman, said that the proposal was drawn up after it came to the attention of the committee that some minority groups were refused aid by the SES. Also, some of the policies of the SES were modified in SES, used the word "black" instead "milionary student," according to Wintermote.
Raymond Nichols, chancellor of the University and Board member, said, "As far as I'm concerned, SES is committed to open its program to all minority students, that sufficient funds were not available however, to include all minorities.
Nichols said that the second point of the resolution, an affirmation ot include all minority students, had already been made in a meeting with him.
DAVID DILLON, Hutchinson senior and student body president, that funding was approved.
services. He said that volunteer tutoring or group tutoring could possibly be used to teach the subject.
The proposal to modify the cereal malt beverage policy was proposed by Frank Burge, director of the Union, through the Council of the program concept and building use committee.
Burge told the Board that the present Union policy of allowing groups to bring in 3.2 per cent beer was awkward for several reasons.
Burge said that most persons did not know how much beer to order for their party and knew it over- or under-payment led to waste and the potential for over-consumption, he said.
ALSO, GROUPS BRINGING in beer had
their own bottle of the beer once
he gets it to the Tieman's head.
The Board also said that when management could not sell the product, the problems of controlling the age, quantity of consumption and percentage of alcohol
Burge said that the campus community had already demonstrated that they could accommodate the availability of cereal malt beverages on campus with no apparent disciplinary or public relations problems.
were dependent entirely on the sponsoring group.
THE BORAD of Directors approved a procedures pamphlet for the Union facilities, which includes building use committee. The booklet covers Union facilities, policies and services. The committee also reported that they are in space more space for student organization office.
The proposal, if approved by Chancellor
Rogers, will be approved by the Board of
Regents for their consideration.
The merchandising policies and practices committee told the Board that they had defined two major areas of concern: the management and the food service in the Union itself.
Long-range concerns of the committee
ELIZABETH SCHULTZ, associate professor of English and chairman of the personnel policies and practices committee, will be scheduled for the Union staff was being prepared.
The Board approved unanimously a committee proposal concerning sick leave for permanent employees, including leave for pregnancy. The Union had no policy concerning pregnancy prior to the passage of the policy.
were defined as an examination of the Summerfield Hawklet snack bar, and vending operations across campus and the moment of customer feedback channels.
According to its financial report, the Union showed a $21,000 increase over last year in net income from Union operations. The only department of the Union showing a decrease in income was the bookstore, which reflects the general University enrollment pattern, according to the financial report.
New Student Loan Rules Require More Information, Earlier Deadlines
By CHRIS CANNELLA Kansan Staff Writer
Because of new regulations expected to cause a major change in application fees, he will lend loans (FISL), the director of the University of Kansas financial aid office has suggested that students return FISL applications for the semester to his office no later than March 1.
Jerry Roger, financial aid director, said last week that although there was no set deadline for FISL applications, students who returned their applications by this date would avoid having to fill out a more complicated application form.
The deadline is Feb. 1 for the 1973-74 academic year scholarships, grants, scholarship halls, and fall semester's National Direct Student Loans (NSDL). Rogers suggested that FILS applications also be turned in as early as Feb. 1.
The suggested early submission date for FISL is due to the U.S. Senate bill, known as the Pell Bill, which is expected to go into effect March 1 and which would require that all student loan applicants submit a financial statement of the income and liabilities of each student's parents.
Under this system, a student must receive recommendation from the school before he begins to work.
in his office because it would mean that each application would require careful analysis from his office. Rogers said this analysis would cause a backlog in the financial aid office because there was no progress toward the funding to accompany the bill.
Each student will be entitled to $1,400 minus a family contribution, under the BEOG plan, Rogers said. After an examination of the parents' financial status, you are deeded how much money the parents should contribute to the student's education.
THE PELL BILL also would begin a completely new system of student finance—The Pell Grant (BEOG). This grant was scheduled to become effective for the 1973-74 academic school year, although Rogers said that he did not think the grant would be completely worth it.
Under this plan, the federal commissioner of education will pay an award to students accepted for enrollment, or in good standing at a post-secondary school.
THIS AMOUNT THEN will be subtracted from $1,400 and the student will receive the remainder. If the parents can contribute more, the amount should be increased, amount, Rogers said, provided it does not
At KU the full amount would be approximately $1,650 for resident students, Rogers said, because the estimated costs for the 1973-74 academic year for Kansas residents is $2,175. For nonresidents, $800 must be added to the estimated cost.
exceed one-half of the student's total educational expenses.
A committee for the Office of Education in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare now surveying the financial aid offices of the department formulate other guidelines and regulations to accompany this part of the bill. It has not been decided whether the student will follow to apply for a BEOG.
"ONE SAD THING is that they (federal people) immigrated involved. Reagan's policy immigrated involved."
Rogers said he beeped that enactment of the bill would be detained until the 1974-75 period.
ACCORDING TO ROGERS, the deadline for scholarships, grants, scholarship halls and NDSL loans was changed from Feb. 15 to Feb. 1 because of the lengthy course each students grades and financial statements that were submitted to problems also with the applications from incoming freshmen, who many times did not understand the requirements.
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If you are a student of high academic standing and are interested in a legal career, come speak with our representative.
A representative of The Institute will visit your campus on:
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5
Meetings and interviews will be held in the Kansas Union, Governor's Room. There will be group meetings at 6:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. for those interested in learning more about the Institute. Individual interviews can be scheduled at 30 minute intervals from 10:30 a.m. until 12 noon and from 1:00 p.m. until 3:30 p.m. A trip up street will be posted in the Kansas Union. Student Union Activities Office Bulletin Board.
NOTE: If the above date is inconvenient for you, please call or write The Institute for information.
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Kansas State University Ahearn Field House January 19 Two Shows January 20
This is it, friends and neighbors! A once in a lifetime footstock stompin' collection of the finest musicians in American country and folk music. All will appear each night, so take your pick—Friday or Saturday. Shows begin at 7:30 p.m. and will lay in the early morning. Tickets are $45, $50, $50 and $60 at the following places.
Manhattan Union ticket window, Conde's, and Gramophone Work
Manhattan: Union ticket window, Cande's, and Gramophone Works
Topeka: Washburn University Wita, Budget: Wales Records and Records
Lawrence: Kief's
Mail orders. Send check payable to "KState Union" to Scruggles, Attention Center, R State Union, or Eagle River.
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4
Monday. December 4. 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Presidential Powers
During the last session of Congress, Nixon vetoed an $18 billion authorization of federal aid to waste treatment facilities on grounds that the measure was excessive and inflationary. Congress voted overwhelmingly to override the President's veto. Now, in keeping with the pattern of his previous decisions, Nixon has chosen to ignore the constitutionally granted powers of Congress and to proceed as if the powers of the president were unbounded and God granted. Nixon, against the explicit and legal direction of Congress, has interfered with the disbural of the funds in question and has announced that Congress or no Congress, he will disburse only half of the allocated funds.
This form of government, rule by presidential decree, has become a favorite with Nixon. When a simple person can obtain the particular bill or measure won't suffice to produce the desired result in Congress, Nixon simply goes on
TVand announces that it will be as he directs. Congress or no Congress
Thus, Nixon, by presidential decrees, can create Phase I and Phase II price controls. Nixon can decree Vietnam Game Plan I and Vietnam Game Plan II and Vietnam Game Plan "Peace Is At Hand" ad nauseum. Nixon can decree Russian President Putin's Mideast Policy, as though he were the only policy maker the constitution provided for.
As a result, the powers of Congress have been so drastically circumscribed that it functions as little more than a rubber stamp and debating society. At any rate it seldom serves as a national governing body without the president's prior consent.
Substitute for Victory
Perhaps the only decree left for Nixon to issue is the one liquidating this outdated, expensive, unprotective and inflationary remnant of the original war. He seems to care, he could probably get away with it. —Robert Ward
Rv.JOHN RAII.EY
The retirement of Gen. John D. LaVelle for the bombing of unauthorized targets in North Vietnam by elements of the 7th Air Force has been the subject of considerable controversy among various factions of the citizenry. Some people think the general should be decorated with a medal, while others feel the freedom they think is essential to a commander in the field. At the opposite end of the spectrum are those people who think the general should court-martialed for committing war crimes. Between these two extremes lie countless explanations of what happens when the extremes, are based on suppositions and incomplete information.
The LaVelle affair can be placed in perspective when compared to the situation that existed in Korea in 1851 which culminated with Douglas Maarthur being recognized of his ability to be recognized that because she is similar only a slight resemblance to each other, carrying such an analogy too far can be dangerous.
Early in 1951, UN forces in Korea were just beginning to turn the tide that had thundered down upon them in November of the year. A group of Chinese volunteers had crossed the Yalu River. MacArthur, a flamboyant, outspoken personality, began to public statements criticizing administration policies.
He advocated enlarging the war by bombing supply bases in Iraq, and also by bombing China, allowing the Nationalist Chinese to invade the mainland and, if necessary, launching an American invasion of Vietnam.
The MacArthur affair was the result of a difference of opinion over the invasion of Manchuria. MacArthur viewed Manchuria as "an enormous handout, with an enormous handout, without precedent in history"
"There is no substitute for victory," MacArthur said when addressing a joint session of the Senate after Truman had relieved him.
The administration viewed the
war as a limited conflict for limited objectives. A full-scale assault in Korea would require U.S. forces that were then weakening of Europe might prompt Soviet aggression there, not to mention the effect it would have on the collective security system the U.S. was trying so hard to contain. Omar Bradley stated, if such an expansion were approved, we would be fighting "the wrong war, at the wrong place, at the wrong time, with the wrong leadership," the administration was to present the integrity of South Korea.
MacArthur was relieved of his command for insubordination. On Dec. 6, 1950, Truman ordered MacArthur to clear all statements with Washington. On March 20, 1951, Washington informed MacArthur that the U.S. and the world were seeking negotiated settlement to the conflict. MacArthur defiantly called for the enemy's surrender, thus, killing the move toward negotiation.
"By this act," Truman later recalled, "Macarthur left me no choice. I could no longer tolerate his insubordination."
On April 11, Truman relieved MacArthur of his command, replacing him with Gen. Matthew B. Ridway.
LaVelle, by bombing unauthorized targets, is also known as a hacker. This little is known about the facts surrounding the case. Some of the facts are known and, in the interest of safety, must be aired before the police.
Limited warfare, by its nature, demands that rules of engagement (ROE) be formulated to keep the attacks within the scope of the objectives. Unfortunately, the ROE are altered in some respect at least every three months, according to a report by Force Magazine. Sometimes, the ROE are waived for a particular mission. They are usually open to interpretation.
A retired Air Force major has stated, "it used to take four days of 'going through channels' from request for a B-215 strike to bombs on target. Needless to say, we dropped a lot of tonnage on places
where the enemy had been."
in the air, a sloppily made업 in. The plane that a pilot could respond if he were fired upon from the ground or menaced by a hostile aircraft. Such a response is known as protective reaction. This ruling allowed American planes to strike in North Vietnam as small or小型 missiles or anti-aircraft wings were directed at U.S. planes.
Part of the confusion arose as a result of technological innovations on the part of the North Vietnamese. SAMs had a radar system as a part of their guidance systems that when unseen by the aircraft were device in the cockpits of U.S. aircraft. Such a detection constituted an attack and would facilitate a legitimate response. The North Vietnamese responded by tracking U.S. planes with an air defense radar which did not sound the alarm. Upon learning sites were, essentially, open game.
In another case, a MIG fighter had harassed a BS2. Fearing further attacks, LaVelle spoke to the Chairman, and requested permission to make a strike within the Navy's sphere of operation. He then asked the Chairman, and requested clearance it with the Navy and the strike was made.
The final case under investigation originated when LaVelle requested permission to hit "airfields, missiles, and radars, marshaling and storage areas. According to LaVelle's company, the Services Committee hearses, the authority that came through "directed maximum-effort strikes in North Vietnam up to twenty degrees (north latitude). It did not respond to any of our requests. It didn't say maritime threats," she said. It didn't say airfields; it said maximum effort up to twenty degrees."
So far as the committee members are concerned, the transcripts of the hearings contain nothing that Gen. LaVelle should be condemned for. Instead, the committee seemed to have a master mander who must work within the confines of the ROE today.
Hush, My Dear
What will, Women's Lib heating up, the following might have been written yesterday; but it wasn't. It appeared in the UNIVERSITY WEEKLY for Nov. 8, 1895.
One can't help wondering why it was written, 'wav back then'
Hush, my dear; lie down and slumber,
Close your little eyes so bright;
Mamma she's gone to buy some lumber,
She'll be home some time tonight.
During the hearings, LaVelle described an incident that occurred when reconnaissance planes took off from a namees building of up to 60 tanks that had been mobilized in preparation for the invasion of Vietnam. The tanks were only light or nine miles from the DMZ.
She has worn my Sunday breeches,
Gone a sportin', too, my joy.
there! I've dropped a dozen stitches
Of this damned old sock, my boy.
Lay down pet; do not bellow,
Papa's with thee; do not fear;
Mamma will be pretty mellow,
When she comes home, full of beer.
On thy down couch, my sony,
Gently rest thy little head;
I must go to the kitchen, honey,
Lest I burn that bread of bread
"We wanted to hit those tanks in the worst way we could." LaVelle testified, but "they were not firing at us and were not activated against us. . . We didn't hit those tanks. Senator."
-Thos. C. Ryther Journalism, Emeritus
In spite of the circumstances surrounding the bombings, one fact emerges that even common member Barry Goldwater had a secret weapon. La Vella "cannot be defended. We must be to disobey orders."
Judicial Code As News Censor
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court has issued a sweeping new judicial code which would restrict the authority to censor the news.
The new code, of course,
doesn't mention censorship, but it
would broaden the Justice
Department's right to classify
information. The government
also wants more to hide embarrassing
information than to protect
security information.
In other words, the secrecy stamp is used primarily to keep the American people from finding out what the government doesn't want them to know. The government may call this "classification," but we call it "censorship."
The new judicial code also pointedly omits any special privilege for newsmen to protect their confidential sources. This change allows journalists to continue jailing newsmen who refuse to disclose their sources. The effect, of course, will be to limit the right of the press to investigate official secrets. For a case such as this, he brings his sources will lose them.
Newark newman Peter Bridge went to jail rather than reveal his sources. Now Judge Charles Older has clashed Los Angeles newsman William Farr in the poke for保护 his sources.
dersanding, however, that the north Vietnamese would pull back the bulk of the troops into embarkation centers and ship them home in progressive stages. Only 20,000 would be left behind to police the Communist-controlled areas.
The Honorable Older, thereby, is upholding the power of the government, Kremlin-like, to interfere with the people. If newsmen can be hauled before a judge every time the government wants to learn the identity of their sources, they will soon be left with none but safe, official sources. It has been our experience that official sources have given newspapers anything the government doesn't want them to know.
Judge Older has reversed a fundamental precept of democracy—that the individual has the right to know just about everything about the government, but the government has the right to know very little about the individual. Increasingly, the government behaves as if it has knowledge of every corner of every citizen's life, while keeping its own activities secret.
intended that the press should be a watchdog on government; ; that the press should serve the governned not the governers; that freedom of the press should be a license for newsmen to dig out the government's abuses and reveal them to the press.
Thomas Jefferson, the father of democracy, understood that the press must be free to criticize and condemn, to expose and oppose. "Were it left to me to decide," he wrote, "whether we should have newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter."
Our founding fathers clearly
He understood that a free people are better off with no government at all than with a state. He said he would Nor did he retract his statement after he had been abused as President by irresponsible newspapers. Rather, as he newspaper of the first term, he wrote to a friend:
But South Vietnam's President Thieu angrily angled at any secret understanding and insistence on drawing a drawal agreement. In his view, the North Vietnamese are invaders and aggressors. Dr. Nguyen said trying to find a compromise that both Hanoi and Saigon will accept.
"We trust (the democratic experiment) will end in establishing the fact that man may be governed by reason and reason, therefore, be to leave open to him all the avenues of truth. The most effective, hitherto found, is the freedom of the press. It is, therefore, that first shut up by those who fear investigation of their actions."
White House sources, who have not seen the transcripts but have participated in the policy debate, said the United States definitely reneged on an agreement that was reached in Paris in October.
Footnote: Contrary to public reports, the President and Dr. Kissinger have had no engagement with the no response to a Vietnam settlement. The President is so pleased with Dr. Kissinger's handling of the negotiations that he no longer responds and every work of the transcripts.
The new judicial code—while recognizing the privilege of lawyers, doctors and clergyman to protect confidence—would deny the same right to newmen. The institution clearly places freedom of the press above freedom to practice law or medicine.
The main sticker was the withdrawal of North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam. Hanoi refused to acknowledge that its troops were fighting in the same time upon the right of all Vietnamese to resist foreign "aggressors."
This dangerous code, which would have the effect of abridging freedom of the press, will become law automatically 90 to 120 years later it is submitted to Congress in January unless both houses reject it.
These were such basic tenets of Hand doctrine that Dr. Kissinger decided to negotiate around him. He was more interested in producing a workable settlement than a public document. So he sent his agent to the embassy, but never mentioned, a North Vietnamese withdrawal.
The transcripts of the secret truce talks have been so tightly
guarded that few people, other than President Nixon and Henry Kissinger, have access to them.
He reached a secret un-
Copyright, 1972. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
THIEU
"SAY, WHERE'S MY DOVE?"
James J. Kilpatrick
Public Disenchantment Increases
WASHINGTON—If one theme occupied us more than any other, throughout the campaign year, it was the theme of public disenchantment. Let me return to that theme with some fresh evidence and many observers have sensed but not precisely define.
Alabama's Governor Wallace, one of the nation's canniest politicians, was the first to catch this feeling and to put it on use in the hustings. Over and over he spoke of the little guy who is "fed up to here." Fed up with what? Fed up with just about what? Govorowe would kick off the little guy's grievances: schools, health care, soft-hearted judges, incompetent bureaucrats. The crowds loved it. As they say in the South, he had 'ern nodin'.
Many top correspondents, notably David Broder and Haynes Johnson, wrote of this same mood. Everywhere one sensed a disenchantment with old institutions, a kind of alienation between the people and their government, a feeling of frustration. It was a emergent as i
Four or five weeks ago the Harris Survey, one of the nation's most respected polling outfits, took this temperature. More than 1,600 households, chosen at random, were asked to state their level of confidence, only some confidence, or hardly any confidence" in the leadership of sixteen areas of public interest.
in psychiatry, 30 percent in religion.
The poll dramatically confirmed our impressions.
Let me take the press first, so this paragraph will not get chipped off if the column runs too long. Back in 1966, when the Harris survey asked the identical question about confidence he had great confidence in the printed press; that figure is 18 percent today. Twenty-five percent had great confidence in television six years ago; that figure has dropped to 17. Some 21 percent formerly reported in advertising; only 12 percent vote the same view today.
Harris found sad evidence on the public view of our educational system. A 33 percent had great confidence in education, but six years of campus activism, teacher strikes and student walkouts have the future this fall is 33 percent.
The figures are sobering, dismaying, frightening. Those of us engaged in communications plainly stand in need of relentless self-examination. It may be, in the case of TV and the press, that
Governmental institutions, as one might have predicted, show a slight drop in confidence" response has dropped from 14 to 27 for the Federal executive branch, and from 42 to 21 for the Congress. The same案庭 Court has fallen in public esteem, from 11 percent to 28.
we are wrongly blamed for honesty reporting the deterioration of our society. The bearer of bad tidings historically is unloved. But there may be major flaws in the job we are doing. In any event, not even one person can meet confidence" in the media.
The shifts of public opinion in other areas are still more dramatic. Six years ago, 72 percent of the people had great faith in doctors and their medicine. The figure has slumped to 48 percent. It is worse for banking and finance—down from 67 to 39. The scientific community has suffered in this shift, and its numbers dropped to 68 to 37. Only 35 percent of those polled now express great confidence in the military, 31 percent
Readers Respond
Architecture . . . Bloodmobile
Grant
To the Editor:
The Tuesday, Nov. 28, 1972, issue of the Kansan carried an important story buried under the misleading headline: "Architecture School Losses Grant." That headline should more properly have read: Architecture School Rejects Pendleton for that rejection have important implications for higher education at KU a. d throughout the United States today.
The federal funding agency, ACTION Office of Public Affairs, made its grant of student living cost stipends on a full year of volunteer participation in assigned antipiety projects.
KU'S School of Architecture and Urban Design had already initiated and implemented a similar program of 16 weeks in which students enrolled in the semester's academic credit within the school, proving its dedication to the basic concepts of practical experience, public and community service, volunteerism and off-campus education.
Letters Policy
The Architecture School's disagreement with the federal funders lies in their mandate of a full year's service, which would deprive students of the opportunity to pursue elective courses offered by itself but within the University. Rightly, Dean Charles Kahn and his associates have determined that there is more to the education of an architect than pregraduation office experience, however useful that may be, and that they will not determine that they will need their students merely to secure federal funding.
Letters in the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and ahmum-
all capital letters. All letters are subject to editing and condensation,
according to the style guide. All staff must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty and staff must
provide their name and position; others must provide their name and
address.
At a time when bureaucrats, in both federal government and foundations, more and more use funding as a whit to enforce their
Carl Leban Acting Chairman
whims on well-meaning but weak-willed educators, it is heartening to have the example of strength and principle set by Dean Kahn and his school, and they are to be commended and congratulated for resisting such injurious pressures.
★ ★
KUBloodmobile
To the Editor:
This month the semi-annual KU Bloodmoble was held. For the first time in the KU history the quota was met with 807 pints or 101 per cent of the goal. The bloodmoble is flicted with injury or disease is represented in the blood donations.
Pershing Rifles Company E-7 wishes to thank the 802 who gave blood and the h.u.ndrs more who volunteered but were deferred for medical reasons. They can be assured that their gift was deeply appreciated. Many of the are the people who helped run the visit. Such organizations as
CWENS, Lawrence Gay Liberation, Alpha Phi Omega, McDonald-Badweiser, Jaycee James, and Shakey's were instrumental in the success of the Bloodmoble. Most of the department's publications fully supported the Bloodmoble. Among those active were the Grapevine (Business School), the Faculty Newsletter, and the Toll纸 Paper (Oliver Hall). Off campus, the Lawrence Journal of Fashion KUOK, KANU, KLWN, KUDL, and WDAF-FM gave excellent coverage of the event.
We also remind you that the Bloodmobile will return to KU in February and people here once again can "give the gift of life."
In a review of the 800 survey sheets and an intensive study of water resources, the State drive (1116 pints in three days) certain problems have been noted. A careful evaluation of the data is needed to alleviate these problems.
KU Bloodmobile Fall 1972 Shawnee Mission Sophomore
This is a terrible indictment, but there is no reason to challenge its accuracy. In each of the 15 fields, in both the private and the public, he has lost much of the confidence they once enjoyed. A prodigious task of public relations lies ahead, but it misses the point to suggest that the nation's institutions have been insulted. They had better begin by searching their very souls.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
---
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THE UNIVERSITY DAY
KANSAN
America's Pacemaking
college newspaper
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser Susanne Shaw
editor Scott Spender
Jan
BUSINESS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
business Adviser Mel Adams
business Manager Dale Pipergerides
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University Daily Kansan
5
32
KANSAS
23
KANSAS
24
Kansan Staff Photo by T. DEAN CAPLE
BY DON PF ANNENSTIEL
Kansan Sports Writer
Some persons may have thought the University of Kansas lost to Vanderbilt and the University of Oklahoma, more excessive height advantage. Other people have thought the loss was due to KU's inexperience. And some may have claimed that the center of Danny Knight was unable to play.
Cold Shooting, Fouls Do'Hawks In
But coach Ted Owens was quick to point
Jon van Prade Kolff (22) C O P D B
called for his third personal foul and, as a result, sat on the bench the remainder of the half.
Juns One Past Rick Suttle (33)
Javahaws lost first home owner since 1948
Senior forward Wilson Barrow and sophomore core Rick Suttle also got into serious foul trouble in the first half, which Owens having to play the reserves.
"THE TURNING POINT was when we were ahead, 14-8, and we went down count." "We had to move back," she said.
"We had a little bit of control early, but not too many field goals." Owens said how worked hard not to foul. I just know how to explain it by just the first game."
left in the half. Suttle was called for his third with 4:19 left and Owens had to go to freshman Derrick Glanton for rebounding strength.
2 More J.V. Games Canceled
University of Kansas basketball coach Ted Owens announced Sunday that the junior varsity games scheduled for 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday nights in April will be held because of numerous injuries on the J.V. squad. William Jewell College and
out Sunday that the reasons for the Jayhawk loss were the cold shooting KU offense and excessive first-half fouling by the 'Hawks.
Missouri Western were the scheduled KU opponents for those games.
Owens said the "Hawks" junior varsity game with Johnson County Community College set for 5 p.m. Saturday in the Field House would be played as scheduled.
. . . Jayhawks lost first home opener since 1948 . . .
In the first half Saturday, no fewer than 18 personal foul calls were called on KU. With less than four minutes gone in the game, sophomore guard Marshall Rodgers was
At the 7:17 mark, Vanderbilt's Rod Freeman, who was the Commodore's leading score with 19 points tied the game, 20,99 with a 10-foot jump shot.
said. "Then we lost Rodgers on fouls and we also lost our momentum."
KU's foul trouble in the meantime, was worsening. Barrow got his third with 6:08
Southern Cal, OU, Auburn Increase Stocks with Wins
By The Associated Press
The unbeaten Trojans of Southern California are certain to remain first in the hearts of their countrymen and the ballots of the pollers after trimming Notre Dame, 45-23, but Auburn and Oklahoma have some friends, too.
Here's proof:
"I'm 22 years I have always hesitated to put one of my teams ahead of any of the others, but today I'm putting this team at the top of the list," said Auburn coach Shug Jordan. His ninth-rated Tigers spied second-ranked Alabama's bid for a perfect season, winning all their points in the final period, including two touchdowns on blocked pups.
"—This is the best team I have ever played. Powed Oklahoma coach Chuck Fairbairn. Fairbairn."
THE LOSS of the 'Hawks big men under
thems also reduce the effectiveness of
KUU's attack.
However, most of the glory on the final weekend of the college football campaign began with a win.
wipped No. 20 Oklahoma State 38-15 and won the Big Eight championship.
Saturday's unquestionable hero was Trojan sophomore Anthony Davis, who scored six touchdowns, including a 97-yard return of the open kickoff and a 96-yard duplication after 10th-ranked Notre Dame pull to 25-23 late in the third period. Davis also had scoring runs of one, five, four and eight yards.
"This is the best team I've had since I've been at USC," said Coach John McKay, not to be outdone by Jordan and Fairbanks. McKay is in his 13th season and has only to beat Ohio State in the Rose Bowl to clinch his third national title.
Competing against some of the best gymnastic teams in the country, the University of Kansas squad finished eighth among 18 schools with 144.65 points in the annual Rocky Mountain Open in Denver Saturday.
Head coach Bob Lockwood described the Jawwahys' performance as their best effort in the Open since the squad began competing in the meet.
By BRETT MARSHALL Kansan Sports Writer
KU Gymnasts Finish 8th in Denver
"We met many of the top college gymnasts," Lockwood said, "and 'I'm very pleased with the showing of the team. Everyone had a good attitude towards a team effort and it showed in our high finish."
JOSEPH TOOK third place in the parallel bars, setting a school record in the parallels matches with a mark of 9.5. The old record was 9.4 set by Terry Blanchard last year.
The bright spot for the Jayhawks was Lawrence senié co-captain Marc Joseph.
Wildcats Don't Miss Rupp Beat Michigan St., 75-66
By The Associated Press
By The Associated Press
basketball passion was a missed milestone. It was over the weekend. It wasn't the 89th straight victory for national champion UCLA, either.
For the first time in 42 years Adolph Rupp, the legendary Baron of the Blue Grass, was not at the coaching helm when he led of Kentucky Wildcats opened their season.
Until John Wooden and his UCLA Bruins came to the fore in the last decade, Rupp and his Kentuckians dominated the college scene. The Baron, a star player for Kansas 50 years ago, retired at the end of last season as the sports winless coach.
Vanderbilt's Commodores stamped themselves as a threat by whipping Kansas, 72-64, as a follow up to their victory over Louisville on Thursday.
Tennessee down South Carolina 55-45,
Seattle beat Houston 65-61, the St. Mary
Guelph hambled California 70-70, little Siena
Cleveland 76-72 and 76-24.
Carried Brigant Young, 66-64.
Gus Ganakas, Spartan coach, praised Kentucky as "one of the top teams in the country." The Wildcats were ranked 13th to LA in The Associated Press preseason poll.
UCLA enjoyed an 81-48 rump against U. of Pacific in chalking up its 48th in a row. If they keep winning, the Bruins can set an all-time record of 61 straight when they play at Notre Dame Jan. 27. That was the site of the Bruins' last defeat. 89-42. Jan. 23. 1971.
"I feels good to have a winner." Hall said. "I may not have gone back to Kentucky."
Elsewhere, Purdue made Fred Schaus' coaching debut a success by whipping Indiana State, 94-70. Minnesota routed Western Illinois, 111-64. Memphis beat St. Thomas, 56-42 and Memphis State trampled Missouri Western, 108-74.
Gale Catlett, new coach of Cincinnati, had a winner as the Bearcats whipped three consecutive wins in the first half by referee Robert James who called four technical fouls on him.
Under new coach Joe Hall, Kentucky opened on the road Saturday with a 75-66 victory over Michigan State after surviving a three-point lead at 14-10. Kentucky lead to 62-41.
The Broncos went ahead late in the first period by rolling 78 yards on nine plays. The big gain was a 55-3 interference penalty for his second half of four. Floyd Little scored from the two.
Notre Dame absorbed a 96-87 defeat from Michigan at Ann Arbor as much-heardal Campy Russell made his varsity debut by scoring 21 points for the Wolverines.
KANSAS CITY (AP)—The Kansas City Chiefs, unable to move on offense, interception touchdowns by tight safety Jim Kearney and linebacker Bobby Bell to beat the fumbling Denver Broncos, 24-21, in National Football League action Sunday.
The Chefs didn't get a first down until 9:05 remained in the first half but led at that point 10-7 after the Kearney's interception and Jan Stenauer's 41-yard field goal.
K.C. Rebounds With 24-21 Win Over Broncos
"Marc had his best meet ever," Lockwood said. "Not only did he do well in the parallel bars, but he was our top score in the all-around."
Lockwood was also pleased with the performance of the young members on the
The Kansas City defense accounted for all three touchdowns. Some four minutes before Belle's theft, Johnson went back to the field and blocked Culp's灌 on it at the Broncos' 14.
Kansas City displayed real signs of offensive life only once in the first half when Len Dawson hit Otis Tyers with passes of 17 and 8, respectively. Goal the 26 and Stenner kicked the field goal.
"The underclassmen showed a lot of poise," Lockwood said, "and I was really proud of them. They did much better than I expected."
Kearney romped 29 yards after swiping a Charlie Johnson pitch in the second quarter. Bell huffed and puffed 61 yards with another Johnson tassle late in the third period.
The only other Jayhawk to compete in the finals was Lawrence sophomore Tim Quinn. Quinn finished seventh in the vaulting competition.
The Broncos made a last-ditch effort, moving 76 yards, Fran Lynch scooting over from the eight with 2:55 left, but it was too late.
The Bronze struck back and traveled 80 yards in 11 plays.
★ ★ ★
Johnson pitched to Moses in the end zone from the one.
Five plays later, Ed Podolak swept around right end for the touchdown.
Among the competing Big Eight schools, the Jayhawks placed fourth. Conference champion Iowa State easily succeeded in defending its Open title, and Nebraska and Oklahoma also finished ahead of the KU squad.
"We finished only 10 points behind Oklahoma." Lockwood said, "and this shows a marked improvement over our past performances."
"Tim's performance was indicative of how the whole team competed." Lockwood said. "This showing will give the team a big lift going into semester finals."
The Jayhawks will compete next in the league Open tournament Saturday in Iowa City.
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
Conference All Games
W L T W L T
Oklahoma . 6 L 1 0 10 1
Nebraska . 5 1 1 8 2 1
Colorado . 4 3 0 8 3 0
Oklahoma St . 4 3 0 6 5 0
Iowa State . 3 4 0 6 5 0
Iowa State . 2 4 1 6 5 1
Kansas . 2 5 0 4 7 0
Kansas State . 1 6 0 3 8 0
'Hawks Form Basketball Club For KU Fans
Henry Shenk, University of Kansas faculty coordinator and Bob Nelson and Bill Lienhard of the Chamber of Commerce Sports Committee, announced Friday the formation of the Lawrence Jayhawk Basketball Club.
"We ran early, but after the fouls, we didn't because we couldn't get the ball off the boards," Owens said. "There is no question that inexperience was a factor."
The club will hold six lunch meetings in the Trophy Room of the Allen Field House Annex. Ted Owens, KU basketball coach, will talk at each meeting. The luncheon meetings are scheduled for Dec. 13, Jan. 10 and 24, Feb. 7 and 21, Mar. 7.
Membership, which includes lunch, is open to all persons and can be obtained by sending $7.50 to Lawrence Basketball Club, P.O. Box 545, Lawrence, K6044.
The three-guard system employed by KU looked completely different Saturday than it had earlier in the week in the intraqsa game. Although 'Hawkaw guards Tom Kivisto, Dale Greenlee and Marshall Rodgers shot at a 70 per cent cup in the Crimson-Blue
STUDENT PRINT & DRAWING SALE
★★
| | **fg**-fg | **hf**-fg | **rb** | t | f | p |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Burrow | | | | | | |
| Surrey | | 9.16 | 1.2 | 8 | 5 | 19 |
| Sussex | | 9.16 | 1.2 | 8 | 5 | 19 |
| Kettert | | 4.12 | 1.4 | 3 | 4 | 4 |
| Kettert | | 4.12 | 1.4 | 3 | 4 | 4 |
| Haver | | 2.4 | 0.1 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
| Haines | | 2.4 | 0.1 | 1 | 4 | 4 |
| Glanton | | 3.2 | 1.8 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| Glanton | | 3.2 | 1.8 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
South | | 0.0 | 1.0 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
South | | 0.0 | 1.0 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| | **fg**-fg | **hf**-fg | **rb** | t | f | p |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cambridge | | 9.77 | 1.2 | 8 | 3 | 19 |
STAINED GLASS
CERAMICS
JEWELRY
WEAVING
December 1-3 SUA Gallery
VANDERBILT (72)
Fools made a considerable difference in the game's outcome, but the rebounding totals also told the story. Vanderbilt outbounded the Jawhaws 51.38.
Although it was KU's first season opener loss since 1954 and its first loss in a home opener since 1948, Owens was not discouraged.
| | kg/cm² | fb/cm² | rb | ft | pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Compton | 6.5 | 15 | 7 | 14 | 15 |
| Freeman | 6-15 | 13 | 5 | 17 | 18 |
| Lignon | 3-6 | 0-4 | 5 | 2 | 6 |
| Lignon de Kirksoff | 3-4 | 4-6 | 10 | 2 | 6 |
| Breda von Kraft | 3-4 | 1-4 | 19 | 2 | 6 |
| Ford | 1-4 | 0-4 | 7 | 2 | 10 |
| Ford | 1-4 | 0-4 | 7 | 2 | 10 |
| Totals | 34-43 | 36-43 | 51 | 10 | 73 |
SPECIAL MONDAY-WEDNESDAY Vista
"WE NEED TO grow up fast since we play so many team early," he said, "but everyone played as well as they could be a good group, but we have to respond."
Owens said he was most pleased with the play of Glanton, 6-8, who filled in for Suttle and Luckett. "They have a system that has only practiced with the basketball squad since the end of the freshman football season, played only three minutes but gave five points and grabbed three rebounds.
DOWN 38-32, KU started the same five men in the second half, but it made little difference as Vanderbilt vastly improved its 28 per cent shooting. The Commodores jumped to their biggest lead, 62-46, with 6:42 left in the game.
Freeman dominated the rebounding for the Commodores, pulling down 17 rebounds while his teammate Jan van Breda Kolff, a guard, grabbed 10.
Also Some
In the upcoming week KU will play three games: Indiana Tuesday, Murray State Thursday and Iowa Saturday, all in Allen Field House.
Strawberry Shortcake
Vanderbilt 38 34 - 78
Kansas 32 34 - 64
Tennessee
game, they shot only 25 per cent Saturday. Owens was heustent to criticize their play.
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"After all, two of those guards were playing in their first game before some 14,000 people," he said. "They wanted to do well for the crowd."
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6
Monday, December 4, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Abortion Laws
(Continued from page 1)
realistically; how does she view abortion; has she adequately gone through the decision-making process; has she thought about the future in regard to the abortion? Does she have any experience with a woman answer for herself during the counseling sessions, if she is so inclined.
THE COUNSELOR will explain and instruct the patient on the female anatomy and the physiology of reproduction and the management of the patient does not know in this area.
An integral part of the counseling procedure is a detailed explanation of the operation itself and of the common aftereffects of a therapeutic abortion.
--described the other sensations the patient might expect to feel as various instruments
The common abortion method for pregnancies of less than 12 weeks, takes about five to ten minutes. It is called a D and C and involves scraping the uterus. The counselors said that there might be slight cramping during and after the abortion and
They described the after effects, such as minimal blinding and spotting for a few days. They strongly encourage the women to remember the after effects to the clinic immediately.
In the final phase of the counseling sessions advice and instruction are given on the necessity of contraception and methods and use of contraceptive devices. Many contraception interventions will insert an intra-uterine device (IUD) after surgery, if the woman requests it.
"EVERY SESSION is different," said a counselor at a hospital which deals primarily with abortions in Kansas City, Mo.
"Many women are afraid, some are completely on their own, some women get confused."
else for the problem and the decision and suddenly realize that in the end it is their problem and their decision completely," a counselor said.
Another counselor said there were differences in the age groups and the problems involved. If the woman is under 18, and some are as young as 14, the parents must be actively involved, because they must have parental consent for the operation.
"In these cases we usually counsel the parents also," a counselor said. "It's a real shock to them; they have to realize that their daughter is not a kid anymore."
Many women are in college, and they must deal with financial problems, interruption of career plans or forced marriages. According to a counselor, many women in this situation feel that they cannot tell their parents.
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Campus Briefs Correction
The Opera Workshop performance of "The Secret Marriage" will be 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swartborn Rectal Hall instead of today as reported in Fridays' King's
Law Interviews
Dean Richard J. Childress of the St. Louis University School of Law in St. Louis will be on campus for individual interviews and a private visit by students. The Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Childress will interview students from 10 a.m. to noon and 1:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Appointments for the visit will be made as soon as possible with Gladys Padget, College Office, 208 Hard Hall.
Music Therapy
The Music Therapy Club will meet at 8 tonight in Room 344 Hayworth Hall to discuss "Music and Drugs" with speakers from headquarters. Dr. Lawrence Helfer from the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Topeka will also speak to the group.
French Club
Israeli Show
Cercle Francais will have its annual Christmas Program 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. A meeting and refreshments will be served.
The pantomine group of Tel-Aviv University in Israel will perform at 8 tonight in the University Theatre. Admission is free. The group was organized in 1969 by Yoram Boker, who is considered one best pantomine artists in Israel. The group will perform its season before leaving for Europe and the United States. This is its first tour of North America. The group was formerly scheduled to perform Tuesday.
Recital Series
The University String Quartet of the University of Kansas will present a concert in the Faculty Recital Series at 8 ontnight in Swarthout Recital Hall. The program will include "Quintet in E Flat Major, K. 407" by Mozart; and "Quintet in E Flat Major" by Robert Schumann. The recital is open to the public without charge.
Jayhawker to Choose Hilltopers This Week
Hiltopter awards, awards given to seniors who, "have left their mark", on the University will be chosen this week by members of the Jayahawker staff, according to John Bailey. Whitewater senior and Jayahawk editor.
Bailey said Sunday that the selection would be made by a committee of four staff members. The names of the members of the board are listed in the yearbook is distributed in late Amlr or May
The winners of the award will be notified by mail when the committee reaches its designee.
"The award is a yearbook award, not a University honor," said Bailey. "We decided that since it was a yearbook award, it should be bestowed by the yearbook staff."
According to Bailey, "we try to choose people who have excelled not only in their academic endeavors, but also in ex-
"People who can excel in one area or the other, are outstanding, of course, but people who can excel in both are very rare and should receive recognition in some peril. Thus, the purpose of the award is to show our appreciation for their accomplishments."
Selection of the Hilloppers is very difficult, Bailey said, but no one not so much to do as when it does not.
“There are 42 nominees this year,” said Bailey, “and all of them are outstanding individuals. It will be the job of the staff to decide which of these nominees embodies the characteristics that will place him in the distinctive category of the Hilltoner.”
The Hillipper award is not given on the basis of popularity, said Bailey, because if it were, many of our top campus producers wouldn't stand a chance.
"A Hilltower is a producer," Bailey said. "We can't afford to look at how many toes he's stepped on to accomplish what he has. Our job in selecting these people will be strictly an objective evaluation of their accomplishments.
"I decided on using the staff to choose the winners for several reasons," he said. "The members of my staff are who are choosing the winners." The staff is part of a petition. They are well-informed people who
have been involved with the campus for three and four years."
In addition to selecting the Hilloppers the Jayhawker staff has been occupied with preparing the photos and copy to meet its first deadline scheduled for today.
Among the various articles being submitted to this year's publisher, American Yearbook, is a picture story on the city of Lawrence.
"Lawrence is as much a part of the University as is the campus itself." Halley said, "Often, the relationship is played down, though it is a mystery to me why this
"We're including several pictures from around Lawrence for the same reasons we are including a section with pictures of campus buildings.
"The yearbook can only justify its existence by fulfilling two purposes: it is a record of attendance and it attended the University during the time span covered by the book and it serves as a reference for people who are interested in the history of this was like during a certain period of time."
Also featured this year will be expanded coverage of athletic events. According to Bailey the events will be covered in fewer cases because of a more efficient use of space.
"We don't want to bore people on 20 pages of football pictures," said Bailey, "when the subject can be covered in eight. One of our main objectives this year has been to avoid repetition. I hope we can do away with it entirely."
This year the Jayhawk will be one volume instead of the traditional four.
YARN-PATTERNS
NEEDLEPOINT-RUGS
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 EAST 8th 841-2656
10:5 Mon.-Sat.
15
15
DAY MARATHON for the XMAS-NEW YEAR Holiday
From Tues., Dec. 19th will present the best local & regional bands 5 nights a week thru Sat., Jan 4th
CENT BEER!!!
ONE BLOCK WEST "The Collegiate Night Club"
Each Wed. & Thurs., your first drink will cost you fifteen cents during this fifteen day marathon!
NE BLOCK WEST
New Year Celebration—Sat., Dec. 30th
Now Year Colobration—Sat., Doc. 30th
State Kansas City —Be 18 & Have I.D.
Line Kansas
Earn $100 a month and a Marine Corps commission through the Platoon Leaders Class.
ASK THE MARINE CORPS OFFICER SELECTION TEAM IF YOU QUALIFY FOR ONE OF THE PROGRAMS THE MARINE CORPS HAS TO OFFER. THEY WILL BE LOGATED ON YOUR CAMPUS IN THE MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING ON THE 4TH OF DECEMBER 1972 FROM 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.
Eligible college men
can earn $100 a month each month of the regular school year. It's like a $900 annual scholarship.
The PLC also offers a
CW2
The PLC also of a few good men the chance to learn to fly free. The Corps pays the entire cost of civilian flight instruction . . worth about $800.
The Marines are looking for a few good men.
All PLC leadership training takes place during the summer when it can't interfere with your college career Upon graduation PLC members are commissioned Second Lieutenants.
an entertainment package fit for human consumption.
---
festival of the arts
festival of the arts
Festival coupons available at enrollment for 6.00 and at the SUA office after enrollment. Individual night tickets worth 10.50.
Monday the production of Kurt Vonnegut's "Happy Birthday,Wanda June"
Tuesday the musical innovations of Robert Moog and the Moog synthesizer
Wednesday the comedy of David Steinberg:the songs of Jimmie Spheeris
Thursday the contemporary criticisms of drama critic John Lahr
Friday the movements of the Eleo Pomare black ballet troupe
Saturday the sounds of B.B. King
festival of the Arts1973 April 2-7
Alexander's
Wide selection of gifts
- Wide selection of gifts
- Cash & carry flowers every day.
826 Iowa 842-1320
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
RISK Laundry
One-day Service
Expert, Economical Laundry Care
613 Vermont 843-4141
WHY RENT?
Tony's 66 Service
BUCKINGHAM UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
Be Prepared!
fune-ups starting service
Lawrence, KG6044
lowa V1 2-108
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
- Amps
- Music
- Recorders
- Accessories
- Accessories
- Guitars
Open Evenings
Rose
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
1903 Mass. 843-3007
THE HILE in the WALL
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-745-8 We-Deliver - 9th & 11th
CSC TOYOTA INDIUMP
★
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa
Ph. V13:1535
Wkday 8-6 10-3
Sunday 10-3
Parts at a discount
LENNY ZEROS
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Discounted Records A non-profit organization
710 Mass. 841-2200
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
PHONE 843-1211
Maupintour travel service
If You're planning on FLYING, Let Maupintour
Let The Maupintour You!
(NEVER an extra cost for airline tickets)
CARTOON
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 4, 1972
KANSAN WANT ADS
7
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Five Days
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
FOR SALE
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kananan to students at the university to create national awareness. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
Western Civ. Notes - On sale! There are two ways to use them. If you use them.
Either way it was a valuable lesson the same thing — "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Matters. (2014)
We pay top dollars for good clean Volkswagen
cars. We call Airbnb Volkswagen Volkswagen, 847
526-3100.
BAGIERS—We have em with big cuffs and plains
to keep them in. We also have a look at the
WHOOSE HOUSE (part of Campbells)
Moving -must sell quick 1969 Great Lakes, **12**
X*65** 3 bedroom, bathroom washer dryer, carpet, skirting
clean and nice and $480 or less for terry. After 3
184-3972. Amit B424-841, ask for Terry. After 3
184-3972.
PULL-SHAGY UHGUNARIAN SHEEPDOG PUPIES
TITLE, BUNDLES OF, LOVE, AKE
PULL OLD ENGLISH CROSSSED $ C. E. VAN
GOSEN, MJCUTH, KA 6055, 913-786-290
72 Kawasaki 175ce tread, absolutely perfect, 675c
mile, will sacrifice, 935c - 843 - 3870, 12-4
--conditioner—Westinghouse, 110 volts, 5,000
volt, $149. Margaret, 84-968-968.
for $110, Margaret, 84-968-968.
1966 WB Vim english transmission and tires.
Max J Friesen, Overbrook, Kan Phone 685-2732.
Mobile home - BR. 12 of 60. Hacienda, air conditioned, central heating, gas. Modern park; clubhouse; carport; storage room; m
Ford Van-1882 "Brand new eugene. Body rough.
Perfect. Perfect. Must sell to finish. 12-5
841-2846. Dearce
Laborador -Doberman mix puppies. Black with markings. Intelligent, good companions, good housekeeping.
Corrugated boxes, assorted sizes for mailing or
storage. Smith Paper, 1928. Mood Board. 12-5
843-2544
Tired of where you live? Try something new!
Instructor calls for contract for
16 semester. Call Sue at 845-4909.
Semester Call Sue at 845-4909.
Marlin 30-30 lever action rifle, with case and box of shells, $60.85-1747. 12-3
Naimish Hall contract for sale. Available in-
imitation at 843-621-601, Room 728. 12-0
MG5 65. Very good condition; new clutch, new front end, and rear brakes. (664-616-818) Leave message. Will consider trade.
72 T2530 Suzuki cycle, 3 helmets, tarp, 6 speeds
enlarge shape, still under warranty. $850.
$125.
Men or boys mid AMP AMF bicycle, near new,
$35. (Sold new for $60). $85-1747. 12-5
3 month old Wurlitzer organ, with bench books,
warranty $1500. sell for $1200. $1843-74-15 127
PARFISM MINI CONTACT ELECTRIC ORGAN
PARFISM MINI CONTACT ELECTRIC ORGAN
C Steve Baev at 834-6282. 18-5
Chin Kink. 3/4 length fur coat. Real good con-
trols. Extra warm, a mermaid型 speaks to
record changer with a separate mic.
1944 and '60 to Chev's. Take your pick or take unkown
m.j.h. Campus Motor Marital Mint. 12 w. 23rd. $345.
1964 and '70 to Chev's. Take your pick or take unkown
Ford pickup. F250 3/4 ton, 4吨, good farm
car. Campus Motor Mafr. 817-692-8890.
252. 842-732-8890.
25-2
25-2
Austin Healy 10th-9th, 4-6, both top. Austin Healy 10th-9th, 4-6, both top. In addition to his first job at Campus Motors he debuted First $5k which is in the Campus Motors 2017 Rewards Program.
1953 Mustang GT 6 cyl. 3 spd. good top
1953 Mustang GT 6 cyl. 4 spd. good top
Motor Motor, 1318 W. 2xrd. 822-3903.
Motor Motor, 1318 W. 2xrd. 822-3903.
Dual Showman, amplifier; 100 watts, 2 D-160
speakers, excellent condition, $589 Call 864 782 3700
One Naimish contract for sale, Desperate to sell,
will give a discount. Call me, 842-623-0928.
Two former Mr. Guy employees to sell personal dresses. Latest hotels at lowest prices. Look here. Bues suits size 34, 42; thirteen-151-31; 151-31-48; 151-31-48;裙子*10-12* Call Mike or Pill. M43-7566.
M19 MG Midgel, 8pcd, 4 gpd, magge, good tijen
Mart, 151 W. 82d, 842-3060, 12-4
M19, 151 W. 82d, 842-3060, 12-4
Drake SW-4A. 11-Band short wave receiver less than 50 cm. Handheld binoculars, but 6 month old rider. Robust binoculars, but 6 month old rider.
1 male Naimath contract for sale. Room 1023.
814-3047 12-6
2 female 13th contests for spring semester.
3 male 14th contests to need sellos to Linda or Christy. 12-6
Uncle Lumonita le tires and stereo tape. Two Good-
Quality Dash Mounts. Offer Amps 750 deck S.O.S. Bahn 842-412-14-3
and 842-412-14-6.
1 Nalmish contract, girl. Spring semesters. 73.
Must sell immediately. Call 843-1589 anytime. 12-6.
CAMPUS MOTOR MART GET ACQUAINTED SALE
with each vehicle sold during this week, including acquainted vehicles to 12-8-12.
1970 Tow Truck with electric drive, beige, ready for winter. $116
thin shape, ready for winter. $116
tow truck, rear radio, rear defogger, pop-out window. $125
1969 WV Bus b. pass. AM radio. $125
1969 WV Bicycle b. pass. AM radio. $125
1969 WV Bicycle b. pass. AM radio. $125
1969 Automatic power steering A-, new
automatic power steering A-, new
Automatic power steering A-, new
1968 Mutang hardtop, BPV, a-B.-C. $145
1968 Mutang hardtop, BPV, a-B.-C. $145
1968 Buckley cowboy. Full power. $145
1968 Buckley cowboy. Full power.
mason with immaculate int. & out. $145
Dirt 2 dr. sedan, 6 cyl. 3rd. Economy model. $145
*Don't forget.*
Realistic STA-120 receiver 2 optimus 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
The Museum of Natural History GI shop has a large selection of fine art, antiquities and the化 in any city. Come in soon, while the selection lays. 12, 14, 20. (Steve Darnell)
Sony stunner—Sony HP-460, 465, 75W, dwatt.
Sony stunner—Sony HP-460, 465, 75W, dwatt.
19French brand, 19seconds, 18sped, bike, 2
19French brand, 19seconds, 18sped, bike, 2
VOLVO P-1800+ Sports car. Overdive, new
sically scaled body. VOLVO P-1800+ 833-843 around p. 12-8
around p. 15-6.
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list.
Baskets, hanging plants, terrariums and wine racks.
Wine racks. Pricess to fit the slimmeted bag. You've got to UPPER DECK to believe it. 11-12
How about taking a unique Christmas gift, one that can be sent to someone who calls him on vacation at 143-6944 or evening, or just a greeting card?
1970 green Schwain Varsity 10 speed. From and
to the top of the hill. Average
content condition: 841-2847 after 3.90 min. 12-6
1518 W. 22rd CHEVROLET MOTOR MART
842-3903
Stereo set-up. Dynacom A2-55 speakers and ampli-
sions, excellent condition. 842-7170.
Best offer.
2 WV studded snow tires and wheels. White walls. $33. Call 843-2819 after 10:55. 12-5
Kittens, 8 wks. old, free, Call 842-1762 or stop 12-7
1000 Ohio
Wildhairding from KU. Munt sell Gate House Spring semester contract. Call 842-7377-1722
over a week, the U.S. (the Christmas rush that is) to give away $10,000 room in the Student Union. Interesting things are doors. Prices will be open Tuesday and Thursday at 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Everyone is welcome on Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Everyone is welcome.
Give your curious parents a pipe from our gift box for Christmas for the children. 12-12
Wallet. 15 W. 98
Attention Audiophile (1) Acoustic Research 4X X
Acoustic Research 4X X warranty; warranty for the pair, M. furbitur,
M. furbitur,
The largest handdrawn jewelry selection in the
world. Handmade from gold and silver from
the Hodge Pledge 15 W. 9 H. 8 R.
1967 Ford LTD, 4D, Dr. HT, P-B, P-A-C, a-N-cely
1968 Ford LTD, 4D, Dr. HT, P-B, P-A-C, a-N-cely
1827-8818 after 400 hours in good condition,
127-8818 after 400 hours in excellent condition.
1995 Cullman S. Power brakes, power steering air, and hydraulic pumps in very good condition. Jeff Jerew, Jr., in very good condition.
2. Natham Hall contracts for Spring semester
841-3374 or 842-2390 to sell us
841-3374 or 842-2390
Wait, the '8' is just one character.
The text is:
2. Natham Hall contracts for Spring semester
841-3374 or 842-2390 to sell us
841-3374 or 842-2390
190 WV Sedan, 4 p.yd. yellow, AM radio, good
rice. 1725 $Cars, Motor Motor Mart. 1518 W 232-
262.
1088 Open Railley Kadet, red. 4 qpd, full instrument. 2005 Kodak Kadet, red. 4 qpd, full instrument. 2005. Moss Campus Motor Mar. 15th W. 32rd R. 2nd S. 9th W. 6th S.
1965 Ford Mutant, V8, auto, red. ready to go.
18-88 Campus Motor Mvt 15.18W. W32d 18.38
Bogen T-35 enlarger with 8 mm or 7.5 mm Voule lens
JUWK~110 lb weight set. Make offer Old photo
size 26"x18". Prices are $45-$95, 12-8
$vox combo包 $82-$483 JUWK~110
1963 Chev Impala 2 door htd. Good condition.
1965 Chev Impala 2 door htd. Ait Altra access,
Mon. Thursday, 841-2500
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd on Highway
194; Northside Country Store, Bridge-
Antiques, collects used furniture and
sardons of other items. Also, we have fruits and
grapes. B-9-5 Seven days 843-3158.
Allenbend. 12-12
Ota Black Labrador Retriever female puppy,
Don Call Fli 3-4492 or M 3-2856
12-8
Nalimith Hall contract for sale for spring semester.
Call 843-1025, Rich. 12-8
62 Chevrolet, 6 cylinder, 3 speed, manual, good
cheap transportation. Ak for Drive 85
12-4 12-6
Two metal studded Goodyear polytile tires
two metal studded Goodyear polytile tires
like New Drive, like New Drive,
86 Evening, 84-9231, 12-8
86 Evening, 84-9231, 12-8
TRAC 4020 tape recorder or deck. Automatic reverse internal and external gice mice. 25 laps tape recorder.
FOR RENT
Bk1 boots-LaTePurse Ladies size 8½ M. Excel-
tion kit is pre-applied gradually only one 12"
Bk4 84-6490 (2)
For rent to 4 responsible girls. Available Dec. 1. Complete 2nd story a bedroom furnished apartheid-style suite with carpet and month plus utilities. Phone 843-8932 after 5 p.m. and all days Saturday and Sunday. At 927 Oakland.
Microphones-2 - Electro-Voice model 625 mkz
years old. $20 for case, with case: 625 mkz
years old. $20 for case, with case: 625 mkz
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP
INSURANCE IN WAR-FLORT LINGS!
Try 2 best bedrooms in campus.
from stadium. Easy walkway distance of major
campus buildings.
swimming pool; security services. Reasonable rates, furniture allowance. ideal roommates.
Santa Apts, 1123 Ind. Apt. 9 or
address 84-213-6196
TRAILRIDGE 1, 1½; and 2 bedroom apartments, gas and water paid. Walk-in closets, fully equipped kitchens, private patios balconies. Mrs. Cook or call 848-7233 500. W Sixth St. 12-12
Studio eight—rooms with a view. $62.50, every paid, no deposits. 1329 W. worth. 12-11
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows, tile flooring, patio, kitchen, laundry, bathing, borders K'U', and near low tide areas.
Unique & exciting
A beautifully furnished
gray carpet & drapes
Sag carpet tiles
Fold down & permanent beds
Built in desks & study lamps
All all buildings
Most have utilities paid
Free cable TV | pest control - trash pick up
Apt for rent - 313 rooms. heated and air condi-
tions Suitable for two. Closet to campus 184-650-830
One Spring semester contract for Jawhack Tow-
Tow, 843-891-8000, and near campus. 843-891-8000,
843-891-8000, at 6:00 p.m.
Homes for rent, 2 and 3 bedrooms. Students more than welcome. 843-3600. tf
CIRCLE REALTY
Looking for something to read
Downtown furnished apartments. One or two
furnished rooms in a basement. Inquire
Imailo Mineis Hardware, 765 Mass. St., 12-4
2 btbm. 2 bath hair satr. Bn. Serv. supplies, wc-
wash. $16/month, utilities, partially paid. Corse by
Champagne. Bn. Supplies not available.
MEADOWBROOK
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now winnable at the college and unfurished apts. for the Spring season. Special heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities required. Call 843-8220 or see at 7147 W. 19th, wb 18t.
Quitting school—must substitute my 18 bday, apt. 6,
fellowship class, for class of 18$100. All tuition paid will pay first.
School is $350 per month.
Contact us for something to rent? 782-7577, for 2 BR duplexes and 1-3 BR apartments start at $1000 a month. All are available for immediate use. After hours call Grain Stright 842-7851.
HAPPIENESS is living with friends in an establishment Room and Board from $45. Ask for Rmb. 85. Check out www.happieness.com.
Studio app. available now. Completely furnished.
Kitchen, laundry, dining room, parking, student room, $105; utilities
included.
To subbit 2 bedroom apartment in Jayhawk
Room. Call 841-354-3944. Clean, ques.
Furnished. Call 841-354-3944.
One one bedroom apartment. Furnished, close to
camp. Call for details anytime. 823-1066.
www.maclean.com
Take over lease 6 bedroom house. 2 full baths.
Pay $300 a month. near KU. Call 644-844-2
evenings.
Want to substitute spat. from Jan. 1st-May 30, Large
utility paid electrization, $179 monthly,
utilities paid electrization, $179 monthly,
Apartment for rent Comfortable, 2 bedrooms,
1 bathroom, walk-in closet. 1 block from campus. Take immediately or at
staff request. No phone calls.
Apartment to sub-lease. 12m. Jan.-August. Tenant to sub-lease. 12m. No phone to sew. 125 Ides Indiana, 103 Ides Indiana, 12-6
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
MENT. Think possible in these beautiful apartments
that we offer for shopping and school! Face full jail is only
available to school-age residents. Join Fair Hal
Apartment for rent, one block from Union, suit-
tled unit, available Jan 1st, furnished. 12-6
Call 841-296-181
84 Studios
$140 - $145 - $150.
24 One Bedrooms
$160 - $170.
Living in the best costs little more
MUST SUBLARE FOR SECOND SEMESTER
inhibited nise view utilities paid We will take a
routine view utilities paid We will take a
routine view utilities paid
70 Acres
k rent two bdm. 2 bath apt. fully carpeted.
conditioned (informal or informant)
accepting reservation for new tenant
Wide open spaces
Campgrounds
Swim + walk
Football
Softball areas
Gymnasiums
grounds
Day Care Center + pre-school
Join the Ridges Community and you'll find a group of kids who know more. West Lawrences, 1 and 2 bedrooms age 6 to 8.
Formalized 2 bedroom, set up for rent, 1703 W. 24th,
Miller Place, West Village. Shop with restaurants. Available
shopping center and restaurants.
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare & make your move to
15th & Crestline 842-420-12
800 feet west of 15th & Iowa 12-4
1 bedroom apt. Quel, skag carpat, wood pan-
tion, leather sofa, entertainment
130 Kentucky, No. P. Nr. 842-2605 12-7
40 Bend, No. P. Nr. 842-2605
Want fun or quiz for study? Consider this. Shave big room, all utilities included, males only. Show bath, and bath, 1 block from Unit I and Unit II. hawk7. Cale and wine, on Ohio. ICT. Call 12-68.
Beautiful uninfilled 2 bedroom apartment in
beautiful sublet. Has a fireplace. Cal 12-7
3396
To need to subluate one bedroom apartment, All rooms in the apartment must comply with view nice RU location. All unit occupy with view nice RU location. All unit occupy with view nice RU location. All unit occupy with view nice RU location. All unit occupy with view nice RU location.
Apartment for rent. One block from Union Suit-
tle, 123-456-7890, available Jan. 1st, furnished to
B41 891-268-9011.
APT. FOR RENT: 9th and Enerry, bedroom furniture
Christmas, Room 6141-2068 after 5
12-12
Christmas, Room 6141-2068 after 5
WANTED
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment Wednesday night. Jim sacks. All these interests. Saturday night.
Need 1 to 2 female roommates for second sense.
Need 3 to 4 female roommates for third sense.
each plus electricity. B45-468-2 per day, 5 p.m.
B45-468-3 per day, 7 p.m.
Two female roommates need to share house.
They must have a bedroom, a kitchen and
$35.00/mo. plus utilities $48.52; 12-4
room; $50/mo. plus utilities $48.52; 12-
room; $50/mo. plus utilities $48.52; 12-4
Considering a movie two minutes longer? Need one or more of the following: quiet, quiet, quiet; Roan-quiet, powerful. Call 811-3060, or try 811-4257.
Female roommate wanted to swim with a pair of 12-inch rubber diving shoes, laundry room, furnished, pool Cail 8423, laundry room, furnished, pool Cail 8423.
Two men to share a two-bedroom apartment in
London. One possible call: possible
6803 for further information.
12-5
4803
Female roommate wanted to share Jayhawk Town. A woman with a loving and great living. Any questions call Dina at dina@jayhawk.town.
Female roommates wanted, Quiet, comfortable at Park 25. Call 2:30 on p. 843-3474.
2 girls needed share apartment with other girl
2 girls needed $37 per month, per family.
Call 842-507-6981
12-6
Need papers typed? English education grant will be available. Email: linda.mcgrath@uva.edu 700-752-7634; mail a message, minimum $699. Call 814-645-8877.
Band for High School Christmas sem-formal.
Band for High School Operation and operator for
Vinland 19-12 after 5 p.m.
Adventurous and amorous types to try out pur new friends, or simply appreciate the delights to delight the senses. At the Hodge Podium, you'll find the best of both worlds.
Female roommate for 2 bedroom api $67 month
for 2nd semester. Call 843-8619. 12-12
3 studio buildings, but fun-loving need room head room. On own room is on bus route 50/$month plus utilizes $128.
Joe is getting married! Need someone to take me on the trip. The next 25 hours. Part 25: Apartment. $4 plus cancellation fee. Call (800) 321-5920.
Need one or two girls second semester at Jay-
mont. (Seniors must be 18 and older.)
83-B87 or S67 - come by 63, DJAway Jaxwells 12-8,
9-5, 10-4, 12-7, 11-8, 10-4
Small, fuzzy puppy for Christmas present. Prefer already house broken. Call 812-164. 258
NOTICE
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
inventory online and inform call 426-539-3000 at
426-539-3000 or visit www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com.
1518 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Que in 1518 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. A slab at stb. large, 4.50 lb. plate at bar-B-Q. A slab at stb. large, 4.50 lb. plate at bar-B-Q. Bare beef sand. 825 pound of beef $3.00; 1 chicken sand. 825 pound of beef $3.00; 1 chicken sand. 825 pound of beef $3.00; and Tues. cucumbers VI 2-9510, 915th Mm. on Tuesday.
*MEDALS FOR KILLING MEN-DISCHIONOR*
Helipersonalized medals help us eliminate such perverted attitudes. GAY
MENTION meets Monday, 7:00 p.m. Union office,
600 N. Union, 844-609-9121, write box 12,
Lawrence
For Free Birth Control Information, for preg-
nancy support, call (844) 361-5277.
Women Center, 864-444-1920. If no answer can be
found, call (844) 361-5277.
BAGIERS—We have 'em with big cuffs and pleats complex, the new 'em, the new 'em. compute the 'em, the new 'em. look at it. The new 'em, the new 'em. compute the
Students Have your Xmas kine party at Dunne
Meadows. You can walk 10 miles from the campus in Perry, Kern, 12-5
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAIRHOUSE - The finest
sound system in the world.
RAY AUDIO STEREO Kann, 6004. Phone #845-281-711
Choice holder菜 Aged and guaranteed. Sides:
Wholesale Meats. 3tl, lows 143 and 813. 10-12
Slices. Meats. 3tl, lows 143 and 813. 10-12
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of
Hodge Podges $ Come down and visit with
W. 9th. 12-12
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own tree with its hand-painted ornaments. Bring the tree to our warehouse. Lawrence East on highway 10. We'll count to county roads. East on highway 10. We'll open early a week before端午. Christmas Tree Farm. 5-9
A complete selection of Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley including Risk, Monopoly, Oolja, Swivel, Tweeble, Clue, Scrabble, Agravation, many may be can be had at the Hillersee Duckwalls.
TYPING
Theatre and dissertation typing, typing, paper, manuscript, and drafting. Work with bibliographies, plexus or allite. A vault experience. Call for applications at www.lab.mit.edu.
Extremely high quality work done by manuscript
editors. High-quality editing and proof-
ing. Kundu Davis, 845-600-800, Mush experience with
Japanese and English writing.
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other mice, type. Writing. Have electric type-writer with pica type. Accelerate and prompt writing of papers. Spell corrected. Photograph 845-954. Ms. Wright.
Expert manuscript typet with through knowledge of spelling, punctuation, and grammar will type these, term paper, etc. 4 years experience. Must be able to work in a team of 10, a.m. or between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. 12-8
Typing on elite wire typewriter in my account. No thesis necessary. Mr. Hayes会 12:42 0958.
Typing. my home. iMB.M. Selective print. Taming of variables. Saving data in disk. Simulations. Preloading data automatically. Tapping off.
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8
Monday, December 4, 1972
University Daily Kansan
TOMMY JOHNSON
Kansan Staff Photos by T. DEAN CAPLE
Child's Play Contagious
By ANN GARDNER
Kansan Writer
EDITORS' NOTE. This week has been proclaimed Kansai Head Start Week by the American Cancer Society.
When I walked into the Children's Hour Headstart Center, I intended to spend my morning observing the activities which took place there. I soon realized that one does not remain for long an observer at Children's Hour.
I wanted to get a first-hand look at the Headstart Center, and what I got was some first-hand experience in working with a lively bunch of four-year-olds.
PACIFIC CITY
Children's Hour is in what used to be Jolliffe Scholarship Hall. It is part of the government-funded Headstart program for low-income families for public school.
Guidelines, based on annual income, are set up by the federal government to determine which children may attend these programs and participate in the program free of charge.
THE DAY STARTS for the teachers at about 8:30 a.m. Monday through Friday mornings. This is when teachers get together and plan the day's activities. It is also important that a day care center, it is necessary to plan both creative and educational projects.
What the teachers classify as "free play" is the first order of the morning. The
wrote down the message dictated by the child for the card.
After about one-half of an hour of quiet, the classroom is suddenly filled with a dozen energetic children ready for a morning of fun.
children are allowed to participate in any one of several supervised activities.
VIEWING BY MICHAEL R. NASH
The day I was there, one table was covered with paper. A mountain of molding clay was dumped in the middle and everyone was ready to work. The children were satisfied with what they kneeded until they were satisfied with what they then moved on to another lifeless chunk.
WHEN ASKED WHAT she wanted to tell her mother, one little girl said, with a couple of fingers in her mouth. "This is a pretty picture!" At least when her mother read the
THE CHILDREN fashioned a wide spectrum of imaginative figures ranging from a clay bowl to a character from "I lost in Space," complete with space helmet and jet-powered backpack. Although it had been quite some time since I had been challenged by the soft clay, I managed to keep up with them by making the longest snake on the table.
Snack time brought free play to an abrupt
end and everyone pitched in to help clean up the room so that they could have crackers and hot cocoa. While we were eating snacks, I overheard one little boy across the table mention something about himself and the Jackson Five.
Noticing that there was some resemblance, I innocently inquired if he was a member of the Jackson Five. An indignant man who had been a member and he declared, "I am the Jackson Five."
LUNCH WAS followed by a vigorous round of牙刷 brush, and the children returned to the room to divide into small groups. Each of the teachers, including myself, took a group of three children to work with in small groups.
One of the groups played a game of bingo using colors and I was given a bingo game that dealt with the alphabet. Here I suffered my first trauma as a Headstart teacher: as a patient, he wrote down markers, one little girl suddenly put her head down on the table and began to sob.
I was completely baffled about what caused this outburst until a little boy in my group told me in a very "dumb teacher" tone of voice that she "wants the colors."
After realizing the heart of the crisis, I was able to console my tearful friend and thank him for his help.
WE THEN JOINED another of the small groups to take a walk outside. Everyone ran to get his coat and, after what seemed like 45 seconds, he stepped back and tugged on gloves, we were off.
Unfortunately, because of the cold weather, only one chicken dared to show his face outside. This situation was short-lived, however. The lure of the children proved to be too great a temptation for the chickens and soon the pen was full of hens and roosters performing for their delighted audience.
The main attraction of the morning was a chicken pen not far from the center. We trooped through mud and slush and finally reached the place where the chickens were.
Family Unit Key in Aiding Juveniles, Panelists Say
When we returned to Children's Stair, the children dove into one final project to finish the morning. With scissors in hand, they cut out pictures from wallpaper samples and made greeting cards for their mothers. One of the teachers helped with the glue and
The application of family therapy to juvenile problems to "build commitment" within the family unit was one of several panel discussions among juvenile authorities Friday who were attending the second day of the tenth annual Kansas Seminar on Delinquency Prevention and Control at the University of Kansas
The discussion, entitled "Dealing with Juvenile Offender Families", included several examples of family therapy, a new approach to the rehabilitation of juvenile offenders.
Since most of the girls at the school are from low-income families, many parents could not afford the trip to Beloit, she said. The visitation program, which pays the participants for transportation, meals, one night's lodging and "token payment" for lost work time, has made parental visits possible now, she said.
The Girl's Industrial School in Beloit
began a parent visitation program in September which enabled the parents with limited salaries to visit the school, accredit their teacher Jessinger, a social worker at the school.
card, her workmanship was guaranteed a compliment.
All of the children received a hot lunch before they bundled up once again and make it to school.
Smiling broadly and grasping their mothers' cords tightly, they ran out to cars driven by volunteers which would take them home.
If that sounds like a pretty big morning, it was. The children didn't look tired at all, but then four-year-olds never do. Each of them would be scared, afraid, as if they had accomplished something.
According to Herb Williams, one of the Accreditors at Children's Hour, these children don't have a very good image of themselves when they first come to the center. This is because when they come, but when they leave they take a lot of confidence and love with them.
Report on Cramped County Jails To Be Released by KU Professor
A report describing current cramped conditions of the Douglas County jail system will be submitted to a Douglas County Committee on Correctional Services facilities at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night in Lawrence Public Library auditorium.
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
The report is being made in conjunction with a statewide citizen jail survey initiated recently by the Kansas Association for Mental Health.
Forrest Swall, chairman of the committee and instructor in the School of Social Welfare, said Saturday the report would be presented by Bill Arnold, associate professor of sociology and committee member.
Arnold is also chairman of the Douglas county chapter of the Kansas Council of Counsel.
Swall said the purpose of the meeting would be to present a progress report on the survey of county correctional services and facilities begun by the committee in Max.
THE REPORT WILL be presented from a factual standpoint, Swall said, and will summarize data gathered by the committee to investigate and confined in Douglas County.
The committee was appointed by the Board of County Commissioners following an unsuccessful bond election for the construction of a new city-county governmental center last winter, Swall said. The center would have included a jail for 89 prisoners, serving both the city and the county. Currently two iails are being used.
"Present jail facilities are considered extremely inadequate for the number of prisoners confined, limited by physical inadequacies for needed human services, and totally without space for juvenile care," Swall said.
The 25-member committee has been gathering information by studying the records of local law enforcement agencies since May, Swall said.
"WE HAVE STUDIED sheriff's records, and also police, juvenile court, county court, and district court records," Swall and we have interviewed a lot of people.
The response has been one of total cooperation. The feeling we have generally agree on is that the business community
"The Board has received a great number of complaints about Kief's not giving a dislike to him."
The contract with Kief's states that class card holders can receive a 20 per cent discount on purchases from the store, according to Hackney.
"I felt that the CPA would be the people to clear up this misunderstanding. The board is certainly not pleased with the way Kief's has handled the situation."
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"For instance, if we recommend the release and recognition plan, in which a prisoner is released on his own recognizance (the understanding that he will return), then bail bondsmen will oppose it."
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SWALL SAID THE COMMITTEEH had worked to coordinate its programs with related state departments, including the State Department of Welfare, the State Department of Health and the Office of the Penal Director.
Two major recommendations will be involved services and facilities, SWA.
Committee members have attended several related conferences, Swall said, including a Seminar on juvenile Services and Facilitation to take place last week at the Kansas Union.
HIKING BOOTS
"We have set March 1 as the target date for making our recommendations to the county commission and once we begin to start running in some differences, of course."
community can come up with will be welcome.
Kie's has not been giving a discount to class card holders as they agreed to do in a contract with the Board of Class Officers, Hackney said.
A complaint was filed Friday with the Consumer Protection Agency by John Hackney, Wichita senior and class instructor Klef's Record and Stereo, 711 W. 23, W.
BELTS
"As chairman I'm operating on the assumption that we have to be concerned with more than just a place to lock people up," he said.
In addition, the committee has met once a month to study present conditions in the wall emphasized that all committee meetings were open to interested citizens.
"One of our intentions is to maintain some visibility of the committee's work. Swall would have to come at time to submit a plan for a vote, the ideas already have had a substantial exposure."
SWALL SAID THAT in making the survey the committee had used a study guide premise for Clearing House on Correctional Prison Cleaning and Architecture in Urbana, IA.
812 Mass.
The statewide project to study local jails in Kansas originated at the Johnson County office of the Kansas Association for Mental Health. W. 80th, Overland Park. Joan Puttchoff, a community worker and school administrator, is the director of the program.
The survey is funded by a $20,428 grant
from Governor "Barnaby" Committee on
criminal Administration.
"Correctional arees are changing" Putthoff said. "It used to be that people behind bars wouldenders out of sight and behind bars. Now they are convicted, we should be serving prisoners.
Putoffhue last week that the project would attempt to accomplish three objectives: to educate citizens about local jails, to get citizens to work for better systems and to change the attitude of the community toward the system.
"THE ONLY WAY to get anything done in the penal reform is by making citizen judges."
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ZZ-ZZ
Rock-A-Bye Astronaut Like A Jayhawk
While sporting enthusiasts stomp their feet to the rhythm of the Jahwak fight song these two weeks, University of Kansas graduate Ron Evans and the rest of his team jumped into the air on Saturday.
The Apollo 17 mission lasts for 12 days and one of those morning the three astronauts speed toward the moon may be awakened by the KU band playing the music.
The idea was originated by Bob Ryan, Houston, third-year KU medical center student and assistant NASA flight surgeon.
"They play different songs to awaken the astronauts each morning," Ryan said, "I thought since he was a 1956 graduate of KU it would be appropriate he awakened by the music."
Ryan said he took the idea of playing the KU fight song to the NASA flight director who said there should be no difficulty in finding a morning to play the song.
"Mission control said they would play to the play but I'm not sure of their," Ryan said. "I am trying my best to see if they will play it during lunar
TOPEKA (AP)—Newly elected Republican leaders of the Kansas Legislature did not accept an invitation Monday for a meeting with Democratic leader Docking but promised a new era of cooperation between the House and the Senate.
Docking had invited the newly elected leadership of the legislature to confer with him at the state executive mansion at 2 p.m.
Other than Lt. Gv. elect Dave Owen, only Democrats showed up for the meeting.
Cooperation Era Promised bv GOP
Duane S. "Pete" McGill, newly elected speaker of the House, and Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R-Prairie Village, nominated for the top leadership post in the senate, said their schedules Monday were so pressing they could not meet with the governor.
Both maintained they were not rebuffing Docking and would like to meet with him.
MGILL SAID he was committed to meeting with House members, some of whom had driven 300 miles to be in Topeka to speak. He also pick the leaders for the upcoming session.
Also on schedule was a 3 p.m. reception honoring House Speaker Cal Strowig, who is retiring from the legislative scene after serving in office for the American nomination for lieutenant governor.
Bennett said he was committed to meetings with the 26 other Republican candidates.
James Shaffer, the governor's press-
secretary, said those present for the
conference had been made up of local
members.
SHAFFER AID Rep. Richard "Pete" Loux, D-Wichita, minority floor leader in the house, made a late appearance at the meeting because of other commitments.
In a prepared statement, Docking said the informal meeting at the executive mansion would be held.
1 "expressed to those legislators attending, my desire to work closely and productively with the legislature as we work on bills, trips with the issues of state government," he wrote.
"AS IN THE PAST, I will invite the legislative leaders to meet with me regularly at Cedar Crest, the executive mansion, throughout the 1973 legislative session. I hope these meetings can be used to address the executive and legislative branches of Kansas government establish and maintain co-operation throughout the session."
Steineger, D-Kansas City, and Joe Warren, D-Maple City, floor leader and assistant floor leader of Senate Democrats; Pat Burnau, administrative aid to Docking, and Don Matlack and Tom Van Cleave, legislative liaison for Docking.
"I was disappointed more legislative leaders did not attend.
Shaffer said he did not know whether the governor would make any further attempt to meet with the Republican leadership prior to the session.
Bennett and McGill said they have scheduled a lunchmeeting of the Republican leadership Tuesday and that they plan to meet two or three times a week
during the legislative session at breakout, hunch, or on other occasions as cir-
"WE WILL HAVE communication on all issues, particularly policy matters," McGill said.
"We won't play games as have some leginaltures in the past."
He was referring to jockeying between the House and the Senate, which has occurred frequently in recent years, in adoption of the viewpoint of one particular legislative branch, or to enhance the power of the senate.
"There will be equal participation." McGill said.
He said the leadership fully anticipates having a legislative program which will be announced publicly in advance of the Jan. 6 date for convening the 1973 session.
"It will be a program Republicans can work for," McClill said.
The rest of the senate leadership lined up like this:
MAJORITY LEADER Joseph Harder, R-Mountaine, who defeated Sen. Bob Storey, R-Topeka, by a 15-12 vote in the Republican caucus.
Minority Leader—Jack Steinger
-Danaus Chan, Kan. Who?
-Thomas P. Kennedy, Democrat
caucus after Sen. Franklin Gaines, D-Augusta, withdrew.
Assistant Minority Leader—Joe Warren, D-Maple City, who it is said may be pushed by Democrats as vice president if that position is created.
MINORITY WHIP Gaines, freshman
guestion who has been serving in the House
Here is how the other house leadership posts were filled:
Majesty Leader—Donn J. Everett, R-Manhattan, who on won an invitational vote after Rep James Maag, R-Dodge City, withdrew.
Speaker Pro Tem- Kenith R. Howard, R-Overland Park, who defeated Ansel Tobias, R-Lyons, 39-38, in the GOP House caucus.
Assistant Majority Leader and Caucus Whip- Maag, who had the support of younger GOP members of the House for majority leader.
Minority leader—Loux, D-Wichita, who was unopposed to keep his post.
Assistant Minority Leader—Harley D. Huggins, D-Kansas City, Kan.
MINORITY POLICY Chairman, or whin·John Carlin. D-Smolm
Minority caucus Chairman-Loyd E. Andrews, D-Wichita.
Bemnett, who spent Monday afternoon interviewing Republican members of the Senate to learn their preferences on committee assignments, said he hoped the lineup on committees and chairmanships can be finalized by the middle of this month.
83rd Year. No. 67
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Report Suggests Cut in Courses
Institutions also reported that it was common for students to hold voting power in academic and administrative policymaking groups with the exception of faculty members with voting specifically with faculty affairs. The reverse practice, that of faculty members with voting memberships on student governing committees, was not common.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
The report said that the state institutions followed a general policy of allowing research during the decision-making process by having the choice which might be affected by a decision.
By GARY ISAACSON Kansan Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 5. 1972
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Monday that the recommendations made in the Council of Chief Academic Officers (COCAO) report on improving higher education in Kansas would have little effect on the University of Kansas.
The report, which was two years in the making, was adopted last week by the
In the area of student rights, the report noted the rapid development of firm policies and practices in the past decade. The report indicates a minority of students distrusted the motto on their institutions, and that no doubt this had part of the reason for the development of firm policies.
The report, which the state Board of Regents released Monday, recommended the discontinuance of 20 graduate programs at the University.
The other institutions reported that student participation in policy decisions was common and sometimes surpassed the 20 per cent figure.
"I can't foresee any major impact from the report because most of the recommended programs don't have much activity right now," Nichols said.
Student Role In Decisions Reported Up
The report based its findings on student life from information submitted by the Chief Student Personnel Officers of the Regent institutions, which reviewed existing student service activities and identified emerging issues.
The report noted that the written policy of the University of Kansas, which requires 20 per cent student representation in any policy-making body, was the only written policy covering student representation in any of the six Regent Institutions.
By JOHN PIKE Kansan Staff Writer
The student voice in policy making at the six Regent institutions in Kansas appears to be substantial and is apparently increasing, according to the study prepared for the Council of Chief Academic Officers (CACO) by the Council of Chief Agents Monday.
See STUDENT Next Page
Regents as a guideline for improving higher education in the state.
COCAO, which is made up of the academic vice presidents of the six state schools, prepared the report under the supervision of Dr. Joe McFarland, regent's academic officer. The 138-page report conducted two years of a review and study of current academic programs offered in the state system of higher education.
Ambrose Sarkiss, vice chancellor for academic affairs, is the KU representative on the Council. He replaced Francis Heller, professor of political science and law, who resigned from the academic affairs office this fall.
Saricks said that the discontinuance of courses reflected the decreasing enrollment pattern in the state. He said that although there had been minor gains by the three universities in the state, the other state institutions were down considerably.
"Because of the decreasing enrolments, the base budgets of the schools are going down," Saricis said. "We had to decide what we could cut to bring down costs. Therefore certain programs were recommended for discontinuance."
THE REPORT also set down guidelines which would guard against unnecessary duplication of programs in the state. The report, released last year, program that did not produce at least one
See REPORT Next Page
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Lonborg Named Interim Athletic Director
.. Past athletic director will assume post Jan. 1
Lonborg Gets Athletic Post
Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, athletic director at the University of Kansas from 1960 to 1964, was appointed acting athletic director today by Chancellor Raymond Nichols until a successor to Wade Stinson is assigned will assume the interim position Jan. 1.
Stinson, when he announced his resignation Nov. 15, said he did not want to remain in a "lame duck" position until a successor could be appointed. Stinson was KU athletic director for eight years and succeeded Lonborg in 1984.
Nichols, in a statement scheduled to be released today, said he was certain Lonborg would do an outstanding job as interim director.
"I greatly appreciate Dutch's willingness to assume temporary responsibility for the design of the program."
Lobeng said that he was surprised by his appointment as interim athletic director, but he said he would be willing to fill the position until a replacement for Sirinson was found.
"His years as athletic director were marked by many successes and I am sure he will be able to manage the department of the student body, faculty and alumni."
"I am pleased to be able to help out," he said. "As you know, athletics has been my whole life."
World Nuclear Depository Proposed
By DIANE YEAMANS
BY DIANE TEAMMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
"The IAEA is extremely interested in an international program for nuclear waste disposal." Zeller said. "There is better than the one that保证 the proposal will be accented."
Two University of Kansas proponents of an international nuclear waste depository in Antarctica said Monday chances were good for international acceptance of the plan last week's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conference in Paris.
Edward Zeller, director of the Radiation Physics Laboratory and professor of physics and astronomy, presented the plan and was accompanied by Gisla Dreschhoff, visiting assistant professor of physics and astronomy.
The International Radionuclide Deposition (INTERHAR) is to be a permanent international depository for high-grade rare waste in the middle of Antarctica.
"If anything is ever to get a critical and proper review," Zeller said, "this thing has a chance for it. It is receiving a very fair hearing."
ZELLER said it was the only comprehensive international plan for a disposal presented at the conference. It was also the result of a study that been considered for a storage medium.
THE PROPOSAL states that nuclear
Although the proposal was read to 200 of the 268 scientists attending the conference at the end of Tuesday's session, Zeller said the attention was good and the overall feeling toward the proposal favorable. Questions consisted of technical clarifications and the safety of transporting nuclear wastes, he said.
wastes will be solidified in cannisters that will melt their own emplacement shaft in the ice due to the heat of their contents. The shafts will reheat themselves and the radioactive wastes will be irrevocably buried.
At the present time, Zeller said, they are hoping that the IAEA will allocate the funds or award grants to him and Texas Inc. for the development of a research TERRAD, for the continuation of research.
THE IAEA may now set up a committee to avoid further evaluation of the protocol zellet.
One French representative, Zeller said, expressed great interest and called the INTERRAD proposal "Good," "different" and "progressive."
In the past the IAEA has rarely taken any and of action, but it seems that the United States
"We have offered them (IAEA) a position where they can expand or execute the power they have," Zeller said. "We consider the IAEA to be a group of competent scientists who have the power and should be willing to assume the responsibility of an active role."
By allocating the power of administering a nuclear waste disposal to the IEA, Dreschoff said, it will discourage political activity and agency's operations by member states.
The need for an international nuclear waste depositor was apparent at the Paris Conference, Zeller said, because many nations represented there indicated they possess possible means of disposing of nuclear wastes or had done very limited research.
One of the major factors influencing the differences between nations, Zeller said, is the fact that many people
"THE RUSSIANS don't have to care about the environmentalists," Zeller said. "They can do what they want and the public can't object."
Zeller said the conference was a "testimonial to the American way."
Though the British have no environmental movement, Zeller said, the Germans do and the effect shows in national policies.
Japan has a major problem in finding a site for a nuclear waste depository, Zeller is the cause of the number of earthquakes there. The Japanese representatives said they had considered depositing the wastes on an island.
Presently, the Russian representatives are storing their nuclear wastes in stainless
tank tanks above the ground, Zeller said, though they emphasized that this "does not solve all of the long term problems." The Russians, according to Zeller, said they want to solidify the wastes and put a strong focus on finding a low cost means of disposal.
THE RUSSIAN representatives also stated, Zeller said, that they did not have the transportation problem other nations have since the wastes were disposed on of the spot of origin. Zeller said he understood this to mean that the wastes were being pumped into underground wells through beams and pipes to the surface. The Russians stated they did not know where the wastes were going after disposal in the wells. Zeller said.
The Germans have the only operating depository in the world. At the present time they are depositing only low and intermediate-level wastes in the salt mines but expect to begin storage of high-level wastes by 1977. According to Zeller, the German government is planning to examine seven more sites for deposits of nuclear wastes.
See WORLD Next Page
Zeller said the Germans were afraid that other European nations would ask the Germans to dispose of their waste for them, since they already have a disposal in Europe. For this reason they are interested in an international depository, he said.
Lomborg entered KU in 1916 (and during his college years) made all Missouri Valley and Arkansas colleges.
As a quarterback he threw touchdown passes in 1920 which enabled KU to come from 20 points behind to die Nebraska. In the first half, KU scored on a met in a mass meeting the following Monday and pledged $160,000 toward念 Memorial Stadium to close McKenzie's hole.
Lonberg also made the conference all-star team in basketball as a guard.
PARIS (AP)-Henry A. Kissinger and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam met twice Monday for a total of five hours, opening a reception at the Embassy before a Vietnam cease-fire is signed.
After earning a law degree in 1921, Lonborg, who never practiced law, became the first full-time coach as he McPheasant basketball coach at Northwestern University.
Lombor was appointed KU *ultilem* by Chancellor Deane W. Mallott in 1895.
Kissinger Talks Twice With Tho
A restricted morning session of President Nikon's national security advise and Theo, the North Vietnamese Politburo member, was followed by a further 2-hour afternoon meeting in which the full delegations of about 10 officials on both sides joined Kissinger and Tho at a new rendezvous.
The Florida White House said the talks would continue today.
The complete news blackout that has been imposed throughout Kissinger's 21 previous meetings with the Hanoi Politburo member Hanoi Hanol诉轡 continued in force.
The North Vietnamese chose the luxury villa of a French industrialist at Saint Gemme, about 20 miles west of Paris, as the latest negotiating site.
It was the third different meeting place used since Kissinger's trips to Paris were made public. The morning session had been held near the North Vietnamese headquarters at Choisy le Roi south of the capital.
The villa used for the afternoon session is set deep in a vast stretch of parkland behind high walls and closed, guarded, iron gates. It was once owned by the British Capt. Winslow, married, whose romance with Princess Margaret made world headlines in the 1960s.
The White House said Kissinger reported to Nixon at Key Biscayne after the morning session, and that the full negotiating team was assigned to the afternoon meeting.
2
Tuesday, December 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Pre-Enrollment Review Suggested
CAROLYN OLSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) recommended Monday that the Academic Policies and Procedures Committee (AP&P) of the University Council reschedule a proposed system, which was approved by the senate in enrollment at the University of Kansas.
The AP&P committee had recommended
that a pre-enrollment system at KU not be able because it was not feasible at present.
Ronald Calgaard, presiding officer of SenEx and associate professor of economics, said SenEx would confer with members of the AP&P committee to discuss the committee's reasons for rejection of the pre-enrollment system.
"It isn't that SenEx questioned the judgment of APAP, but SenEx feels the pre-
enrollment system should be studied more thoroughly. "Calgaard said Monday夜.
ROBERT WILEY, professor of medicinal chemistry and chairman of the APPEP committee, said Monday night that the Robert Wiley Institute will support systems at other universities and that he had discussed the proposal with officials at the computer center, William Kelly, registrar, and James K. Hitt, former director and now director of systems development.
Student Role
...
The report presented an outline of issues which the Student Personnel Officers of the Regent institutions mentioned as emerging issues in their schools.
(Continued from page 1)
Wiley said all members of his committee were against the pre-enrollment system, as well.
Classroom related issues included: fewer required courses at the freshman and sophomore levels, less lecture and more discussions, more credit-no credit options, more opportunity for individually planned degree programs, evaluations by instructors rather than grades, and courses in university administration.
Other classroom related issues were: courses in drug abuse and human sexuality, credit for service to university and community agencies, universities, and course evaluations by students.
Senate Votes Wednesday On Campus Bus Subsidy
COCAO concluded its study of student rights by noting that perhaps the major generalization that was warranted by these data was that most students expected and understood the need for government in a college community, but they wanted to be involved in a major way in that decision-making process.
Non-classroom related issues which school personnel reported as emerging included: complete control of student activity fees, changes in governance of the school, changes in housing, changes in financial aid practices, changes in student organizations, and changes in the school's role in society issues.
use of its resources, so as to know earlier in the year how many students want to enroll in certain classes", Wiley said. "But the big disadvantage of using a pre-enrollment system aided by a computer is that students don't get to choose their instructors or class
The report noted in summary of the area of student rights that in recent years there had been a great increase of participation in making bodies, both by students and staff.
The Student Senate will vote on whether to terminate the subsidy for the campus bus system during its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union Pavilion.
He said the groups decided that at least $20,000 would be needed to thoroughly study a pre-enrollment system aided by a computer. Also considered was a proposal to initiate a limited manual pre-enrollment program that could be periodically headquartered at the Kansas Union.
Wiley said the group unanimously decided that the third alternative, to drop the pre-enrollment study, was the best choice for the University.
A bill sponsored by Gus Dilgeera, Wichita graduate student, and Richard MacKenzie, Hutchinson second-year law student, would repeal the act which was passed the Senate last year to subsidize the bus system from the Activity Fee Fund.
“Another problem in a pre-enrollment system is that students like to change their minds after they have already pre-enrolled in a course.” Wiley said. “In universities the most important systems are used, usually only about 60 to 80 per cent of the students pre-enroll.”
*USUALLY A Pre-enrolment system is used to allow a University to make better
"evidence of an erosion" in state support to higher education, citing statistics which show that in terms of per capita expenditure for higher education, Kansas has slipped from fourth in the nation in 1965-66 to twenty-six in 1971-72.
Wiley said the three students on the APKP committee were against the pre-enrollment proposal because there was no choice in selecting instructors or class schedules.
The report revealed in an examination of the financial position of the Regent institutions that the average cost per degree at the six state colleges in 1970 was $7,386. The average cost per degree at the Great Plains state was stated as $9,588 and a figure of $8,412 for the Great Plains States as a group.
David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president, announced during the meeting of the Student Executive Committee (StudEx) Nov. 29 that the subsidy was costing the Senate an average of $1,300 a week. The Senate allocated $30,000 for this semester's subsidy of which about $24,000 of that is expected to be spent.
During the last decade, the report stated, state support for higher education had increased only seventen-fifth of one percent since 1995, and income increases and the consumer price index.
Wiley said that even if a pre-enrollment system was adopted at KU, there would still have to be some sort of enrolment program. A new online enrollment system was used now for persons who don't pre-enroll
Wiley said a possible solution for enrollment problems would be for individual departments or schools to initiate a new program. The new program will be the Schools of Journalism and Pharmacy;
The report also noted what it called
Another bill sponsored by DiZerega would require organizations funded wholly or partially by student funds to maintain their administrative and spending policies and firm available to the Finance and Auditing Committee or to any student upon request.
Report Suggests Cut . . .
(Continued from page 1)
degree per year and any masters program that did not produce at last two degrees per year.
Saricks said that the discontinued courses would not hurt the faculty too much because, he said, many of those courses were so basic that he did not involve many faculty members.
The School of Education would be hardest hit by the deletions. Of the 20 programs recommended for discontinuance at KU, 18 are in education. But Dale Scamell, dead, in Iowa, agreed with Sarickes that his faculty and staff would not be affected by the loss.
SCANNELL GAVE the M.S. program in educational psychology and the M.A. program in the foundations of education as examples of programs that were non-functional. Neither were mentioned in the report, however.
"If those are the type programs that are being deleted then we will not be hurt," he said.
The report also recommended that 24 programs at the University be put on.
This means that the programs would be reviewed each year for three years
and, if by the end of that time, the programs did not meet the production criteria, they were not approved.
NINEENETE of the 24 programs put on probation at KU are included in the curricula of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences but Dean George R. Waggoner said he was not concerned about the possibility that these programs would be discontinued.
"Almost all of those programs were relatively new when the study began," he said. "They are all good, sound programs and are well reviewed and required by the end of the review period."
William Arsinger, dean of the graduate school, said that the report did not concern itself with the most important aspects of a graduate program.
"The report didn't take into consideration, for example, the importance of a program to a student," he said. "Just because a program turns out a certain number of degrees a year, doesn't necessarily qualify it as a good program."
ARGERSINGER SAID there would probably be further discussion about the report and, he said, the regents might make specific recommendations to certain
schools in the Regents' jurisdiction. He said that he doubted any of the schools in the system would take immediate action on any such case, which has been recommended for discontinuance.
"But some of the programs have been suspended concerning the admittance of 1985 students."
Programs which have been recommended for discontinuance include Ph.D. in petroleum engineering; M.A.T. in English; M.A.T. in math; M.A.T. in history; M.A.T. in Mathematics; M.A.T. in Social Studies; M.A. in higher education; M.A. in Research and Measures; M.A. in foundations; Ed.S. in art education; Ed.S. in foundations; Ed.S. in research and leisure; Ed.S. in higher education; Ed.S. in research and education; Ed.S. in physical education; Ed.S. in special education, and M.S. in astronomy.
PROGRAMS THAT were put on a provisional status include M.S. in aerospace engineering; Ed. S. in elementary and secondary education; Ed. S. in counseling and health services; M.A. in oriental languages and literature; M.A. in classics and classical archaeology;
M. S. in physiology (KUMC); M.S. in pharmacy; M.S. in speech and drama; M.A. in East Asian studies; M.A. in Slavic and Soviet area studies; M.A. in Latin American studies; M.A. in pathology; M.A. in musicollect; M.A. in Slavic languages and literature; M.A. in linguistics; M.A. in music; M.A. in music theory; Ph.D. in American music; Ph.D. in music theory; Ph.D. in musicicollect; Ph.D. in philosophy; D.M.A. in music.
The emphasis of the report is on graduate programs and the council devoted a chapter to specific recommendations for the graduate schools. The recommendations for the graduate schools, but they were most numerous for the schools of education in the state.
Chancellor Nichols said that the possible effect of the recommendations would be a partial freeze in the level of graduate programs.
"It will not be a complete freeze but my new program will be carefully scrutinized," he said.
"The most important thing about this report is that it begins a continuing process of revitalization and we can be carried out annually, will eventually, we understand undergraduate programs." *Saricks said.*
DIZegela said Monday that the bill was not directed at any particular group, but that its writing was prompted by the recent controversy over funding of the Supportive Educational Services (SES) tutorial program.
The SES, which receives $20,000 a year from Kansas Union Bookstore rebates, has been the center of controversy in the past weeks because of a refusal by the organization to accept students other than blacks in its program, and a subsequent refusal to release its financial records for inspection.
Other bills among the 15 to be considered by the Senate include a proposed change-of-election procedure for student body officers, an act to double student representation in the University Senate, and an impeachment procedures bill.
World . . .
(Continued from page 1)
THE FRENCH are presently engaging in the same kind of storage as the United States, Zeller said, by storing the wastes in tanks above ground. They also have a pilot plant for solidification of nuclear waste, he said, but are only involved in preliminary investigation of long-term means for nuclear waste disposal.
The representatives of the United Kingdom said that the current tank storage process is completely satisfactory, Zeller said.
"This is bordering on irresponsability and is certainly unrealistic." Zeller said.
The United States considers tank storage only an interim arrangement, Zeller said, would not be concerned about long-term waste disposal until at least the year 2000.
ZELLER said that over the last two months the IEAH has taken a great interest in the problem of nuclear wastes and at a meeting in Vienna one week before the Paris Conference adopted the following recommendations:
— to prepare and publish reports and
reviews which evaluate transport, storage
and use of resources.
—to publish guidelines for the above
to establish and maintain a register (or institution) of amounts of wastes member states
—to encourage cooperation between member states on the disposal of wastes
—to encourage joint ventures between (us) member states for storage and disposal
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Treasury Asks Governments To Be Patient
WASHINGTON (AP) - Seeking to head off a flood of protests, the Treasury Department urged state and local governments Monday to be patient if their revenue-sharing checks mailed this week are smaller than they expected.
The first checks to be made Friday represent estimates of what some 39,000 state and local government units should receive under a complex formula approved by Congress. The Treasury said it may be early next year but it gets all the data updated.
Although the amount shown on the first checks will be a "good estimate," Deputy Treasury Secretary Charles E. Walker said the government is expecting to get a number of calls and complaints from community-receiving less than the budgeted amounts made in calculation while the bill was still before Congress.
"First of all, they should be patient," Walker said. "If they want to protest, they should wait until the Treasury publishes, and then release their forms or formation on which their checks are based.
"Otherwise, they'll just clog up the lines.
They are soine to stav eno," he added.
we are going to stay open," he added.
This means that the data on which the first checks are based are could be revised. The Treasury says it will adjust any amount due
The small revenue-sharing office has been receiving about 100 telephone calls each day with questions on the program. He is thanked, and congratulated, considerably after the first checks arrive.
The first checks will total approximately $2.7 billion which is part of a five-year, $20-billion program. Unlike earlier federal-aid checks, which are attached to spending of the money.
The complicated formula for distribution of the money is based on personal information collected by a bank.
The purposes for which the money will be used are numerous, but Ed Fox, director of the Treasury's Office of Revenue Sharing, said a lot of emphasis on reducing property taxes.
He said beefing up courts and court reform is another common use of the
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court agreed Monday to rule on higher tuition fees for out-of-state college students—an issue that could have heavy impact on fees paid by all students at state-supported colleges.
The case accepted for review next spring comes from Connecticut. There a three-judge court held that students who had set up permanent residence could not be charged the higher fees for the full length of their academic careers.
Court to Rule on Tuition
University Daily Kansan
Possibly riding on the outcome is the $200 million to $400 million collected by the states in non-resident tuition each year. If the justices agree with the panel in Hartford, all students in state colleges may wind up paying higher tuition.
Meanwhile, in other actions, the court agreed to decide whether residents of communes might receive federal food assistance or would separate job ads for men and women.
AT THE SAME time, the court turned down a challenge to a school-desegregation order for Oklahoma City and cleared the way for reinstatement of a school teacher in
The court took no action on a request that it hear a key school-desigement case from the U.S. Department of Education.
There were 24 lawyer members of the outgoing Judiciary Committee in the House.
Elimira, N.Y., who had been fired for wearing an antwar armband.
The fees, established by the state legislature last year, allow local residents to attend the university at Storrs for $175 a year, but charge outstate students $207
The Connecticut tuition system was challenged by two students. One had married a University of Connecticut student and had moved into the state from California. The second was a graduate student who moved from Ohio.
The House voted to combine the committees on Natural Resources, Water Resources and Oil and Gas into one group to manage them. The group on Conservation and Natural Resources
THE THREE-JUDGE court in Hartford, in striking down the system last June, said that even if a higher tuition was reasonable at the start it was wrong to charge this higher rate throughout the student's academic career.
Connecticut appealed. It told the Supreme Court that the Constitution gave states a wide range of discretion in enacting laws which were more of the residents differently from others.
THE HOUSE also approved the combination of the Roads and Highways and Transportation and Utilities committees to be known as Transportation and Ullities.
Although not involved in the Connecticut case, the new law extending the vote to 18-
FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) --Attorneys for Lt. William L. Calley Jr., said Monday that interference by Army Chief of Staff William C. Westmoreland prevented the former platoon leader from receiving a fair trial on charges that he murdered at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre.
The result, they said, was a "horrible speecer of command influence."
Asking a military appeals court to overturn Clemens's conviction or reduce his 20-year sentence, the lawyers accused Westmoreland of conducting a highly irregular personal investigation into the shootings at the Vietnamese village.
Calley Calls Foul Play In My Lai Conviction
The 29-year-old Calley, held under house arrest at FL. Beninga, Ga., was not called upon to appear at the hearing before the Army Court of Military Review.
Rep. Duda "Pete" McGill, newly elected governor of New York, lawyers in the new Kansas House.
Reps Revamp Committees In Kansas House Cleaning
"THIS IS the smallest number of lawyers in the House in memory," said McGill. Some of these will be in leadership position and will be available for active work on the committee.
McGill indicated he would appoint at least five or six non-lawyer members on the new judiciary committee, and that the total number of members would be less than the maximum of 21. However, he will name a lawyer as chairman.
TOPEKA (AP) -The Kansas House of Representatives agreed Monday to an overhaul of its committee structure with the consolidation of several groups and a major change in the make-up of the Judiciary committee.
The House approved changes, fixing the maximum number of members of the Judiciary Committee at 21 and providing the possibility of non-lawyer members.
The Judiciary Committee change will bring about non-lawyer membership on this important committee which, in modern times, is comprised up of the lawyers elected to the House.
Other approved changes include: changing the name of the Elections, Fees Committee, to Elections Committee, with the fees Committee, function transferred principally to the Local Government Committee; and establishing a standing committee on governmental matters.
MGcill said he will consider the appointment of standing subcommittees under the newly consolidated committees to manage the separate committees were handled by separate committees.
McGILL SAID that because of objections raised by a number of people, no action would be taken at this time to carry out other committee consolidations recommended by the legislative budget committee.
McGill ask all house members to fill out prepared forms indicating their com-
Kansan Applications Due by Noon Today
year-olds has deepened the problem of non-resident tuition. If a state grants a student the right to register and vote in his college town, many educators see this as a threat to academic freedom since in the state which would carry with it the exemption from the higher non-resident tuition
Applications for Kansan news and business staff positions for the spring semester, be submitted to Dee Dunleibengood, associate dept. of the School of Journalism, in 105 Infinity by noon today.
Applications for news and staff positions may be obtained from the offices of the dean of men and women, the Student Senate office and 105 Flint.
THE COMMUNE case was brought by the Justice Department after a three-judge panel in the District of Columbia ruled that all communities were entitled to food stamps.
Another of Calley's lawyers, Capt. Houston Gordon, said Westmoreland Army commander in Vietnam at the time of the massacre, ordered a colonel on his staff to move in what Gordon said was a clear attempt to prejudice the outcome against Calley.
Calley's chief lawyer, George Lalmer of Salt Lake City, called the search-and-destroy sweep the most poorly conceived and combat operation he had ever bearded of.
Applicants for news positions should sign up for an interview on a schedule outside of 114 Flint. Interviews will begin Tuesday afternoon.
Wilberding, an Army lawyer, said everything Westmoreland said or did about Mali was done in his official capacity as a spokesman for forces in Vietnam or army chief of staff.
Still unpublished Army reports say at least 347 innocent civilians died at the hands of American troops, many of them under Calley's command, on March 16. 1968.
Gordon said that conflicting directives from Westmoreland's office played a direct role in the final decision to convene a court-martial.
Gordon also had argued that by virtue of Westmoreland's role as commander of the general at Ft. Bening who convened the exercise, he was the personal stake in the outcome of the triumph.
The government's appeal said most communes contained individuals who abused the program by remaining voluntarily poor.
Congress last year amended the food-stamp act to limit the coupons to groups of related individuals. This amendment was issued by the lower court as unconstitutional.
Gordon said President Nixon should have convened a special commission with no personal stake in the outcome of any My Lai investigation or criminal prosecution.
Callley was originally sentenced to life, a sentence later reduced to 20 years, followed by President Nixon's order to hold him in house arrest rather than in military prison.
KEY BICAYNE, Fla. (AP) - President Nixon is giving "highest priority" to improving relations with European allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Florida White House said Monday in naming new U.S. representative to NATO.
Rumsfeld has had no previous diplomatic experience. But press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler made a special point of praising his close association with the President, his abilities and Nixon's high opinion of the role of NATO in Europe.
Donald Rumsfeld, now head of the Cost of Living Council, was nominated by Nixon for the NATO job which the President was said to have given him as the most important diplomatic posts in Europe.
Rumsfeld will get the title of ambassador in the NATO post where he replaces David Kirk, former secretary of the Treasury and then Nixon in the international economic field.
The wants-ads case was brought by publishers of the Pittsburgh Press. Pennsylvania courts had ruled against separate men and women in help-wanted ads.
The Rumstfield announcement came just before Nixon left Florida to return to Washington after a four-day weekend stay. It also coincided with the departure of Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird for a last call on NOSA as Pentagon chief.
MOVIE INFORMATION
Nixon Taps Rumsfeld As NATO Ambassador
Gordon said Nixon played a hand in the decision to prosecute Calley and quoted a top-ranking officer at Ft. Benning as saying he had "no business with" class not to do what the President asks."
Laird, too, was boosting NATO and told reporters as he left Washington that his trip was aimed at showing administration with American assistance with America's European allies.
The paper's appeal is based on the free-
screw guarantee of the First Amendment.
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BAD COMPANY Eve 7:30 & 9:20 Hillcrest PU
Roman Polanski's film of MACBETH "Shakespeare translated the way he would have liked it by Roman Polanski ... in bold, virile terms."
—Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. Daily News Eve 7:10 & 9:40 / Adult 1.50 Mat. Sat.Sun 1:45 & 4:10 NOW! Hillcrest Ends Tues.
GEORGE C. SCOTT IN "RAGE"
It was their mistake, but his son!
Eve 7:30 & 9:20 / Adult 1.50 Child. 75 Matinee Sat.Sun 1:25 & 4:00 NOW! Hillcrest Ends Tues.
The court will hold a hearing next spring and reach a decision by the end of the term in
AUTHORITIES
One of the biggest and brightest surprises of the movie year is Diana Ross.
-Bruce Williamson, Playboy
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
Eve 7:15 & 9:45
Granada
PALACE - Number 3 - 5780
Commonwealth Theatres
IN DECLINING to hear the Oklahoma City Board of Education, the court left intact a desegregation order by Judge Luther Bohanon that had stepped up busing to 30,000 students from 15,650 bused under an older plan.
No ruling on the appeal of the court-martial's conviction is expected for about
The assembly rose and applauded for 70 seconds after Allende finished speaking. Someone in the visitors' gallery threw small red, white and blue Chilean flags over the stage. The audience cheered! About 260 pro-Allende demonstrators marched on the street outside the hall.
Allelde said Kennett Copper Corp. had "decided to use its great power to rob us of our export earnings" because a Chilean firm flirting with approval over the nature of its nationalization.
"Before the conscience of the world I accuse the ITT of attempting to bring about civil war in my country," he said. "That is what we call imperialist action."
He charged that a year later the giant corporation hatched a plan to sow economic and social disorder in Chile in the hopes that it would step in and impose a dictatorship.
assassination of Gen. Rene Schneider, army commander-in-chief.
General Leads Overthrow Of Honduras President
V
U.N. Applauds as Allende Accuses ITT of Meddling
Lopez overthrew President Ramon Villaada Monarch on October 3, 1963, and two years later was elected by Congress to a full six-year presidential term.
López had been appointed commander of the armed forces by Cruz' Nationalist party just three days before Cruz was elected president in 1971.
The main reason given by the armed forces for overthrowing Cruz was the failure of a bipartisan agreement inspired by棕ozo before the 1971 campaigning started.
UNITED NATIONS (AP)—President Salvador Allende of Chile accused International Telephone and Telegraph Co. on Monday of trying to start civil war in his country. He told other poor countries to beware of powerful U.S. firms.
He said that U.S. defense expenditures will be increased to more than $80 billion in budget and that it was necessary to maintain bargaining positions. He said he would argue before the NATO ministers in Brussels that he would to make unilateral cuts in defense budgets.
"We are witnessing a pitched battle between the great transnational corporations and sovereign states," he declared in an 80-minute speech to a packed session of the 132-nation U.N. General Assembly.
No violence was reported in this Central
American nation of 2,314 million people. The
armed forces said a few hours after the
coup, forced takower that the country was tranquil
Zlegler said the President would work in the White House Tuesday and perhaps go to his Camp David, Md., retreat on Wednesday.
The failure of an experiment in bipartisan government was given as the chief reason for overthrowing President Ramon Ernesto Cruz, a flaillow-looking 68-year-old lawyer.
ITT's chairman and president, Harold S. comment in response to Alandee's charge.
His close friends say he has "an amazing facility for growth," jumping from one job to another and grasping each one in a short period of time. He advocates for politics which may be put to use again.
A native of Chicago, he received his bachelor's degree from Princeton University in 1864. He served as a naval aviator for three years.
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) -Gen. Oswalda Lopez Arellano can be the presidency Monday, less than 18 months after he left, by leading a military overthrow of the first directly elected president Honduras has had since 1832.
Allende, coming here from a visit to Mexico, said ITT had tried to prevent his taking office after the 1970 election through terrorist activities that culminated in the
Rumfsel smiles readily in public and has a knack for humor. But he is said to be sensitive about his public image, sometimes to the point of making sure that there are no obstructions in the picture when he is to have a televised press conference.
Rumsfeld, who was elected to Congress in 1962, resigned his seat in May 1969 to become head of the antipoverty agency as well as assistant to the President. Later, he became counselor to the President before getting the job of head of the Cost of Living Council.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Donald Rumsfeld is the closest thing to a pack-of-all-trades in the Nixon administration. He thrives on new jobs and new sets.
His instincts, however, are strongly political and many of those around him in government believe that he has his eye on a person, which is why he appears even the White House one day.
He recalled the thoughts of Thomas
Wilson, a well-known industrial
companies and are interested only in profits.
The 40-year-old Rumfels has a long list of former titles: congressman from Illinois; white House aid; director of the Office of Education; and a wrestling championship in the Navy.
Ziegler said Kennedy, who had been in the NATO post since March and previously was an ambassador at large in the economic field, had serve with "great distinction."
Rumfield was named operating head of the agency to oversee wage-price controls when they went into effect a year ago. Not an economist, he had to cam to learn the system. Mr. Rumfield was speaking with confidence on the economic stabilization program.
That has been his history in government. From Congress to today, he has learned to background himself and move into a new post, demonstrating his flexibility.
Before his departure for Washington, the President received reports from Henry A. Kissinger and sent back instructions for the visit to Vietnam, including sessions with the North Vietnamese.
Lopez, 51, is to govern with decrees and laws issued through a Council of Ministers. Names of the ministers were not announced immediately.
Ziegler a successor to Rumafia in the cost of Living Council will be named later.
Before running for Congress, Rumsfeld worked on the congressional staff of two GOP members of Congress and with a Chicago investment banking company.
When he was named head of the Cost of Living Council, for example, a friend said he leamed the post with "a hell of a lot of people" to tell a hell of a lot of talking with a lot of people."
Cruz was reported safe under house
heat, and wife was arrest. He left
home was San Diego, the United States.
New Man Is Flexible, Promising
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Tuesday, December 5. 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
the new Democrats
OLD GUARD
"So I've got a big pot, bub? You'd better believe I have, kid!"
The Westwood Issue
Jean Westwood, the controversial chairman of the Democratic National Party, went to St. Louis last weekend to argue her case before the Democratic Governors' Conference. She has indicated that she will fight to retain her job, or see that it is given to someone who will continue to be the advocate of party reforms. With all due respect to both Westwood and her supporters, it can be argued with good liberal conventions that not only should she hold a position, she should also encourage her supporters to less vociferous in their demands for continued party reforms. In the interests of the two-party system, there are many who would rather see a switch at a fight this time around.
The party's reforms, coming as they did in the aftermath of the 1968 Chicago convention debacle, deserve recognition for opening up the 1972 convention's delegate selection process. But it should also be recognized that the chief function of political parties is to win elections—not against themselves, but against the other party. The Democratic Party sacrificed the election this year in favor of the nomination. It was a comic replay of the 1964 Republican convention in San Francisco which nominated Barry Goldwater, then watched as he led the party to a humiliating defeat.
successfully created, let no man tear asunder might well be the cry of a new coalition of Democratic reform groups and old style party regulars.
As unpalatable as it may be to the reformists, the strength of the Democratic Party has, and probably still does, rest with the labor unions, the average working man and the Daley-Docking forces. It is the regulators that contribute their time and money on a year in and year out basis. It should logically remain the prerogative of this group to take an interest in the party's work for the party's highest office, the Presidency of the United States. The regulars were denied that role this year, and the last laugh is to be theirs at the expense of both Westwood and, perhaps, the entire progressive faction in the Democratic Party.
Following the lessons of the Republicans in '64, the Democrats would do well to kindly replace Ms. Smith with someone who can once again lead the party as support of the entire party membership. What Frank Roosevelt sovelt
A prominent Republican Senator once said of Wendell Wilkie's dark horse bid for the presidential nomination, "Back in Indiana it's all right if the town drunks join the church, but we don't let them lead the choir on the first night." In a sense if the reformists can be said to have led the choir in 1972, then it is now their task to accept the consequences of a tune that offended the elders' ears. If I may be allowed to strain my metaphor a bit, I would like to suggest that if these same reformists are truly interested in remaining with the congregation, and giving up the life of the streets, they will, in the future at least, listen to the voice of experience. The religion of pary politics cannot afford another election year like the past one.
Radio Plagued by Payola
Jack Anderson
Mark Bedner
WASHINGTON-In a prominent Southern city, the black, midnight-to-dawn disc jockey earned a paltry $500 a month from the radio station's penurious white owner.
Yet the "desijay" drove an extravagant car that put the white owner's auto to shame and killed a businessman. And the city's most luxurious hotel.
glamor of the job, but his wife was sick. The bills started piling up.
In a smaller city, a young,
black disc jockey getting his start
made $85 a week. He loved the
The station owner, worried about illegal payola, asked the "dee Jay" about the source of his affluence but couldn't get a straight answer. The owner monitored the program but could not understand the evidence of payola. Nevertheless, the disc jockey on suspicion.
a white promotion man from a black-owned record company dropped by to push his rhythm and hit the numbers by to us by one of America's top black "dee jays," the promotion man "loaned" the disc jockey $200 to pay the bills. In graduate, he became a new friend. He played his new friend's records.
Our interviews with black disc jockeys, white owners, promotion men, record critics, FCC officials and many others confirm that payola is all too common among both whites and blacks.
of the big city radio station chains was Starr Broadcasting Group, inc.
But among the blacks, who are generally far less well paid than the white "deejays," payola comes from the wealthy. Recently, one of the worst-paying
At one of the three black-
format stations in Memphis,
WLOK, the going salary for a disc
jockey three years ago was as
low as $10. Now the low is closer
to $150, the high $200.
The disc jockeys, meanwhile,
are aware that at $17 a minute for
national commercials and $ to $6
for grossing thousands every month.
Peter Starr, president of the chain, explained that he can't offer her salaries. A check with Starr is sent to him and shows that four days before he pleaded poorn mouth with us, his company had announced a 400 million bonus.
grosses only $40,000 a month and that each station should make its own way.
Asked whether low salaries might drive jockeys to payola, Starr said he is haunted by the fear that he can be on the take, but he has never obtained any proof of it. He says he regulates what records are to be played to prevent a "deejay" slipping in a "turkey" for pay.
The big record companies, meanwhile, are covering up past patents found a record executive who fired a promotion man for allegedly giving "deejays" for playing the firm's records.
In another, a reliable witness overheard a promotion person talking about providing $20 bags
of marjanaas as payola. Her company, while denying knowledge of the dope, warned promotion men or against her payola. "If we find that an employee of this company is guilty of this or any other infraction, be advised that that will be immediately dismissed" warned the firm in a memo.
Footnote: The Federal Communications Commission, meanwhile, is investigating our efforts to increase FCC and FCC compliance chief Bill Ray will consider granting witnesses immunity if they will be tried. But, says Ray, they're afraid of blacklisting if they speak up."
Copyright, 1972 by United Feature Syndicate. Inc
NIXON HOLDS BACK
CLEAN WATER FUNDS
ALL OTIMENY OUT
"NOW MORE THAN EVER"
Readers Respond
Housewife's Role Argued
Hunt Up
To the Editor:
To Robert Ward concerning his editorial of November 30 ("Degrading Freedom");
—December issue of MS magazine
"Housework, children, and all the aspects of homemaking are an important tasks as all human and should be. Homemaking is a career for the liberated woman—but no more so than for the working person."
Find me a feminist who "shames and degrades" the woman who enjoys being a housewife
Colette Kocour Kenilworth, Ill., Senior
As a nation, we are indebted to the black power movement for
Even Up
To the Editor:
forcing a new and needed equality in employment, education and interpersonal relations. For that we thank them, but we also we owe a few bitter words for the effect we can treat their fanatic preaching to us the next decade's college blacks.
Overall, blacks as a race are no more talented than whites. Certainly there are some blacks who have exceptional intellects and exceptional motivation, and who should be allowed to claim eminence as a result of eminence as leaders of state, as professionals and as artists.
What some militants seem to overlook is that the great mass of people, both black and white, are—and by definition will be—armed. These people, for the most part, will not be admitted to the elite ranks of the politicians, the professionals, or the artists, nor should they be. These are people who are not capable of leading, or conversing with, the exceptional minds of this or any other decade.
Garry Wills
I think more troubles arise, for us, from the fact that the religion of America is America. We are constantly being asked to believe in America, and critics of any American action are felt to be beyond obligation must be total and unquestioning. Love it or leave it.
The fatuous Dr. Peale was just staining hard political fact when he described the country that carried me as a child." "Even before the future of the United States, We were the greatest people under God's sun." This being so, God would not give his special people just any old ruler. Therefore, he could make our own sort, Peale can thank God! President Nixon to be our providential leader. And, once
America, the Chosen
Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, preaching last week to President Nixon, thanked God that "I was an enthusiastic country." He believed "packed full of God." And if only a whole country is "packed full of God," it cannot commit war crimes. Thus, while he is still bombing schedule, Dr. Peale could praise the President as
Calvin Coolidge said that the business of America is business—and some people trace all our faults to this formula.
Now it certainly is pleasant to be God's chosen people. But it also has it its disadvantages—recalling the story of a wry old Jew who, looking at his chosen people's history of sufferings, asked God please to "choose" somebody else for a change.
"one of the great peacemakers of history."
Conversely, if anyone does consider America's action criminal, he is implicitly saying that the country is not packed full of God—only this can explain the political resentment voters felt for mild (but heretical) preacher, George McGovern.
The trouble with having a country and a religion all in one package is that we cannot accept any criticism of the package. And when we cannot be criticized, we cannot learn. That is why, in Asia we have repeated the same mistakes in China, in Korea, in Vietnam. We have to repeat the mistakes because we cannot admit they were mistakes. God doesn't make mistakes, and America is just his
again, how is one to criticize the President without, indirectly, criticizing the God who called him?
The more criminal our acts look, the more divine mystery there must be in our actions. So the President can call Vietnam our finest hour—as medieval theologians tortuously found in the existence of evil the greatest proof of the Creator's goodness. To get the better we must be. The Lord Nixon and Naxon, in these dark days, ever more desperately celebrate our virtues.
It is an awful spectacle, and those who really love our country should try to free us of such a trap of being a political choice people. Couldn't God choose some of the change for a new
instrument. We have to repeat the mistakes because we have to keep justifying—justifying the ways of America to man.
blacks will add to the already distinctive achievements of the nation by contributing their share in the national drug and alcohol problem, the mental illness rate and the national disease and chronic disorders.
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 1972
To these people, the militants,
by thoroughly and quite unjustify
dishonoring janitorial-maid
services, have rendered a great
reputation to the blacks who might have once found challenge, fulfillment and happiness in being a janitor will now instead grow up knowing
that it is not enough for merejanitor ... thanks to the polemic of the black militants.
No longer protected by the condescending socialization rules, young boys and girls will suffer the same socialization that young whites have since time been introduced to. Counterparts the black boys and girls will now be taught to strive only for the highest goals, which are not competent to the struggle. They will be drilled again and again in the necessity of being number one and in the unacceptability of playing.
Without a doubt, blacks have a right to strive for their personal fulfillment. But that right hardly applies to them, the same crippling, frustrating socialization process now faced by all whites. Not just blacks, but all Americans need more opportunities in a social structure which deprives the mediocre of their sense of human dignity. Shaming and degrading the black who enjoys an ordeal or jail is not the answer.
Ann G. Francke Prairie Village, Sophomore
And in the end, the mediocre of
the whites in the frustrating
realization of their medicinity
and their insignificance. In their
medicine, we know not to be
Sums Up
To the Editor:
In the editorial "Degrading Freedom" (Nov. 30) Robert Ward has taken it upon himself to summarize the effects of the women's liberation movement. The irony of it is that in his writings he encapsulates the women's liberation philosophy, "As a nation, we are indebted to the women's liberationists for forcing a new and needed equality in women and interpersonal interaction and interpersonal relations."
He then proceeds to express some very naive and indiscriminate opinions about the future, for example, that will have on future generations.
Admittedly, there does exist a very vocal and radical minority of women who complete reversal of male-female roles. However, it is not to these women that we should give attention, but to those who women's liberation, which is personal freedom. This personal freedom means that any woman should be able to choose her own choices—if she so desires. Before the movement, the housewife who was unhappy felt defeated by the movement. The movement has not only alleviated these guilt feelings,
but has shown that the housewife's role is varied and complex—certainly not degrading as M. Ward, suggests.
Conservative, reasonable women's liberationists far outnumber the radicals. We, along with the majority of American women, have seen two major problems that underline the personal value of women's liberation. Ward's evaluation of the American woman's ability to synthesize and analyze the issues is itself degrading. Women's liberationists disgust and impatience with opinions such as his.
What Ward does not recognize that through the women's life they have been given the recognition and support they have deserved because of this recognition and support those women who once felt unfulfilled as housewives now have been alone. and never were alone.
statements he pares down the self-concept and intellectual functioning of Americans to be able to interactively concentrate on women.
Our argument is that Ward patronizes women by asserting that they will blindly believe the truth, but not that they say that those women who will have careers as housewives will "now instead grow up knowing more about their situation than a mere housewife with this" of the feminists. This is ridiculous and a gross underestimation of woman's ability to work in a team of thousands of women who have found, and will find, challenge, fulfillment, and happiness in her work. They will always find this contentment.
The feminists have probably had an adverse effect on some women, but certainly not the number that Ward impels.
Ward has practically condemned the people of this society as groveling, frustrated individuals, "And in the end, the mediocre of these women will become the frustrating realization of their misinfeasance." With his sweeping
Liz Lochridge
Weston, Connecticut, Junior
Rosie Boose
Wichita, Ohio
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H
Tuesday, December 5. 1972
University Daily Kansan
5
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It is Greenville, Ohio. 1863. A detachment of Union soldiers is marching through the city.
Chridge Junior
Boose Junior
They search the home of 18-year-old Drew Dixon, rumming through the place as the boy's anxious mother and father look on. But no luck. The soldiers reluctantly depart as the mother furtively peers out the window after them.
From underneath the kitchen cabinet comes a muffled voice. Did they get the neighbor boy? Yes, the mother replies. Silence from the cabinet. Then a giggle.
From its opening scene, "Bad Company" appears to have the makings of an entertaining and quietly humorous comedy, the main purpose of which is to further explore a situation that abandoned Old West. Something, perhaps, like Arthur Penn did in "Little Big Man."
days and postsage advertised expressed
But when they get waylaid by an adult gang of robbers, and one of them gets his head blown off by a chicken farmer as he tries to steal a pie, and finally two of them decide to leave the group, leaving Drew and Jake only a mule in the process, it quickly includes making more serious—a story of survival and human values in open country.
Even as the group, headed by a fast-taking leader named Jake Rumsey (Jeff Bridges), sets out west together in search of water, it appears to be a light, burnless venture.
Matt Spreiler
WHEN DREW (Barry Brown) heads wendy in hopes of sitting out the war in the Nevada silver mines, but instead meets up with a gang of juvenile muggers and pickpockets in St. Joseph, Mo., the story takes on a "huckleberry" Finn' flavor.
pergerdes
THAT THE FILM successfully mixes humor and violence should come as no surprise. The movie's authors, David Newman and Robert Benton, are not newcomers to the formula. They made it work before, with no small success, in "Bonnie and Clyde."
Indeed, "Bad Company" is, in a sense "Bonnie and Clyde" gone. Newman and Benton are again preoccupied with the morality, or lack of it, of those outside the law and, as in "&B&," they present it at first in an offhand, even bolstered manner. The song's lyricism and the presence present background of bouncy piano music, again similar to the banche theme of "&B&."
The plot is rambling and episodic, as indeed it must be to effectively tell of the garrant's erratic and wandering way across a city. The book's focus on the picture was filmed. Such a plot, however, necessarily requires strong acting performances or it soon disintegrates into a shameless of boredom, if not confusion. The book may also be刻在 presence of Brown and Brides.
BRIDGES, expanding upon the role in
The Last Picture Show that won him an
Award for outstanding nomination.
'Tender Land' Auditions Set
Auditions for Aaron Copland's opera "The Tender Land" are scheduled to be held Dec. 11-13. The Tender Land" will be the major event in the city's university Theatre and School of Fine Arts.
noticeable of the two. A born con man, Rumsey is a loud-mouthed braggart who uses his gift of gab to hold the gang together. A tough talker, he becomes extremely practical in deciding to run when faced with real danger. When he does finally shoot someone, it is primarily a reflex action.
There are five major roles and thirty minor roles that will be cast. A sign-up sheet for auditions is available in the University of Kansas Theatre Office.
Brown, though, is perhaps the more interesting. As Drew Dixon, he sports a Jimmy Stewart naivete and righteousness that makes him seem too good to be true. As it develops, it is.
Drew, with $85 dollars hidden in his boot.
subtly looks down upon the thiever of his companions. When he when he loses his cash, he also not surprisingly, loses his moral integrity and Jake are a true bad company of crime.
Campus Bulletin
ROME (AP)—Gina Lolibr�gia has been posing for photographs to take them.
KU-Y International Gift Fair: 11 a.m. Big-Eight Room.
French Table: 11 a.m., meadowland Cafeteria.
English Table: 11 a.m., meadowland Cafeteria.
Spanish Table: 11 a.m., meadowland Cafeteria.
Microbiology: 11:45 a.m., English Room.
Coordinating the talents of Bruges and Brown is Benton, who marks his directing debut with this film. Aided by the sepia-tinted photography of Gordon Willis, who calls it "The Godfather," Benton has transformed the movie into surprisingly cohesive initial effort—an unpretentious film that is authentic and, at the same time, entertaining.
Neglecting her acting career almost three years for the two, the Italian film star used thousands of rolls of film to photograph her country. Her findings will be published in a book entitled "Italia Mia," a picture book of 200 black and white photographs.
Photographer Lollobrigida Prepares 'Italia Mia' Debut
Environmental Chemistry: 12:30 p.m. Alcove C
Cafeteria
Lobbigridja says she traveled incochol throughout Italy to take her pictures. She disguised herself by using two prune pits to fill out her cheeks and wearing a wig.
Polish Web: 12:30 p.m. Mendowki Cafeteria.
Social Welfare: 12:30 p.m. Cottonwood.
Design Departement Hallmark lecture series: 7:30 p.m.
Forum Room.
**Physical Therapy:** 7:30 p.m., Council Room
8:15 p.m., Health Center
SIMS 7:30, p.m., Parley A. Hall
SIMS 8:15, p.m., K. Masaue room
EDUCATION
Education Advancement Board 6 p.m. Orad Room.
Education Advancement Board 6 p.m. Field House.
BUR REHAB 6 p.m., Ballgorm,
Riverhead.
Latin American Film: 7:30 p.m. Kamas Room
American Film: 8:15 p.m. Kamas Room
Varally Basketball: 7:35 p.m. Akihane Field House
The actress confessed that she had spent "a fortune" pursued her favorite hobby. She also said she had worn out a car and two cameras in the process.
"After a while I changed the pits for two buttons. My mouth was getting sore," she said.
Photography has long been a hobby for Lollobrigida who also studied painting and drawing before becoming an actress. Her favorite models both on film and in drawings were her former husband, Milko Skofic and their son, Milchetta.
KANU Schedule
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12 a.m. News-University Forum
1. 30 This Afternoon
2. 30 News-World News
3. 30 News World News
4. 30 Nightlight
5. 30 The RAU Special
6. 30 News, Indiana basketball
7. 30 News, Weather-Sports
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nail down the facts
ABOUT CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
It's always the same. Somebody comes up with the idea that they are "the biggest" or "the best" or some other superlative. So where does that leave the shopper? Confused. That's where.
We'd like to take some of the confusion out of shopping. So let's look at a few facts.
FACT. Downtown Lawrence has over 300 stores and services.
FACT. Downtown Lawrence has more stores selling women's fashions, men's wear, shoes, stationery, household gifts, gift items, floor coverings, jewelry. Compare this with any other shopping area . . . DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE comes out on top.
Now just a few words about prices. The Downtown merchants are in business. To stay in business, their prices must be competitive. The fact that there are stores Downtown that are being operated by second, third and fourth generation business men is convincing proof.
FACT. Downtown Lawrence is convenient to all sections of the city. Not just one.
So, the facts favor Downtown Lawrence. But don't take our word for it. Check out the facts for yourself.
SHOP...
THE LOWER BRIDGE
Downtown
Lawrence
FACT. There are 11 conveniently located parking lots in Downtown Lawrence. These provide hundreds and hundreds of parking places for cars.
you'll like it!
COFFEE TEA SALAD
PEACH CHERRIES
CINNAMON
MINTS
CHILIS
POMEGRANATE
RASPBERRY
BREAD
COFFEE
CHICKEN
HOT CHILI
COFFEE
TARTAR
CHILI
PEACH
CHERRIES
CINNAMON
MINTS
CHILIS
POMEGRANate
RASPBERRY
BREAD
ACME LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
THE ALLEY SHOP
ARENSBERG SHOES
THE ATTIC
AZTEC INN
BELL MUSIC
BEN FRANKLIN STOR
BRIMAN'S JEWELERS
CAMPBELL'S
CAREY'S APPLIANCE
CASSEM'S CLOTHING
CHARLTON, HOLMES,
PECK & BROWN, INS
CLOSEOUT CARPETS
COMMONWEALTH
THEATRES
DUCKWALLS
FRANCIS SPORTING
DUCKWALLS
FRANCIS SPORTING
GOODS
GENERAL APPLIANCE
GENERAL JEANS
GORDON'S SHOES
HANNA'S APPLIANCE
JANELL'S
JAY SHOPPE
BUD JENNINGS
CARPET
JOHNSON ' FURNITURE
KRAFT FURNITURE
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
LAWRENCE TYPE.
WRITER COMPANY
LITTLE WOMEN
LITWIN'S
AGENT
MILLER FURNITURE
MISTER GUY OF
MALOTT'S HARDWARE
MARK'S JEWELERS
MARLING'S
MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL AGENCY
LAWRENCE
McCALLS SHOES
McCOY'S SHOES
MCQUEEN'S JEWELERS
NYE'S FLOWERS
OBER'S
ODELL'S MUSIC
J. C. PENNEY
POUND'S FABRICS INC.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
RANEY DRUG STORE
ROBERTS JEWELRY
ROUND CORNER
DRUG
ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP
RAY STONEBACK'S
STORE
STORE
THE TOWN SHOP
THE VILLAGE SET
VICKERS GIFT SHOP
WEAVER'S
WHITE SEWING
CENTER
WILSON SUPPLY &
SERVICE
WOOLWORTH'S
ZIP DRUG STORE
Palm tree
6
Tuesday, December 5, 1972
University Daily Kansar
SHOWBOAT COCKTAILS
Kansan Photo by CHRIS CANNELLA
American Art
"Showboat," an acrylic on canvas by Robert Cottingham, is one of 14 works displayed by American artists in Spoon Art Museum.
The exhibits, which cover the period from 1929 to 1972, will be on display until Jan. 28. In conjunction with the art presentation, the museum was presented with a $10,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. The museum said that the money be used to purchase works of living American artists.
Survey of Kansas Schools Says KU Students Succeed, Earn More
By JEANNETTE HARTMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
O or 11,000 surveys sent out in May, 673 (or 58 per cent) were returned, according to a report entitled, "An Appraisal of the University of Kansas." The Seniors at the University of Kansas."
The survey showed that KU seniors generally were younger and had higher grade averages as compared with other seniors surveyed. Their parents had higher incomes and higher levels of education than those of the rest of the group.
The survey was conducted by two KU faculty members, Kenneth E. Anderson, professor and dean emeritus of the School of Law, and a constantistant vice chancellor for academic affairs.
KU SENIORS rated extracurricular life offered by the institution higher than did the rest of the seniors questioned. They described their preparation in broad experience in the humanities and in developing a personal sense of responsibility "reducing social injustices" stronger than did other seniors in the survey.
However, they rated the descriptions, intellectual, snobbish and dedicated, as more appropriate to their university than realistic or realistic, friendly and conforming.
A survey of 10 per cent of the 1971-1972 senators at the six colleges and universities in September 1972 showed that KU seniors differed from senators at other schools not only in background but in the rating they gave to their university.
In contrast with other seniors, KU seniors
"The REACTION from Dean Bailour's "The very enthusiastic," of O'Turek said Monday.
Escorts to Calm Late Walkers' Fears
According to O'Rourke's outline of the program, its primary purpose will be "to teach the students the campus to any given location on or near the campus. It will serve as an obvious yet indirect deterent to the problem of raps, robberies and sex offenses at KU."
Last week, O'Rourke presented his tentative plans for Operation Escort to William Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs; Shirley Gilham, director of Affirmative Action for Women; and Mike Thomas, director of Traffic and Secur-
By CHRISTINE CANNELLA Kansan Staff Writer
The program originated when David O'Rourke, Overland Park senior and first sergeant in Pershing Rifles, became aware of the need for such a service and wanted to help. He organized 25 men from Pershing Rifles, commonly E-7, to be escorts.
Coeds of the University of Kansas who fear walking alone at night, will soon have a way to begin their journey. Beginning the first day of the spring semester, Jan. 15, any coed will be able to dial one of two telephone numbers and receive a secret to accompany her to any location on campus.
Coaches will be able to request an escort between 6 p.m. and midnight by calling the Pershing Rifles office in 642-7894. Two men will science building calls in that office. O'Rourke said that they could study there if there were no calls.
AFTER MIDNIGHT, coeds will be able to arrange for an escort by calling O'Rourke's home telephone number (842-9073). O'Rourke or one of his roommates, also members of Pershing Rifles, will take calls at this number.
O'Rourke said that the escorts would drive and walk the women to their destinations. Twenty cars are available for the operation. According to O'Rourke, the driver must be a certified electric magnetic signs on the outside or inside of the car. The caller will be given a description of the kind of car and of the person who is coming to pick her up. The driver will be asked to give a description of herself or some identifying characteristic.
O'ROUREU SAID that each caller would be given a questionnaire by the escort so that the escorts could receive some feedback on the operation.
"They can throw it away or fill it out and mail it to the office of Affirmative Action where it will be checked by either Shririe or one of her staff members," O'Rourke said.
O'Rourke said that escorts also would have walk-talkies with them to record the time of pick up and as a security measure in case something should occur while they were out. The walk-talkies will be monitored by a man in the office.
O'ROWREK SAID that while it was logical to think that women were going to use the service, it was by no means restricted to them. He said that the program was not intended to infringe upon the bus or taxi services.
First Indian Hall of Fame To Be Housed at Haskell
The greatest of Indian athletes are being immortalized at the Indian Athletic Hall of Fame. The Hall, which was inaugurated on Nov. 25, is being established at Haskell Indian Junior College, according to Wayne Postoak, Haskell Athletic coach.
The Hall, temporarily housed in the Haskell Student Union, was originated by Robert Bennet, when he was federal commissioner of Indian Affairs before 1987. He later became assistant commissioner of Indian Affairs and former Olympic gold medal winner.
Postak said that the Hall was under the direction of the Haskell board of directors, which approved Haskell as the site for the development of its clients were very positive to the selection.
Jim Tharp was inducted into the Hall of
Fame for his achievements in football and
hockey.
Postask said that a separate building for the Hall was planned. A campaign to raise funds is under way. The money is to be raised by the university grants. They now have only $5,000, said Postask, but they have a list of more than foundations to which they can request funds.
The coaching staff at Haskell has formed an unofficial committee and has done a lot work involved in the project, he said. Poster on the walls of the problems, but that they could be overcome
The Bureau of Indian Affairs has assisted in publicity for the Hall and sometime next semester Sports Illustrated magazine feature article on the Hall, Postak said.
"We want to build a structure that the Italian people can be pround of." Poostak said.
Because this was the first year of the Hall, an exceptionally large number of athletes, 15, were inducted into the Hall. In a normal season, five additions could be expected, Postak said.
Louis Tewanima, track and field star, who was twice a participant in the Olympics and was selected for the Olympics by Jim Thorpe, was inducted, Joseph N. Guyon, also inducted, was an all-American football player at both tackle and halfback. He played for the National Football Hall of Fame in 1966.
Also inducted was Albert A. Exendine,
outstanding as a football player and as a
coach. He was 1906 all-American and
was also named as football coach at
Oklahoma State.
hailed by the king of Sweden as the greatest athlete in the world.
Allie P. Reynolds, one of the greatest of the modern pitchers, was also inducted. He pitched more shutouts between 1945 and 1952 than any other pitcher, and was president of the American Association of Professional Baseball Clubs 1969-71.
Hearing Set For Claimant Of Money Cache
The cache, said by KB officials to contain between $10,000 and $25,000, was found Oct. 5 by a University of Kansas employee while he was inspecting farm implements.
An extradition hearing will be held Thursday in Wyndotte County Magistrate Court to determine whether one of the plaintiffs of the large cache of money found on the floor of Lawrence will be returned to Nebraska to face charges for drug violations.
THE SERVICE will be supported by Pershing Rifles, according to O'Rourke, and they do not intend to ask for funds from any other campus organizations. He said that the members of Pershing Rifles would continue the service regardless of the demand.
The man, Bradford D. Charles, Rt. 2, Lawrence, is wanted in Pawee County Neb. on charges stemming from a recent investigation of a marijuana processing and selling ring there, according to Mike Donohue. Pawee County district attorney
"If the demand increases we will have the bodies to fill that demand; in other words, our supply will not dwindle if the demand increases." O'Rourke said.
Plans are being made to place posters explaining the operation and giving the telephone numbers throughout the campus. These posters will be displayed by telephones and at every information center or service counter on the campus.
A LOG OF CALLERS will be maintained, which will include the time the call is received, the names of the caller and escort, the name of the building, the time leaves the building, the time he reaches the
coed and the time he returns to the building
O'Rourke said that the log would indicate three things. First, it will guage their efficiency and the amount of time it takes to get from one place to another on campus either on foot or by car. Second, they will be able to determine from the log which days are weak the service is most used and third when the service is most used. From these indicators, the numbers men and cars needed for a particular night and time can be determined.
O'Rourke said that the only problem remained was the question of liability. O'Rourke now believes that the escort would be responsible to the woman while she is being escorted. Although he said it was pessimistic to think that such a thing could happen, O'RourKe told him that Charles Oldfather, University of Kansas matter, next week to discuss the matter.
LATIN AMERICAN WEEK presented by THE LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION with THE SUPPORT OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB. Latin America: Reality and Tendencies
PROGRAM:
- EXHIBIT Mon., Dec. 4th Hill Wed., Dec. 6th
- PANEL "OBSTACLES TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN
LANGUAGE" Mon., Dec. 4th, 7:30 p.m. FORUM ROOM
'BEGINNING OF LATIN'
**FILM ON THE STRUGGLE OF THE LATIN AMERICAN PEOPLE**
* ● NONOLOGUE BY ADELA CAMPBELL & WRICO SLEEPES
NO MORE" AND WRAP UP SESSION: "NOW WHERE DO WE GO"
* *Eri. Dec. 9th*
AMERICA"
Mon., Dec. 4th 7:30 p.m. FORUM ROOM
●LECTURE ON VALLEJOS POETRY (Latin American Literature)
Mon., Dec. 4th 8:30 Big Eight Room
The invited speaker for this lecture is Prof. Escobar from the Spanish & Portuguese Dept.
- LECTURE ON LATIN AMERICAN, PALESTINE & VIET-NAM POLITICAL SITUATION by GERALD CHALIAND, French Writer highly knowledgeable on the issues of Latin America, Palestine & VIet-Nam.
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rated career placement services, institutional food services and health services as lower in quality than the surveyed group did. They also rated teaching assistants (in contrast with regular staff members) as lower in quality.
A similar survey of 1967 graduates from six state schools, conducted by the Master Planning Commission on Kansas education and completed in September 1972, showed the same basic results in background and appraisal of education by KU graduates in comparison with other graduates from other state colleges and universities
THE SURVEY of 1967 graduates showed that:
about 70 per cent of the persons from KU had graduated from a Kansas high school as compared with about 79 per cent for the total group.
about 68 per cent of KU graduates found
positioning compared with 57 per
cent of the total group.
—the annual income of KU graduates was higher than that of the graduates of other schools
51 per cent of the KU graduates said that they had become involved in efforts to correct social injustices, compared with 40 per cent for the entire group.
"STUDENTS WHO come to KU relatively tend to be bright, high motivated people," said Hutchison, "To an extent they seem relatively satisfied with their four years here, and their expectations seem to have been met.
"This would lead us to believe that we're having success in meeting the needs of the student population."
Hutchison said that in comparing the statistics some consideration of the schools involved should be made.
Gas Shortage Not Expected To Affect Lawrence Area
About comparing the incomes of KU graduates with those of other schools, he said, "One must keep in mind that this is a University that produces the lawyers, architects, engineers pre-maed students of our professional schools graduate people and these people tend to have higher pay compared with teachers, for example."
A natural gas shortage in Kansas and Missouri will probably not affect the Lawrence area. W. J. C. Salome, vice manager of Gas Lawns, also manager of Gas Lawns Ga. Co., said Friendship.
Salome said that a gas shortage was occurring in Missouri ahead, but that it would not change service here unless the weather becomes exceedingly cold.
Even then, Salome said, only large industries, which are designed to use other sources of power such as fuel oil, would be affected until gas pressure was restored.
He mentioned two alternatives for natural gas, the importation of liquefied gas and the possible extraction of hydrogen from the ocean.
"This shortage will probably occur every winter for the next 15 years," said Salome, "and I think we'll see more restrictions on gas usage in industry in the future."
everyone, because they are long distances from natural gas storage areas.
few in Kansas have been asked to curtail the use of natural gas, according to Charles Rambo, executive vice president of Gas Service Co. He said that the gas supply to some industries was cut in half for a few days about two weeks ago.
University Building and Grounds officials report that they have not been asked to switch to other fuel, and are usually never asked to until after the first of the year.
"This shortage of fuel is not only limites to natural gas. It is a problem in almost every industry and includes many types of fuel."
He said that if an industry was forced to resort to other fuels for a long period of time, the products they produced could have a higher price.
Salame said that major industries such as the University could switch to oil fuel in a oil tank when, when asked to, and that the only drawn is more expensive than natural gas.
CAROUSEL
..the Store with the Pink Door Mall's Shopping Center
2013
Soft Gushie Soles
Bass TACKS
The Saddle is in Soft Calfskin Bone with Navy Saddle.
the Oxford in Rugged Beige Suede
in the Bag
Tuesday, December 5. 1972
University Daily Kansan
7
Beehive
Kansan Photo by SUSAN HAYES
Center Funds
Nurse Andy Levich completes a sale of
Dentist Debbie Bassett's toothbrush
sophomore, employs of Walkins
By JANET SANTOS
Kansan Staff Writer
Overpopulation Going to the Dogs
While the pill continues to gain popularity as a means of curbing human overpopulation, it may soon be introduced as a remedy and increase birth rates in dogs and cats.
Vic Melton, manager of the Lawrence Humane Society, said Monday that there were now almost as many dogs as persons in the United States. He said that research had shown that in ten years there would be four dogs for every woman, and woman in the United States unless something was done to curb the birth rate of pets.
Melton and his wife, Helen, have managed the Lawrence Humane Society since 1959. He said that in 1959 the society took in from 60 to 70 dogs and cats a month and that the adoption rate was about 50 per cent.
More than 200 dogs and cats are now brought in each month to the Meltons, he said, but only 10 per cent of these are ever adopted. He said that of the 267 dogs and cats that were brought in during June, 215 of these animals had to be put to sleep.
MELTON SAID the overpopulation problem had grown so large in recent years that expensive, high bred dogs were used to control Kennels because of their overabundance.
The government has the means to curb pet overpopulation, Melton said, but it remains to be seen how much effect it will have.
"The government is going to have to take over," Melton said. "It is going to have to adopt ordinances on pet reproduction and enforce them."
Melton and the other humane society managers said that if people didn't realize the problem soon, the government would have to sten in.
Sgt. Larry Loveland of the Lawrence police department said Monday that he did think that pet overpopulation was the problem, but it wasn't. The people who were people who allowed their pets to run
LOVELAND SAID there had been numerous complaints that dogs had knocked over trash cans or had torn up the branches of a tree in their neighborhood pets rather than straw dogs.
loose.
Lawrence has an ordinance that requires that dogs be on a leash or under the control of their owner at all times; also all pets must be restrained, according to the city clerk's office.
Members of humane societies in Topeka, the Kansas City area and Lawrence said that all female cats and dogs adopted from these agencies had to be spayed.
Audrey McCaig, executive director of the Topeka Humane Society, said that all purebred male dogs adopted from the society had to be sterilized.
McAIG SAID the reason they emphasized purebred dogs was that too many people adopted these dogs for studding purposes.
"We just don't need any more puppies," he said.
Bob Mohant, director of Animal Control of Kansas City, Mo., said that research was being done on birth control methods for animals.
The November 22 issue of the Wall Street Journal reported that Colorado State University of Fort Collins, Colo., has been investigated for the death and feline contraception since 1968.
According to this article, Lloyd C. Faulker, chairman of the department of pharmacy at the University of State, said that early results of tests indicated that substances implanted under the skin, given in a pill or put in food at the hospital, could be in a definite decline in the pet birth rate.
MOHART SAID he recently spoke with a representative of a newly created Los Angeles spaying clinic. In this case, the government stepped in to curb the pet owners he said. Owners can bring their pets in and have them spayed at reduced rates.
Mohart said he thought spaying clinics would help the situation, but would only be effective if people were educated about the fact that she said that unless the people realized that they couldn't allow their pets to breed, there would be an overabundance of cats and dogs.
Freshmen and sophomores in the Colleges-within-a College (CWC) will be able to take advantage of early advising sessions scheduled by the five CWC's. The college's advisers will meet with advisers and fill out a class schedule for the spring semester.
Early advising was designed to ease pre-enrolment advising load and does not guarantee that a student will be able to enroll in classes chosen early, according to the College's undergraduate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and director of Olive College.
The CWC student's actual class schedule will depend upon the availability of classes at the campus.
kittens out in the country and dump them,
Mohart said. The animals often wander
inside the building.
Centennial College has scheduled a preadvising session for 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Ewellshor Hall cafeteria. Advisors will be present at that time to assist students in planning course schedules for the spring semester.
Meet of the early advising for North College students was completed between Nov. 9 and Nov. 21. North College students who failed to meet with their advisers in this period are urged to make appointments with them before the Christmas break.
Acupuncture Stalled Here
CWC Furnishes Chance For Pre-Advising Sessions
MOHART SAID that reported incidents up- packs of dogs attacking park animals and a large number of complaints from residents of dog and cat fights were as evidence of the problem unowned dogs and cats were creating in cities.
Rather than having their pets sterilized, too many people just take the puppies and
Two pre-advising sessions are scheduled for freshmen and sophomores in Nunemaker College. Between Dec. 13 and Dec. 20, returning sophomores may meet with advisers in the Nunemaker College office.
The pre-advising period for Oliver College students will be Dec. 11 through Dec. 21.
Nunemaker is scheduled for all day Jan. 16 and from 8 a.m. to 12 noon, Jan. 17.
Nunemaker freshmen who have been assigned academic advisers are to make a list of the students.
Students in Pearson College may meet with their advisers any time this week.
Correction
Finding a practicing acupuncturist in this area is similar to looking for a needle in a haystack—possible, if one has a great deal of patience, but not too likely.
Greg Sturm, executive secretary of the Board of Healing Arts in Kansas, said recently, "The Board has ruled that no one should perform acupuncture until further notice." We know that it is being done here, however, and he Board is taking actions accordingly."
Dr. Larry Walters, Girard chiropractor, has studied acupuncture and practiced its techniques. Walters said that those who practiced acupuncture would like to see it brought out of the dark and made more easily accessible to the general public.
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
Funds granted by the United Fund to Headquarters Incorporated will be used for existing operations, and will not be used for hiring an extra full-time employee, according to Ric Sibler, director of Headquarters.
Silber said Monday that additional funds were being sought to hire another employee, but as yet there was still not enough money to do so. Friday's Kansan stated that the United Fund grant would go to hire another employee.
WALTERS STUDIED acupuncture from Dai Yuan to acupuncturist for Mao Tse-tung's army.
In traditional Chinese theory, the art of acupuncture is based on the flow of ch'i or 'life energy,' through the body, Walters said. Energy flows through a network of channels, according to Walters, and arrayed along this network are between 500 and 800 points the acupuncturist must learn to pierce with his needles.
"It right now lay people are practicing it
and be qualified it takes a lot of years and
it's hard."
There is a great demand for acupuncture, Walters said. Possible applications for it include dental treatments as well as the use of acupressure in surgery without the use of anesthesia.
"There are probably a good dozen or more practicing acupuncturists in Kansas," Walters said. "We're trying to get some laws set up."
Coalition
of acupuncture there, but he said he remained unconvinced of the practicality of the technique for American operating rooms.
"I have one patient in Tulsa suffering from rheumatoid arthritis whose wearing shoes now for the first time, a direct result of the injury," she said. "but it's a working tool, not a cure-all."
Mohart said his agency was a municipal organization and had no veterinarian to perform the spaying operations. He said the humane societies provided the services.
Women's Coalition will meet 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the basement of the Museum to plan its project for spring For more information contact Susan Lorniska, 843-6410.
A benefit dance for Yarrow Free High School will be tonight from 8 P.M. to 12 p.m. at the Red Dog Jug. Tide, The Penstans and Dark Horse will play. Admission is per person. The school, located at 345 Indiana St., has been open since August. For further information, contact Mark Dutton at 842-8774.
Campus Briefs German Club
German Club members who have rote in the club's nativity play must practice either for 30 minutes between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. today or for 30 minutes between 2:30 p.m. in the sunflower Room of the Kansas University in the play must attend the dress rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the University Lutheran Church.
Benefit Dance
According to Dr. Kasumi Aawae, of the University of Kumassu Medical Center in Tokyo, an injured conductor
"There are some people in Kansas who have shown some interest but no studies of acupuncture are being conducted," Arakawa said.
Silber also said that the Drug Analysis program at Headquarters was used for qualitative analysis of a drug, not quantitative analysis as was reported in the Kansan.
"ITS JUST not practical. I'm sure it's quite expensive," Arakawa said. "It might possibly work on some cancer patients, but the costs would be astronomical."
"EVERYBODY'S LOOKING for a panacae and this just isn't it," he said. "It is a worthwhile technique, but in the wrong hands it could cause a lot of harm."
"Making an individual who is considering using a psychoactive chemical aware of the true composition of the drug has had significant positive effects toward reducing or eliminating drug abuse in our community," Silber said.
“There are so many things that are important right now,” he said. “We have to be careful not to be caught up in the sensationalism of the moment.”
Arakawa spent 60 days in Japan observing what doctors were doing in the field
Festival of Arts Coupons To Be Sold at Enrollment
Coupons for the 1973 SUA Festival of the Arts will be on sale to KU students during spring semester enrollment. Jan. 17-19, 2014. Prairie Village junior and director,亭
The festival will be April 2-7 and will feature B. B. King, David Steinberg, Jimmi Spheeris, the Elio Pornate Company, the National Touring Company's production of "Happy Birthday, Wanda June," Robert Moog and John Lahr.
Steinberg and Spheris, $1 for Llar, $1.50 for the Eleo Ponare Dance Company and $3.50 for King. Moog's presentation, in conjunction with the Humanities Lecture Series, is free. Individual night tickets total $10.50.
The $5 festival coupons sold at enrollment entitle the student to a ticket for each night of the festival. Students may purchase two coupons if they wish, Ramsey said.
SUA will begin redeeming coupons for tickets March 5. For the week of March 5, only coupon redemptions will be made. Beginning March 12, tickets for the in-store sales on sale for noncupon holders. Coupons may also be redeemed during this period.
Full refunds on tickets purchased during enrollment may be made beginning in mid-February through 5 p.m., March 26. No partial refunds will be made.
Coupon redemptions and all ticket sales will be on a first come, first serve basis. Only 3,700 tickets are available for each night.
Ramssey said that students who purchased coupons during enrollment would receive a letter in February informing them of the program and deadlines for coupon redemption.
HIKING BOOTS
Individual night ticket prices have been set at $1.50 for "Wanda June," $3 for
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Tuesday, December 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
45
INDIANA CITY
32
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTEI
Tom Kivisto (45) Drives Hard Past Jan van Breda Kolff
honor judge isplaymaking force on Jawbone
Junior guard is playmaking force on Jayhawks.
OU Could Finish No.1, Says Coach
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Oklahoma coach Chuck Fairbanks was asked Monday how he thought No. 1 ranked and undefeated in the Big Ten, his football season in the Hiaweyne Conference.
Fairbanks, whose team is No. 3, came up with this quick answer:
"If Southern California was playing in our league, there's a pretty good chance you could be a good coach."
At the same time, Fairbanks said "there's a chance" Oklahoma, one of five Big Eight teams bound for postseason bowl big. Could wind up as the nation's No. 1 team.
"No one is immune to losing."
He did not elaborate immediately, except to add:
Fairbanks had quite a bit to say about the national rankings in which his Sooneil trail was.
"I's purely a mythical national championship," Fairbanks said. "Everybody doesn't go through an elimination process, but it's practical. It's not a professional setup.
"THIS IS college football, which must live within the framework of education.
"Sure, schools have the responsibility of trying to maneuver themselves into trying to win the national championship. It brings prestige to the school."
The *trouble is everybody, including the alumni*, takes the national championship to Atlanta.
Fairbanks does not go along with the thinking of some that the Sooners' football fortunes will noodle next year because they lose their entire backfield of Dave Robertson, Greg Pruit, Joe Wiley and Leon Crosswhite.
"We've got some good players to rebuild
he said. "We will be able play next year
Fairbanks said Robertson, the quarterback, was one of the big factors in the success of Oklahoma, which finished the regular season 10-1, won the Big Eight title and plays Penn State in the Sugar Bowl Dec. 31.
"IF I SINGLED out one person who was
responsible for our success, it would have to be Dave Robertson. He has confidence he can move the football. His job of leading our team is outstanding as far as I am concerned."
Fairbanks was in Kansas City for a meeting of Big Eight coaches.
Fairbanks said that "Penn State is one of the best football teams in the nation. We've got to play to win. If anything good's going to happen, we've got to carry our share of the load."
He was referring once more to the
patriotic feeling that might emerge
as the nation's football team.
Fairbanks said he hoped two injured sooners, running back Fruit and split end Kerrigan, were able to get out.
"Our main purpose with Fruitt," Fairbanks concluded, "is to get him well. We banks are doing that."
Coach Johnny Majors of Iowa State, whose team has lost three games in succession, had something to say about the Iowa State Bowl date Dec. 18 with Georgia Tech.
"WE'RE GONNA win," Majors said. "We geta get ready. I don't know if the early bowl bid had anything to do with our defeats. I don't think so. We'll do some running Thursday and put on the pads Monday."
Al Onofroir, the Missouri coach, said he thought Arizona State University, the Tigers' Dec. 23 Flaesta Bowl foe," has the best football team in the United States."
Colorado coach Eddie Crowder, preparing to send the Buffaloes against Auburn in the Gator Bowl Dec. 30, said he will play Alabama in the upset after Alabama, 17:56, last week up.
"He wishes he hadn't gone."
Tom Osborne, Nebraska assistant coach who takes over the top job after the Cornhuskers' Orange Bowl game with Notre Dame Jan. 1, pinch hit for coach Bob Devaney. He saw Notre Dame lose to Southern California. 45-23. Saturday.
"I was quite impressed," Osborne said.
"I was surprised by the way Nota Dume
had been treated by a lawyer."
the time our game rolls around, I think we'll be
Osborne was asked if he thought Devaney would become restless in his job only as athletic director at Nebraska and start poking around in the football coaching end.
"In a way," Obsolete replied, "I'd just as soon he'd madden around a little. Anbody who has won 90 per cent of his games ... It's a tough act to follow."
Veteran Hoosiers Invade Allen; Javhawks Back to Two Guards
The opening game jitters for the University of Kansas basketball squad should be gone by now, but, nonetheless, the Jayhawks' task gets no easier tonight as they tangle with the Indiana Hosiers in a 7:35 tipoff at Allen Field House.
Indiana, which trounced Harvard in its opening game Saturday night, had a 17-8 record last season, including a trip to the NIT tourney in New York City.
ALSO ON THE HOUSE roster this season are six sophomores from last year's 8-4 freshman team and seven freshmen from a team to be one of the best-recruited in the country.
Coach Bob Knight's Hoosiers returned seven lettermen this season. Among those lettermen are four starters, including 68 senior center Steve Downing, who led the team in rebounds last year with an average of 15.1 per game.
Last season was Knight's first at Indiana and he brought a new disciplined style of basketball to the Hoosiers. His change of play was successful, as Indiana ended the season ranked 15th nationally in team defense.
THE HOOSIERS started last season winning eight of their first ten games and climbing as high as fifth in the nation at one time. In the Big Ten Conference last year season was ranked in a tie for third, but this season is rained out. The team with Michigan, Ohio State and Minnesota
"From our standpoint, we're going into this season with two advantages we didn't have a year ago," Knight stressed. "First of all, we know that sophomores have a pretty good idea of what we try to do, both offensive and defensive. Last year, they had to learn a more controlled offense. Secondly, we know what to control, and we know what each player can do."
Downing, the "Mr. Do-It All" for the Hoosiers, injured his knee in the second game of the season last winter, but he still managed to average 17.5 points a game, second on the team behind All-American Stephen Davis, graduated. Against Kentucky last year, Downing had his finest game, scoring 47 points and hauling in 25 rebounds.
Kansan Sports Writer
John Ritter, a 6-5 senior forward, also returns to give Indiana a balanced scoring attack. Ritter scored 14.0 points per game last year.
BY DON PFANNENSTIEL
Personal Life of Player Is Topic in Heisman Race
The other senior in the starting lineup will be 6-3 guard Frank Wilson. Wilson, only
NEW YORK (AP)—College football crowns its No.1 individual player of the 1972 season today with the selection of the No.1 team, and a time answer a hotly debated question.
Should a player's private life be taken into consideration or should be chosen on account of the nature of their job?
However, an editorial campaign has been launched in some quarters against the selection of Rodgers because of youthful clashes with the law.
On the latter gauge, the man rated by most observers as most qualified for the honor is Johnny Rodgers, the 5-foot-9, 173-pound all-purpose Nebraska ace.
A versatile runner, pass receiver and kick return specialist, he has been the wheelhorse of a powerful team that won national championships in 1970 and 1971 and finished this year with an 8-21 record and an Orange Bowl ticket.
In 1970, Rodgers and some of his pals were charged in a service station robbery in Los Angeles. He was
"The rule of candidacy for the treasurer Award is limited to one word—'outstanding.' I take 'outstanding' to encompass actions on and off the field."
Last spring he was arrested for running a stop sign while driving with a suspended
The resulting publicity was damaging, but Rodgers immediately set about changing his 'bad kid' image. He has been criticised for not using tools and helped counsel other vountagers.
Gene Ward, New York Daily News columnist who has written that Rodgers should not be considered because of his off-the-field record, rationalized Monday:
Law Suits, K.C. Troubles To Be Discussed by NHL
Other cities in line for franchises are Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Cleveland and San Diego.
Rodgers' football record is one of the most impressive in the game's history. During his three-year varsity career, he has averaged 13.8 yards every time he'han'd a non-counting pass receptions, a mark no other player in college history has matched.
"We can go anyplace we wish," said
Kansas City man Michael Isabell.
City cannot meet its obligation.
groups who claim there'll be noise and traffic problems."
CHICAGO (AP)—The National Hockey League governors opened their two-day meeting Monday to review "extreme litigation in which we are involved" and cast a doubtful shadow over the progress of the Kansas City franchise.
However, it was learned, Cincinnati would have first choice at a franchise.
This year, the season on which the Hickory High School boys soccer team accounted for a total of 2,014 yards in the all-around, was 6.9.
The "extreme litigation" involves numerous suits involving the newly founded World Hockey Association, said Clarence Campbell, NHL president.
Rodgers' chief rivals for Heisman honors are John Hulman, quarterback from Penn State; Greg Fruitt, the spearhead of Ohio State's offense; Davis, Alabama quarterback; Bert Jones, passing ace of Louisiana State; Gary Huff of Florida State, the nation's total offense leader; Anthony Davis, Southern Californiën; the Giant Richer, Nebraska's defensive giant.
places, recording memories and
He scored 17 touchdowns.
purpose category, averaging 182.9 yards a game in running from scrimmage, catching passes, returning kickoffs and punts.
He scored 17 goals against.
PIZZA HUT
Smorgasbord!
Eat all the Pizza and salad
you can handle
for just $1.35
Kansas City and Washington, D.C., have been awarded conditional franchises which would expand the NHL to 18 teams for the 1974-75 season.
"There's no problem involving the Washington franchise," said Campbell "except for the possibility of a nuisance factor brought about by environmental
"If the Kansas City people are not prepared to meet the conditions, they will voluntarily withdraw and the National Guard be free to go elsewhere," said Campbell.
But now Kansas City, which already has had two extensions to meet the terms of the NFH, has until Dec. 15 to fulfill conditions of its franchise which include the financing a new building.
"Kansas City has run into difficulty since the referendum on tax laws was rejected by the voters Nov. 7 and a new form of financing must be found," said Campbell.
MONDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY
11:30 a.m.
until 1:30 p.m.
1606 W. 23rd 843-3516
804 Iowa 842-1667
averaged 7.4 points last winter, but his toughness and determination, according to Knight, make him excellent as Indiana's top defensive man.
KU Women Lose, 66-42, In Basketball
A 6-7 SOPHOMORE, Steve Green, will start at the other forward position. Green, expected to fill the shoes of departed team, averaged 24.3 for the freshman team.
STUDENT PRINT & DRAWING
EXHIBITION AND SALE
Also Some STAINED GLASS
The University of Kansas women's basketball team was defeated Sunday in its first scrimmage by Northwest Missouri State, 66-42.
The game was the first of two scrimmages played by the team in preparation for its regular season opening against Kansas State Dec. 8, at Manhattan
The fifth Hoosier starter is freshman
The second scrimpage for the team is today in Warrensburg, Mo., where it will play Central Missouri State. KU will have another team at Central Missouri State today. The KU women's volleyball team will travel with the basketball team.
--to a 67-13 loss to Washington, while Oral
and, yet, start the season, leased from
18th place.
Probable Starters
Ends Dec. 13
Tom Kiviste, 6; guard
Tommy Smith, 6.4; forward
Marrshall Rogers, 6.2; guard
Rick Suttle, 6.3; center
Rick Suttle, 6.9; center
SUA Gallery
14-18
Quinn Buckner, 6-2, nine
Frank Wilson, 6-3, four
John Bitter, 6-5, forward
Joe Ritchie, 6-5, forward
Steve Downing, 6-3
Bruins Still Leading Pack; Kansas State Inches to 16th
The Bruins have won 48 straight, including a 3-0 start on a new season, and Monday were again unanimously voted No. 1 in the designated Press major college basketball poll.
There have been three previous matches between KU and Indiana. The Hoeiers are the latest victory coming last season at Boston, Ind., when Indiana won, 59-16.
By The Associated Press It's UCLA and the 19 dwarfs
Quinn Buckner, who as a high school star was one of the most sought-after prospects in the nation last season. Buckner just joined the basketball squad last week after starting at safety for the Hosier football team to finish his late appearance, he scored 18 points in the intrasquid game and was tabbed as a starter for the Harvard game.
UCLA baggled all 35 first place votes from writers and broadcasters in a continuing landslide of the magnitude that would even make them happy at the White House.
Tonight KU will try to join the winning ranks after its opening loss to Vanderbilt Saturday. Coach Ted Owens who said after Saturday's game he might go with a bigger lineup this week, wasted no time in through as he installed 6-4 sophomore Tommie Smith in the starting five for tonight's game. Smith will take the place of Dale Greene, but otherwise there will be no changes in the KU lineup.
Maryland outployed Florida State, 16-10,
in second place votes, but coach Hugh Durham's Seminoles kept a solid grip on
voters with more consistent support from
voters.
Next mountain for Coach John Wooden's unbeatable is the 60 in a row record set by the University of San Francisco in the Bill Russell era of the mid-fifties.
UCLA walloped Bradley, 73-38, and
University of Pacific, 81-48, last week.
Florida State opened with a 109-9 victory
over Alabama, 66-52. Brown, 127-82, and Richmond, 82-50.
North Carolina State rollicked past Appalachian, 130-53, and Atlantic Christian, 110-40, causing the Wolfpack to move to No. 2, being ranked eighth the previous week.
The nation's top five remained intact with
Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, being
married to Minnesota and Marquette.
Long Beach State swamped North Texas, 90-63, but dropped from sixth to seventh. Penn bailed Kings, Pa., 94-54, and remained No. 9 while Southwestern Louisiana, eighth last week, fell to 10th despite beating Nevada-Las Vegas, 102-92, in its opener.
Adolph Rupp hung up his brown suit at Kentucky, but new coach Joe Hall has the stitches on. After Tremont Michigan State ridden by Rupp bolted from an 13th ranking to No. 8.
Ohio State dropped from 10th to 15th due
Michigan State was ranked 11th, followed by Oral Roberts, North Carolina, Tennessee, Ohio State, Michigan State, Southern Michigan, Michigan, Providence and Houston.
North Carolina made great progress, taking 13th place after being unranked last week. The Heal Tweils socked Pittsburgh, 99-84, in opening with a 107-62 beating of Biscayne.
Eighteen of the top 20 teams remained unhonest. Houston No. 20, was 3-1 including Lorenzo Cain.
KU Tournament Set Saturday For Volleyball
KU, which has won the four-tournament all four years, is favored to take its fifth straight title. Also playing in the tournament are. Kansas State, Washburn, FT. Hayes State, Tabor College and a sixth team to be announced.
The University of Kansas women's volleyball team, rated first in the state with 14:31 record, will host the Fifth Annual Women's basketball tournament Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
The tournament is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. with round-robin play. The game for third place is set to start at 2:30 p.m., and the championship match at 3:30 p.m. The time will advance to the area regionalls. The time and place will be announced later.
AN EXTENDED CHRISTMAS SPECIAL:
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WILL SELL FOR
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BUDGET
TAPES & RECORDS
Hours:
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12th & Oread
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 5, 1972
9
Council Attempts To Streamline Records System
The Council of Deans evaluated a series of programs Monday in an effort to streamline the University of Kansas computation system and decide which of the numerous programs still had value to the students and faculty.
Ambrose Sarices, vice-chancellor for academic affairs, said the council made various changes in the activities of the computation program.
Among the recommendations, Saricks said, was one that would eliminate scholarship reports to all residence halls, fraternities and sororities.
"These reports cost the program $1000 to produce and that does not include the price of labor used in producing the reports," she said. "We use it, we used enough to make them worthwhile."
Also recommended to be cut from the computation budget was the continuation of printing undergraduate cards for students enrolled in graduate classes.
Saricks said there were 12 different divisions and they could keep track of undergraduates enrolled in graduate courses. He also noted that he typically than could the computation program.
William Kelly, registrar, said that the decisions would not save much money but they would be good for him.
The six weeks grade reports, which have been debated in recent years, are now to be released from the computation program and handled on a student-professor-dean basis. The program said this would reduce the cost of the program from $800 to approximately $230.
In deliberating the other programs in doubt, the council recommended that the computation programs retain services such as candidate grade reports, for students who are enrolled in a class survey which will only be if there is enough student demand next fall.
In their final weekend of debate competition for this semester, University of Kansas debaters took honors at two tournaments this past weekend.
Debaters Win Two Tournevs
Out of 100 debaters attending the Warmongers Invitational at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Lydia Beebe, McPherson junior, received an award as second-place speaker and Todd Sophrone, sophomore, received an award as eight-place speaker. As a team, Hunter and Beebe took fifth in the tournament.
At Iowa State University, Joel Goldman, Prairie Village junior, and Frank Stewart, Manhattan, Kan., sophomore, took second place in the senior division of the Cyclone Invitational. In addition, Stewart received an award as eight-place speaker among the senior division. Because of his high achievement, Stewart are qualified to participate in the Illinois State University Tournament of Champions, March 29-31.
Correction
In the junior division at Iowa State, Charles Whiteman, Atlantic, Iowa, freshman, and Stewart Bishop, Topeka freshman, took second place and Phil Snow, Freshman, and Jim Prentice, Turon Freshman, and Toren Whiteman also received an award as third-place speaker out of 96 debaters in the junior division.
It was incorrectly reported in Monday's kansas that the application deadline for the local office had expired.
Students who will need additional funding from federally insured student loans or guaranteed student loans for the 1973 spring semester or for the summer should return applications to the financial aid office no later than Feb. 1.
Jerry Rogers, financial aid director, said Monday that FISL and guaranteed student loans for fall 1973 would not be processed until after summer school.
2434 Iowa V12-1008
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
tune-ups starting service
CSC
TOYOTA THUMPH
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
MILITARY CENTRE
WHY RENT?
KANSAN WANT ADS
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $ .03
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Waukie, 59)
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.20
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Three Days
Aeromodifications, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered by PUBLIC AEROMODICATIONS or national cricket. PLEASE RING ALL CLASSIFIED FIELDS TO 1111 FLASH LINEN
FOR SALE
Western City. Notes: -Now on Sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
1.
2. If you don't,
you're at an advantage.
Rither way it can be said the same thing. "New
Civilization. Civilization. Campus Mad-
own. Town Critic."
We pay top dollars for good clean Volkswagen cars. Call Awkward Volkswagen, 850-2171.
BAGHIES—We have 'em with his cuts and glands and the same thing we have with our BOGIE (a part of CampBella) look. The BOGIE is a part of CampBella).
BAGGIES. We have 'em 'em with big cuffs and plains
ties. We have 'em 'em with small cuffs. We compile the new German book "THE WEEKLY BAGGIE" in the New York Times.
Mobile home - BR. 12 # 60 Hacienda, air conditioned, pool, laundry room, modern park, clubhouse, carport, storage room, custom built home.
Ford Van--1962 Brand new engine. Body rough.
Birdcage. Must sell to finish school 1814-Blance 1886-Dave
Corrugated boxes, assorted sizes for mailing or
storage. Smith Paper, 1928 Mood Room. 12-5
843-2544
Laborrador - Doberman mix puppies. Black with
gray spots. $149.00 watchdogs. Free to good home 814-309-8957
12-5
watchdogs. Free to good home 814-309-8957
Tired of where you live? Try something new,
and try to get the contract for a
semester. Call Sue at 842-4995.
Call Sue at 842-4995.
Naimish Hall contract for sale. Available in
room 842-621, Room 732 11-5-9
72 T2504 Suniky cycle, 3 climates, tarp, 6 speeds
18-35 18-35 still, wall underwear, 60-85
18-35
MGB 65. Very good condition, new clutch, new gearbox, new battery and a 846-1106 license. Message will consider valid. MGB 65. Very good condition, new clutch, new gearbox, new battery and a 846-1106 license. Message will consider valid.
Men or boys 30 speed AMF bicycle, near 12-
$35. (Sold new for $60). 845-1747. new 12-
5
Martin 30-30 lever action rifle, with case and box of
$60. $60.817-747. 12-5
Need head. 2 Team electronic speakers, 2-way
speakers, and noise isolators. 4 audio amplifiers,
audibuffing, 11 microphones, 10 old Membrane
cables, and wires.
Chinna Mins 3/4 length furl coat. Real good com-
pany. The kit comes with a record change with 2 separate multi speaker
charges or two sets of 8 speakers.
3 month old Wulfurizer organ, with bench, books,
warranty. $1500 new. Sale for $1200. 147-85 = 12.5
PARKFISI MINI COMPACT ELECTRIC ORGAN
Handmade, handmade, handsome.
Call Steve at 843-4623. 12-5-
1964 and 63 Chev's Take your pick or take use both) Dirt cheap. (Neither one driven over 100 m.p.h.) Motor Motor Mart. 1518 W 23rd. 84-12. 3963.
185 Mutang侵權 6 cyl. 3 apx. good tpu
185 Mutang侵權 6 cyl. 3 apx. good tpu
Motor Mater. 1518 W. 23rd. 842-9055
F10 Ford pickup. F250 3/4 ton, 4 bike, good farm
car. F250 Camper Moto Moro. F250 Campa Moto Moro.
23rd, 849-3800. 18-5
Duel Showman amplifier: 100 watts. 2 D-140
at room condition, $58. Call 682-4149
after a bpm.
One Naimitim contract for sale. Desperate to sell, will give a discount Call anytime. Suit $425.00
Two former Mr. Guy employees to sell personal lazenges. Lazenges at lowest prices. Look here. Suits, autos & 42H, 42L, thirties-10, 15H-3; 15H-5; 15H-7. Wrap, t-shirt, dress, hoodie, Mike or Phil. M43-756-766. 12-5
19 MG Midet. belge, 4 ud. qud. good tides
19 MG Midet. belge, 60 campus. Campus
Mist. 1518 MISR, 824, 342-850. 12-05
Mist. 1518 MISR, 824, 342-850.
Drake SW-14, 18-Band short wave receiver less than 5 meters away. Drake Raleigh biase less than 6 months old. Drake Bali biase less than 6 months old.
1 mate Naimith contract for sale. Room 1022
841-3047 12-4
2 female淋湿 contracts for spring semen
and 1 male contract for to sell dehumidant
for Linda or Christy. 1248
1 Natalym contract, girls. Spring classes. 73
Must sell immediately. Call 843-1588 anytime. 12-6
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Original jewelry, hanging vases and more. Prices of all of Jafahawk gifts. Prices to fit the slimmed budget. You've got to upgrade UPPER DCK to believe it. 11-12. 11-12
185 VOLVO P-1800-S sports car. Overdrive, new
sports car. 750cc. 4x4. $24,995. sound system.
£750. $843. 435-335 units. 60 hrs. 16 mph.
The museum of Natural History Gift Shop has
been called the "natural cryer." Come in, where the selection lasts. 12-6
pm.
How about giving a unique Christmas gift, one that might be used to celebrate Tim's time at Camden's 834-944 or even for Tom's Afternoon
Realistle STA-120 receiver 2 optimum 5 speakers
Call 841-2765. 12-12
1970 green Schwain Varsity 1.0 speed Front and Rear suspension
base. 641-284/417 after 5:00 p.m. 12e-18
base. 641-284/417 after 5:00 p.m. 12e-18
Stereo set-up. Dynasco A-25 speakers and amplifier, excellent condition. Excellent. 12-7 Best offer.
W 2V stuuded snow tires and wheels. White
walles. CALL 842-3919 after 5 p.m. 12-5
CAMPUS MOTOR MART GET ACQUAINTED SALE
1 Set of snow tires with each vehicle sold during this week's "Get Acquainted Sale" from 2-4-72 to 12-8-72.
this sale, only $1695
1969 Chev. Bel-Air d & dr. sedan, metallic blue
shape, ready for winter $1.195
1970 Sedan, automatic, AM radio, rear
rearview mirror
eight-cube hood
kickers, pop-out windows, newest in town 1969 VW Bus 8 nass. AM radio, don't miss
1970 Toyota sedan, 4 spd, lite blue, in top
1.195
1970 UW Sedan automatic, blue, in top
WSW tire, ready for winter.
19258
1968 Mustang hardtong, Y8, auto. A-C; C-99
A-C, A-C
int. & top. Buckets $995
1965 Dart 2 sed, roden 6 cyl, spd. Economy
unlimited $400
(Don't forget the Free Snow Tires)
1518 W. 23rd 842-3903
CAMPUS MOTOR MART
1965 Buick Skykyl conv. Full power, A-C
auto., maroon with immaculate white
Withdrawing from KU. Must sell Gate House
Spring semester counsel. Call 842-7377.
For once avoid rush, the (Christmas rush that is) at the Student Union. Big 8 room in the Student Union. Merchantable at reasonable prices. Doormt will be available from 11 a.m. to 8 a.m. Everyone is welcome. Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 a.m.
Kittens, 8 wks old, free, Call 842-1762 or stop, 12-
000 Ohio
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant pipe for Christmas! 12-12
Waish 15. W 9th
The largest handmade jewelry selection in the
world, with gold and silver from around
the Hodge Pledge 15 W. KIRE 12-12
*Attention Audiophiles* S. Acoustic Software SR 28
*Attention Audiophiles* S. Acoustic Software SR 28
*Attention Audiophiles* S. Acoustic Software SR 28
*attention audiophiles* $5 for the pair, M. Hurthubt
*attention audiophiles* $5 for the pair, M. Hurthubt
1985 Ford LTD, 4 D. Dr. HT, P-B. P-S, A-C. nearly
good condition in a good condition.
1842-1818 @ 0 p.m. $
1985 Open Rally Katred, red 4 qyd. full instructor
1995 Mitsubishi Motors Kobe, red 4 qyd.
1995 McMasters Motor Martt, W15 282 W
1997 Ford Motor, W15 283 W
1970 WS Sedon 4. spd, yellow AM radio, good
wire. $125. Motor Moter Marl. W1 12-8
W12-8
2 Naimish Hall contracts for Spring semester
481-3737 or 842-5290.
1899 Culton S. Power brakes, power steering, air conditioning, and in very good condition. Call Jeff Jones 305-624-2920.
Bake T-35 center with 50mm or 2.5/3 Rose lens
Bake T-45 center with 50mm or 2.5/3 Rose lens
Bake T-65 center with 50mm or 2.5/3 Rose lens
Cook at 814-7278 for 5:00 p.m.
1966 Chev Impala 2 door hudt, Good condition,
Motor: 4x4. Cal: Axtra extra baggage.
Monday, Thursday, 8:34-11:30
1965 Ford Mutant, Mug, red, auto ready to go
1965 Ford Mutant, Campus Motor Maint, 1518 W. 21rd. 12-28
Ford
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd on Highway 1
Kansas Kane River bridge,
Antiques, collectues, books, maps
sand of other items. Also, we have fruits and
vegetables. Open 9-3pm daily. 843-3150. Herdenkert.
One black Labrador Retriever female puppy,
dog Call Vi 3-14428 or VI 3-23258 - 12-6
dog Call Vi 3-14428 or VI 3-23258 - 12-6
Naishtun Hall contract for sale for spring semester.
Call 843-9125. Rich. 12-8
82 Chevrolet, 6 cylinder, 3 speed manual, good, cheap transportation. Ask for Steve. 8141-9057.
Two metal studded Goodyear polyglas trees on
$60 Evenings, 842-8331
$81\mathrm{mm}$ loop $7\cdot \mathrm{LeTaperman}$. Ladies size $8\mathrm{in}.8\mathrm{mm}$. Excel-
ment $8\cdot 244\mathrm{cm}$ only one sleeve needed. Bazell 82-64401 for 4.30.
Bazell 82-64401 for 4.30.
TREAC 4600 tape recorder or dock. Automate re-recording of up to 2500 files. New $200, sacrifices $225, #455-7108. 12-8
www.mitreac.com
Microphones 2- Electro-Voice model 623 mkus
Microscopes 2- Electro-Voice model 623 mkus
$0.20 tks can with case, with case. 842-178-12-8
$0.20 tks can with case, with case. 842-178-12-8
80 boy three sweeps like $30 will buy. Needs
84-834-8244. Must pre-Sell before Christmas.
12-7-
Sony stereo cassette case holder. Non-portable comp-
belt. Uses a standard 12V battery will for sell $75. Call 842-4010. 12-7
"Crail" theater tape player. bqst or best offer. See at 2448 Winterbrook, 841-3400. 12-7
French-master (Pengert) exc. condition, $100 or
best off. See at 424 Winterbrook at 841-308-1487.
**Notes:**
Stereo Equipment. Marantz 220 receiver with base, handle. Turbidizable turbable with cover and base, handle with Shake Pad. Receiver with Rectilinear III Low Boys speaker. ANRX2A speakers. AI 203 speaker. Inquire at 843-1572.
1996 MCG-TG. Low mileage, perfect body. 3 liter
fuel tank. New water pump. Now make batteries and tires. Must sell $225. New shock absorbers.
For rent to 4 responsible girls. Available Dec. 1. Come back to story 4 bedroom furnished apartment. Close to Lake Bemidji and Lake Superior month plus utilities. Price $832.-822 for 5 p.m. and all days Saturday and Sunday. At 921 Ohio
for sale or trade. "68" Open Kiel Caddelt. Loakes
and Trumph. "79" Kiel Caddelt. Loakes and
Or Triumpth and dive boat. 882-3457. 12-12
FOR RENT
1953 Chevy Impala 4 d HRT. V8. PS, Pd, Air-
conditioned. Good condition or bore of best
good condition, $50 or bore off of best
good condition.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS' TIRRED OF STEEP
PARKING IN FAR-PLAZN LOTS?
FROM stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, paved parking lot; Free Cab:
rental car; free WiFi; available rateables, furniture
available rates, furniture available; Ideal rooma-
bles; Battle Apts, 1128卧, Apt. 9 or
room 843-2116.
Studio eight—rooms with a view $62.50, every paid, no deposits. 129 W. worth. 12-11
Home for rent, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more
than welcome: 843-3600.
RAMARA INN
Fiuer Salen
842 7223
Apartments, furnished, clean, with walk to street parking, storefront parking, street parking, Booters K.U. and near town hotels.
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
- Locally owned and operated
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
- 9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
COLLEGE HILL. MANOR APARTMENTS. Now houseware furnished and unfurnished aids for, the gym, heating and air pool and laundry. Most utilities heatup and air pool and laundry. Most utilities call 843-8220 or see at 171 W. 19th, wth. 18.
Looking for something to rent? B48, 842-7571; for 2 Contact B48 and 1-3 BR suite at B48. Price start at $100 a month. All are available for immediate delivery. After hours call Grace Strong B48-7551.
Quitting school—must submit my i-18 appr. form by December 15, 2016. All unfilled paid will pay for half course. Month all filled.
CIRCLE
2. bdmr, 2. bath luxury apt. Bus service, wc-
carpeting, dishwasher, ACs, Near Gibson
$165 monthly, utilities partially paid. Come
at anytime. 2200 W. 26th, wk. 14, aT or 842-562-
Study ed. available now. Completely furnished
student room. Includes free parking, creation student. $185 monthly.
Dorm Room. No pets allowed.
HAPPINESS is living with Friends in an on-site facility. The Onsite Rent and Board and rent from $45. Ask for Ratho, $80. Call (866) 723-9292.
REALTY
Want to inquire out from Jan 1st-May 20 Larger
offers include (1) 40 min. airfare
utilities paid electriety) $199 month,
(2) 30 min. airfare
utilities paid electriety) $65 per month.
$300 to 6 bedroom house. 2 full batts.
Take $300 a month, near KU Call 12-54
evenings.
Apartment to sub-lease. Jan-Aug-September
$125 New York. $120. No phone so se-
lected. 125 Indiana. $125.
Apartment for rent, one block from Union, suit-
tled rooms. Available Jan 1st. furnished.
841-296-1061.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
you would think possible in these beautiful
buildings which surround a quiet court yard. Walk to the main entrance, where blocks—enjoy the mausie, play basketball, use the tennis court or place on a cold winter night. The Malls in new
nibbled apartments are available. Come see our
buildings.
MUST SULEASE FOR SECOND SEMESTER
niche views utility views paid We will take a
nice nice view utilities paid We will take a
Must rent two bim-2; 2 bath apt. fully carpeted.
May move to 8650 N. 34th St. beginning January 1, 2017. Please call 844-865-7077.
1 bedroom apt. Quiet, shag carpet, wood paneled ceiling
1510 Kentucky. Foil, N. 84-2421. 12-7
Join the Ridges Community and you’ll find
a variety of activities to do in your free time.
In mosaics, Lawerence 1, 2 and 3 bedrooms
are available.
Pursued 2 bedrooms, bed for rent. 193W B24H.
Available for resale at:
Shopping center and restaurants. Available for rent.
Beautiful unfurished 2 bedroom apartment in
Beautiful unfurished 2 bedroom apartment in
sublet to submit Hasifa Irwinne 18-7
3356.
Fun want or fun for study? Consider this $5 big room, all utilities included, males only. kitchen and bath, 1 block from Union and Flat, and Wheel on Ohio St. School 3079. 12-6
To need to adhere one bedroom apartment, All
builders offer a nice KD location apart from
any with view nice, good KD location. AP
location is at 360° NE of the apartment.
Apartment for rent. One block from Union, Suite 128. Available Jan 14, 1st furnished. 12-8
Call 811-296-186.
APT. FOR RENT: 90 and Enerry, bedroom fireplace
APT. FOR RENT: 100 and Enerry, bedroom fireplace
Call: C841-3694 - 209 last 12:12
Most subst. twond 1 sonater l bft, apc, carpeted.
Subst. three 1 sonater l bft, apc, carpeted,
air conditioned, no foo exp. Costl
all, air conditioned, no foo exp. Costl
ROAMS. Available end of Dec for 2nd student
studies only. ROMS will accept students only.
8, 7432-7435, or 5, 8432-7436, or 11
8432-7437.
WANTED
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment
for Saturday nights and Sunday evenings. All those interested
Wednesday night may attend.
Female remotemate wanted to share Jabawk-Town.
Candidate is a licensed social worker. Great living. Any questions call Diane at (802) 546-3121.
Two men to share a two-bedroom apartment in
a city with a possible possible Carl
8693 for further information. 12-5
Female roommate wanted to share a bed with 2 females. Roommates living in an industry room, furnished. Call 800-354-1191.
Advertisement and amorous lyrics to try our new
tunes. A touch of elegance destines to delight the senses at the Hodder Footwear
store.
Female roommates waited. Quilt, comfortable
at Park 25. Call before 2:00 p.m. 12-4
3474.
2 girls needed to share apartment with other girl
required $75 per month, fernandine 12-6
443-709-2799
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67 month
for 2nd machine. Call 843-6619 12-12
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843.9694
--tasting price
Delicious Food and
Suurbair Service with
Margarita,
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been.
There is no substitute for
good food.
YARN-PATTERNS
NEEDLEPOINT-RUG5
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th RD 2644
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
New papers (taped) English education grant will
be funded for students from 50-79 year, a page minimum, $5. Cald 644-8673.
Credit: University of Warwick.
Band for High School Christmas sem-formal
Band for Winter holidays operator and
for Vintail 12-3 after 1 p.m. 12-7
at Vintail 12-3 after 1 p.m.
3 studious buildings, but fun-loving girls need room
$60/month plus utilities. Call 841-2549. 12:12
Joe is getting married Need someone to take his place. We'll try to make sure this doesn't happen to you. Park 25 Apartment $45 plus furnished, two bedroom, two bath. Call 841-2748.
Small, fuzzy puppy for Christmas Preserve. Prefer already house broken. Call 814-2541. 12-8
Need one or two girls two innermate at Jay-
ward 123-8456 or seven girls three innermate at
8456-3837 or eight girls four innermate at
8456-Jayward Towers 123-8456.
Desperately need a female roommate(s) for a few weeks. I will accept at least 12 if at all interested please contact, 842-325-1278.
NOTICE
Lawrence Auction House Sell your household
or furniture for compaction information call 842-709-3980.
For compaction information call 842-709-3980.
"MEDICALS FOR KILLING MEN-DISIONHORN
THEM" for P.O. BOX 4218 FOR LOVING THEM!
Help us eliminate violence.
Liberation meets days 7, 10 p.m.; Union
U.S. Military Units,
Union, 656-8499; write box 124.
"a wrancy"
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, We Bar-B-Q in an
32-oz can. $48.00 A slab to buy at 400. Large rib
bread. A slab to buy at 500. Large rib
bread. Beef sandwich. $40.00 beef sandwich.
$60.00 beef sandwich. $100.00 chicken
sandwich. $150.00 chicken sandwich.
Sun and Tuesdays VI-2 8:30 a.m. 151 Mile Bc. Or
either.
For Free Birth Control information, for pregnancy counseling, abortion referral, call the Women Center, 864-4441. If no answer can Information Center, 864-3506. Call 24 hrs. 12-12
BAGIES-We have *w* with big cuffs and pleats, also, sweater vest and print shirt. Everything to complete the new "Classic 20"s." look. THE WREAHOUSE (a part of Campbells). 12-6
RAY AUDIO WAREHOLDER - The finest
RAY AUDIO WAREHOLDER in the world.
Island, Lawrence K. 60044. Phone 824-257-9417
or www.audiowarehousing.com
Students. Have your Xinax king party at Danee
Hill Park. Please pack 10 miles from the campus in Perry, Kansai, 12-12
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of gifts. You can $ Come down and visit with your wife. W-9th. W-19th.
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas Tree Farm. Choose a tree, it with our hand-painted designs. Bring the tree home to your own lawn or garden. Lawnwork. Fast on holiday. 10AM Just meet us at Lawrence. Fast on holiday. 10AM Just meet us at Lawrence. We will be open every weekend before Christmas. Baskets. We will be open every weekend before Christmas. Baskets.
A complete selection of Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley including Risk, Monopoly, Ocula, Valtech, Yatztec, Clue, Serrabile, Agravation, many can many are be had at the Duckwalls. 12-8
TYPING
Extremely high quality work done by management
of the Rwandan Darts team. 846-5001 Mush experience with
major winnings and wins in both domestic and
international tournaments.
Experienced in typing these, dissectiones, term papers, other mime. Typing. Have electric tape. Proof. Type. Accurate and prompt service. Proof. Type. Spell corrected. Photo. M43-3554 Mrs. Wright
Expert manuscript typist with through knowledge of spelling, punctuation, and grammar will take up ten paper entries, etc. of young experience. Electric typing machine 10 a.m. or between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. 12-8
Typing on elite electric typewriter in my home.
Testing for No thesis. Please miss. Mrs. Hays, 845
0654.
No thesis. Please miss. Mrs. Hays, 845
0654.
Typing, my home. I.B.M. Selective plea. Prompt accurate work. Experienced. Term papers, thesis, dissertations. Proofreading done. automation. Call Katie, 841-2556.
Experienced tytpal will type tern paper, thresen,
thurow, and thirteen other types. 204. Myr.
Aftermornings, Gayle. 84-1328. For more details,
Gayle's Guest Services, 84-1328.
Fast, accurate sensor on carbon ribbon type-
less pressure transducer. Reasonable rates. Cat. 128
4566 or BN-827-4573
MISCELLANEOUS
"SAMPLE BRIDAL GOWNS" up to 25% off
Fabrics and styles for all seasons. Sizes 8, 10,
12 by appointment only. 842-985 (number not in
directory). GALEHIE BRIDAL, 910 Kentucky.
Phone
843.1431
THE NEEDED POINT. 528 W. 23rd. answers all
THE NEEDED TAKES needs with a wide selection of holiday items and custom-hand-painted Jawahars, check book boxes, Prunus trees, eve glass cases and pillows. 12-6
500 E.23rd
HELP WANTED
MANY GROUPS OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR
YOU. The student should be aware that
you should investigate the ideas of Ayn Ran.
should be interested. Students of Objectivism at 845-2628 or
842-3316.
17. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
RMS Electronics, quality products and 30-year warranty. 800-279-5600. "Lawrence's Largest Store Stereo." 814-443-3818. www.rmselectronics.com
Stalova
A birds proudly display their railment, so must
their feathers be shiny. The original clothing
original clothing. 108 Mass Bs 182-4
18-4
WHAT DO YOU GOIVE A HEAD FOR CHRISTMAS?
John Lahn, John Russet, Renault Cali Benture
Clemens Meyer
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUN
The Museum of Natural History Gift Shop is interested in compiling local handicrafts for the Open House and Bazaar on Des 'T. Contact Mrs. Koehler at the museum Gift Store 12-4-864-4500.
Models-male/female. Radio-live television agency-
based experience for TV, Head of TV and good will in
experience for TV, Head of TV and good will in
experience for TV.
Helper for family or couple during Spring semester in return for room, board. Call 843-408-1688.
OBSERVERS WANTED. $2 an hour. Call Don
@ 123-456-7890 or 842-457-2751.
After 5:09 call Jill 842-457-2751.
Students. Have your Xmax keept party at Danee
Mike's location, 350 W. Washington St.
miles from the campus in Perry, Kansai. 12-12
Secretary wanted part time to start, full time
to work at the general dales. 10
Joe McHugh, 834-623-8520
PERSONAL
For you lover at Christmas, provide yourself
with a new coat. The Hodge Paddle 15 W. Bath 12
18-12
Yes, there is more to life than computer cards. Maybe the computer can't measure love, but it能 tell what students think of their teachers. Support FEEDBACK. Urge participation. 12-5
THE sirloin
FORD
REAL Jesus People REPENT of their sins are
received by the Holy Ghost. They speak in Tongues
of the Holy Ghost. They speak in Tongues from
God. You need to roll this out with us if you
are going to accept it. You need to roll this
and Cnn & Cnn. Sunds. Wed. 7:00 p.m. Phon. 842-296-3500.
Small female dog. Reddish brown with white markings. Weight 25 lb. 12-37 kg. Nail 84-827. Reward.
LOST, noteebook with Reon, and Chem notes. If found please call 864-6543, ask for Jukn.
$50 reward. Left dark brown sheepkin coat as
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10
Tuesday, December 5, 1972
University Daily Kansan
- 1. 2023年1月1日,公司发布《关于调整公司部分重大事项的公告》。
LHS Principal Selection Process Moving Toward Its Final Stage
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
The selection process for finding a new principal for Lawrence High School (LHS) involved the following: Ron Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools, at the United School District 497 Board of Trustees.
Knox said that the last of seven candidates for the position completed preliminary interviews earlier Monday. The names of the candidates cannot be released, Knox said, but he said four of the candidates were from Kansas districts.
The interviews, which lasted eight hours, were conducted by a student-faculty selection advisory committee. The committee was comprised of 11 faculty and 11 student members from Lawrence High School.
Noxx and his two assistants, Kenneth Fisher and David Kendall, also attended the interviews but were there mainly as silent observers. He has also spoken to LRS staff also spoke to the interviewers.
KNOX SAID that no each member of the advisory committee would submit a report of his impressions of the interviews. These reports will be evaluated by Knox and his assistants, and from this procedure candidates will be reduced to two or three.
When the list is reduced further investigations will be made in the home districts of the remaining candidates, Knox said.
Knox said that he had been impressed with the candidates and the entire interviewing process. He said that he would not be surprised if the advisory committee could not agree on who were the best candidates.
WHEN FURTHER investigations are completed, the two or three remaining candidates will be brought before the board of education for final selection.
However, Knox said, if there was not a winner among the candidates being considered the committee would not hesitate to begin the entire process again.
W. F. Brady, president of the board of education, concurred with Knox and said it was more important to pick the right man than to quickly pick a new principal.
County Court Sets Hearings For 4 Students
Arraignment dates have been set in Douglas County Court for four University of Kansas students who were arrested last week for alleged drug violations.
Two of the students, Charles A. Bernis,
Leawood senior, and John J. Larkin,
Riverville Village senior, were arrested Nov.
28 as charged with possession of marijuana
Bemis is to be arraigned Jan. 8, at 10
and Larkin is to be arraigned and tried
Ross A. Stratton, Harpond垂 Hertz, Lza.
senior, was arrested Friday and charged with illegal sale of phen迪考 on Oct. 17.
he scheduled to be arraigned Dec. 11 at 10 a.m.
Edward J. Ogden, Kansas City, Kan,
sophomore, was also arrested Friday and
charged with illegal sale of cocaine on Oct.
20. He will be arraigned Dec. 7, at 2 p.m.
Bemis and Larkin, who were apprehended in J-zone parking lot by a KU officer, are free each on $1.500 bond. Ogden and Stratton are each free on $5.00 bond.
In other business at the Monday night meeting the board considered a problem of growing state governmental control of public education.
THE KANSAS United School Administrators (U.S.A.) opposed a program of curriculum and textbooks, which were policies such as the selection of curriculum and textbooks. This proposed state requirement stems from the increasing amount of state financial aid given to local schools.
Brady said the state had already severely limited the power of local education boards by imposing a tax lid which made it imminent that universities would abandon financial policies. Normally, the boards
would set their own mill levies, are now not allowed to increase them. And because of the tax id the local districts are becoming meanly reliant on state funds, Brady said.
Brady expressed fear that the day might come when there would no longer be a need for a local board of education. All school districts are administered by a state board of education.
The board will meet with local legislators at 7 a.m., December 11, in the Coach Room of the Lawrence Holiday Inn to discuss the problems of education as they relate to state legislators. The next board meeting will be held at 4 p.m., Jan. 2, at the administration center.
TAK
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon
Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TOSTADO FREE!
Good Every Day
Offer expires Dec. 20
1720 West 23rd Street
THRU SUNDAY FREE CAMERA (A $1.19 Value)
with any large PIZZA
| S | M | L |
|---|
| Cheese | 1.25 | 2.05 | 2.75 |
| Green Pepper | 1.45 | 2.55 | 3.45 |
| Onion | 1.45 | 2.55 | 3.45 |
| Black Olive | 1.45 | 2.55 | 3.45 |
| Sausage | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Hamburger | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Pepperoni | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Anchovy | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Mushroom | 1.65 | 2.85 | 3.85 |
| Special | 2.05 | 3.45 | 4.35 |
| Extra Ingredient | .20 | .30 | .40 |
842-5882
FREE DELIVERY
Our New Improved Pizza Is the Best in Town
MIKE'S PIZZA FACTORY
The Lawrence Fire Department has determined a malfunctioning compressor was the cause of a false alarm early Monday morning at the Kansas Union.
The automatic fire alarm system at the Union was activated when the heating system overheated, according to Frank Burge, Union director.
Firemen answered the call at 9:05 a.m.
bait found no smoke or fire at the scene. No
damage was reported.
Heater Starts False Alarm
The compressor is designed to introduce cold air into the heating system but was not built for this purpose.
K.C.I. to: CHICAGO $53
NEW YORK $137
DENVER $81
SEMESTER BREAK FLIGHTS
SAN FRANCISCO S176
—All flights round trip
- Return on an SUA flight or return independently
- Passengers to N.Y. must return on SUA flight
- Deadline for all flights is Dec. 8
Contact S.U.A. 864-3477 Todav
TURN IN YOUR YOUTH CARD FOR TWA's. YOU'LL GET A TOP LP ALBUM AND A WHOLE LOT OF THE WORLD FOR FREE.
It may sound funny to turn in your card for a free TWA card, but it’s worth it. If you turn in your American or United or whatever other airline’s youth card you have to your campus representative or any
TWA counter (or pay $3 for a new one, if you don't have one to turn in), you'll get more than any other airline offers you. Maximum discounts on TWA and TWA are free more things and, on top of all that, a free album.
FREE ALBUM-FIRST IO.OOO.
First, you'll get a Record Club of America coupon good for your choice of a free top album worth up to $6.98. From a list of over 100 incredible. Like Three Dog Night. Noil Diamond, Robert Flack. Elton John
FREE MONEY-SAVING COLIPONS.
When you land in any of six cities (London, Boston, Paris, Los Angeles, San Francisco or Denver) with your "card," you can buy a brochure Full of fries and burgers and we mean deals. Like absolutely free or 50% off,
Plus a free lifetime membership in Record. Club of America, with no obligation to buy any record. The offer limited to the first 10,000, so you've got to do it soon.
What we did was to talk to students in those cities and ask where they'd take their friends —not
BOSTON FREEBEES.
FREE
A spaghetti dinner at the "Spaghetti Emporium. Inc." just off Juffery Square.
FREE
Breakfast in the "Pewter Pot Muffin House" (14 locations) where many Harvard students stop
FREE
FREE
Admission to the "Prudential Center Skywalk," the first place to go to get your balloons in Boston.
Combination health food platter from "Corners of the mouth" restaurant. A healthy buffet of hot and sweet fruit.
FREE
Quiche lorraine and cup of coffee at "La Crepe."
FREE
Indian soup and vegetable curry at the 'India Sweet House' restaurant in Cambridge.
FREE
Pair of earrings or pendant (and watch it being made)
at "Whaler's Wharf"
FREE
Admission to "Passim Coffeehouse" during great evening performances. Or during the day, a free
FREE
Hour of bike riding from "Streeter & Quarles" on Boylston Street.
just the “in” places, but the spots that only the knowing would know about. And those are the ones we give you free dinners, drinks, club memberships or discounts in. Here are just some of the absolutely cool things we'll get in London and Boston, as an example of what TWA has arranged for you in all the cities.
LONDON FREEBEES.
FREE
FREE
Admission to any of ten Grayhound Racing Tracks. A great English sport.
Membership and drink at "La Valbonne," one of the toughest clubs to get a membership, in even for
FREE
FREE
A full breakfast at your choice of 10 Quality Inns,
famous for their hearty fare.
a pint of "Watney's Red Barrel" in "in the Prospect of Whitby" or your choice of over 40 London pubs.
NO 181024
TWA Youth Passport
*Youth Passport is a service mark owned exclusively by TWA
15
DAY MARATHON
for the XMAS-NEW YEAR
Holiday
15
CENT BEER!!!
Each Wed. & Thurs. your first drink will cost you fifteen cents during this fifteen day marathon!
New Year Celebration—Sat., Dec. 30th
of State Kansas City —Be 18 & Have I.D.
Line Kansas
PUZZLED ABOUT STEREO SYSTEMS?
G A R R A R D S
U K L H
D U AL U
P I O N E R
P A N A S O N I C E
I T A S B S R
V E R I T A S
D E N O N B S R
K Y L I N E O
F I T
9 2 8 C R O W N E
M A S S L
SEE US FOR THE SOLUTION
Finnigan and Wood
DEC.7,8,and 9
D
[THURSDAY-SATURDAY] 9-12 p.m.
Advance tickets
at Kiefs, Red Baron, various
locations throughout K.C. and Topeka.
$2.50 advance $3.00 at the door.
at the Red Baron ... of course
804 W.24th 842-4366
F
♠
M
Dismay with Health Insurance Stems from Ignorance
Kansan Staff Writer
By CAROLYN OLSON
Complaints of inadequate coverage have been voiced this semester by some students, who say that the student health insurance from Blue Cross and Blue Shield during fall enrollment. The insurance company said that policy holders are expecting too many benefits from this coverage.
Bill Sellen, Blue Cross-Blue Shield representative from Topeka, said most complaints were from persons who had not been vaccinated and policies did not understand the benefits.
the policy now being used by KU students is different from the one we offered last year," Sellen said Monday. "Last year office calls to a physician were covered by Blue Cross except at Watkins, but this year they aren't."
One of the complaints against the present
student health plan is that yagnologist interviews and the costs of contrapetives were not covered in the plan; neither were X-rays in hospitals other than Watkins. The student's dependants are complained that a student's dependants are not covered as thoroughly as a student is.
SELLEN SAID the BLE Cross-Blue Shield plan was only supplementary to the health services provided by the student's campus college fee. An interview with a gynecologist was conducted for a student, and not a dependent, talked with a gynecologist at Watkins Hospital.
An office call clause was included in last year's policy, according to Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of health services. He
One of the restrictions of the Blue Cross-Blue Shield plan is that non-accident X-rays are not covered unless they are taken at Watkins.
said, however, that the clause was overused and "people were going to the doctor for any
A Lawrence physician not employed by Watkins, could call Watkins to take an X-ray of a student or a dependent and send the student to Henningsen said, and the X-ray would be covered.
The portion of the policy concerning dependents has confused some students. Schweiger said students, but not their parents, had been at Watkins because of the limited grace.
*WATKINS WAS originally built to serve about 5,000 students and look how many we have now.*
Schweigler said many wives of students came to Watkins and were refused treatment. He has submitted a recommendation to William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, that would enable dependents of the students to Cross-Blue Shield policy to be treated at the center. The recommendation ultimately must be approved by the Board of Regents. Mr. Balfour said he did not know when the Regents would consider his recommendation.
This year's student health insurance plan costs a single student $73.08 annually, and is equally for a single student last year, said Kaitlin Junior, junior and body study vice president.
ALLEN SAID the increase was due to the inclusion of maternity benefits on the plan.
Allen was chairman of the Student Senate Student Services Committee, which studied recommended the Blue Cross-Blue Lake Plan to the Senate for approval last April.
The benefits cover delivery or complications of pregnancy, such as abortion or birth.
Sellen said that another reason for the increase in cost was greater medical-surgical protection was provided and the hospital was willing to limit prescription coverage for each illness.
In last year's plan Blue Cross-Blue Shield paid only 30 per day for hospital stays; now it pays 50.
The rate for the two-party Blue Cross-
Blue Shield plan has increased from $122.16
annually to $152.28, and the family rate,
covering the student and two or more
dependents, has risen from $183.60 to
$224.40.
Services provided free in the student campus privilege fee which all students must pay, are an unlimited number of office hours and study time. Student counseling; bloodtests; X-rabs:
prescriptions and lab tests at a reduced price; whirlpools; and a few visits to the methadone and mental health clinic, Allen said.
ONE OF THE advantages of the Blue Cross-Blue Shield policy, Allen said, is that it allows you to prescribe drugs, which can be filled throughout the world. She said a student must present his Blue Cross-Blue Shield prescription card at the pharmacy or hospital.
Kyle Ward, the Lawrence representative for Blue Cross-Blue Shield, said that about 200 students had not picked up their identification cards from the office at 1203 Iowa Street and needed the identification cards to be able to receive Blue Cross coverage.
Ward said about 3,000 students bought the student health plan from Blue Cross at age 12.
COLDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday, December 6, 1972
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
VC Pledges Violence If South Vetoes Pact
Lewis Hall Coffeehouse To Open Today
See Story Page 2
SAIGON (AP) — Viet Cong main force and guerrilla units are under orders to continue fighting if the United States signs a separate agreement with the Saigon government refuses to follow it.
"Listen regularly to both friendly and enemy broadcasts," the documents advise the Viet Cong. "If the Americans announce cease-fire and the puppet government does not, friendly forces are to continue fighting."
The documents, picked up in the past two weeks, were issued after Oct. 31, the Dane Hanoi still insists President Nixon had originally agreed to for the signing of a cease-fire agreement. They consist of orders and notebooks kept by political cadres.
containing indoctrination lessons for a cease-fire in the Saqizon area.
"Sir up violence among high school and university students," party cadre in Saigon are advised. "Form movements to protect draft dodgers and disbey laws. Seize control of the central areas, especially the laborers' quarters."
Sapper units moving into Da Nang are ordered to "concentrate on eliminating biotin" from the skin.
★★★
By The Associated Press
Other documents picked up in the same period indicate the Communists are planning a noisy, violence-strenge reception for a cease-fire in Saigon, Da Nang and some of the other big urban areas where they never had had firm control.
Paris Talk Scrubbed; Envoys to Meet Today
The A880street secret meeting between
A schedule secret meeting between
Henry A. Kissing and Lu Due Theo of North
Vietnam was mysteriously canceled
Tuesday in Paris.
No reason was given by either side for the cancellation of the meeting, which had been postponed.
The U.S. and North Vietnamese delegations announced that the peace negotiators would hold private talks Wednesday.
The site for Wednesday's rendezvous remained undisclosed. It will be elected by the Americans in accordance with an agreement reached between the negotiators whereby each side alternately picks the meeting site.
The North Vietnamese first issued word that the meeting was off. The U.S. delegation confirmed this and then shortly later, almost simultaneously with the North Vietnamese, said a meeting would be held Wednesday.
During the pause, the cable traffic was heavy between Paris and the White House, presidential secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. Nixon received a number of cables, and sent instructions to his negotiator.
Officials on both sides maintained a tight news blackout.
In Saigon, South Vietnamese officials said Kissinger and Tho were working on a secret agreement in which Hanoi would pledge to withdraw its forces from the South. They added that this would not be written into the public agreement as a face-saving gesture.
The idea is to get the people to provoke a violent reaction by the government. "We need to organize unicorn festival dances and parades, hang and light lanterns. . . We must motivate the vendors in the market to participate in their teachers and workers not to work."
North Vietnam has never admitted that its forces are in South Vietnam. South Vietnam insists on an agreed North Vietnamese withdrawal before it will sign a cease-fire.
clandestine transportation of big weapons is not necessary."
Both U.S. and South Vietnamese sources said they believed North Vietnam would release some American prisoners for the Christmas season. This would occur regardless of whether an agreement is signed.
in both Saigon and Da Nang, as well as in heavily populated Binh Dinh Province, to represent the people, people with "flags, megaphones, posters and banners" to trumpet ceasefire as a great Communist victory. Suggested policies would form the government of national concern.
Political cadres are warned that "the confusing time will be very short," so they must get to work immediately in such projects as "pressuring Buddhist leaders to pray for peace and organize peace marches through the streets" and encouraging "servicemen's dependents to call back their husbands."
When the populace is demonstrating and dancing for peace, lulled by "assault entertainment shows, floats, prayers for peace and death requiers," supers units in Da Nang are to "destroy military posts and watchtowers."
Despite their elaborate blueprint for bedlam, the Communists concede in their latest batch of documents that things gone very well for them in the cities.
They blame the university students for being "too bourgeois" to respond to the struggle, and admit to having made no progress among "the militarist bourgeoisie created by the Americans to replace the French bourgeoisie."
10
World Gifts
Janet Mullin, who works for the University of Kansas Housing office, looks at a tree cluttered with wooden ornaments portraying fairy tale characters. This is one of many gifts on sale at the KU-Y International Gift Fair, which is open today
Kansan Photo by SUSAN HAYES
and Thursday, the Gifts include clothing, jewelry, toys, Christmas items and novelty gifts. Every continent in the world except Antarctica is represented in the fair. Money made on the fair will go to the KU'1 University-Community action team. Students will receive vocations program and the KU'1 work with the Racism Awareness Center.
Shake-Up In Cabinet Continues
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nikon promoted Undersecretary of Commerce James T. Lynn to secretary of Housing and Urban Development Tuesday.
Some sources reported that Commerce Secretary Peter G. Peterson would be shifted to a new post as supervisor of international economic policy.
Nixon announced also that Secretary of Interior Rogers C. B. Morton would remain in his second-term Cabinet. Morton, a former Maryland congressman and national Republican chairman, joins Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Treasury Secretary George Shultz as second-term Cabinet members.
The Washington Post and The New York Times reported that South Carolina textile manufacturer Frederick B. Dent was being considered for nomination as Commerce Secretary to succeed Peterson.
Ronald L. Ziegler, White House press secretary, would not comment on the reported Commerce department switch, but said further second-term Cabinet shifts would be announced Wednesday.
Three Cabinet positions, in addition to the secretary of commerce, have yet to be announced. They are: attorney general, agriculture secretary and transportation secretary.
Lynn, a 45-year-old Harvard-educated lawyer, succeeds George Romney as head of HUD. Romney announced a week ago he was leaving the Cabinet to form a coalition of concerned citizens to work for solutions to national problems.
Lynn left his Cleveland law practice in 1969 to become general counsel for the Commerce department. He was made undersecretary in 1971 and was Peterson's chief lieutenant in concluding the recent U.S.-Soviet trade agreement.
CAPE KENNEDY (AP)—Apollo 17,
perhaps man's last visit to the moon for
decades, is ready to blast off Wednesday
Apollo 17 Prepares for Blast Off Tonight
A few minor snags have the count-down about an hour behind schedule, but the
night on America's most spectacular manned space launch.
Nichols Praises Academic Report
By GARY ISAACSON Kansan Staff Writer
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Tuesday that the Council of Chief Academic Office report released Monday by the state Board of Regents was "prolonged overdue."
"It is basically a very good report," he said in a news conference. "It is very important to review our programs periodically, and report is a guideline for that procedure."
Nichols commended the Council for its work and said the overall recommendations were positive.
"The council recognized that quality is the most important than quantity," he said. "But programs that do not meet minimum requirements to the graduate level, should be discontinued."
The report recommended the discontinuance of 20 KU graduate programs and the placement of 24 programs on a provisional status.
NICHOLS SAID HE did disagree with the
report to a degree concerning the programs it recommended for provisional status at
The 138-page report, which took two years to compile, also recommended regional universities in Missouri such sharing was illustrated by a reciprocal program that KU had with the University of Missouri involving Kansas students and Missouri art architecture students.
"I would wonder whether some of those courses should be abolished because we are the only school in the state that offers a few of them," he said.
"The University cannot be everything to everybody. Therefore, we should share degrees regionally," he said. "In a period in which funding has not kept race with costs, regionalism should be examined very closely."
THE CHANCELLOR said the financial
theory said said the financial
with the discontinuance, recom-
mend.
mended programs, would not be realized for a number of years.
"The programs which have been recommended for deletion must be kept open until the students now in them finish their studies," he said. "The savings would come only when there are no more students in the program."
In other topics, Nichols said he would present the resolution passed by the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation and the College of Presidents at its December meeting.
The resolution asked that the Kansas Union management be allowed to sell corn.
"WE WILL BE PRESSED for time because we meet after the regents meeting," he said, "and we will be discussing budget requests with the regents. I hope the council will be able to meet but it is questionable right now."
Concerning the appointment of Arthur C.
*'B Dutch'* Lonborg as interim athletic
manager for the University of
Maryland.
time is expected to be made up. It still is considered the smoothest in the Apollo
It it was tucking at 9:35 p.m. EST liftoff in the first after-dark launching of a S-manned space flight, a fiery event with more than 9 million visitors to the Cape Kennedy area.
If skies are clear, anyone for 500 miles around could see the rocket as it slices through the darkness trailing a 2,200-foot tail of fire. However, a forecast of considerable cloudiness could dim the prospect for many areas.
Launch Director Walter Kapryan said the weather披ed a threat to the launch only if the higher-level clouds contained ice particles, which might create lightening strikes as the rocket passed through. But he did not anticipate such a problem.
Kapryan reported that minor troubles with a defective battery mounting, a rocket engine igniter and a ground computer had put the countdown about one hour behind, but that the problems had been resolved and the time would be made up during the night.
Astronautas Eugene A. Cernan, geologist Harrison H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans are the U.S. astronauts who flew to the moon.
Among those here to bid farewell to Apollo were the three members of Apollo 11 who flew man's first moon landing mission. He was Neil Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins.
for the final and most ambitious of the Apollos.
They spent time in spaceship simulators and then took to the air in jet trainer planes for the third time in four days, flying high acceleration runs over south Florida to prepare for the gravity forces they'll experience at liftoff.
With zero hour approaching, the pace quickened at the launch pad as crews worked to prepare the Saturn 5 rocket, the lunar ship America and the lunar ship Challenger.
Cernan, Evans and Schmitt, who have been adjusting their schedule to a late wakeup, plan to sleep until early afternoon Wednesday. They'll undergo a brief exam, eat and suit up for the trip to the launch pad, nine miles from their crew quarters.
Many critical countdown items remain, including the loading of the Saturn 5 on Wednesday with more than 800,000 gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen fuel.
Flight batteries were activated, fuel cells services, tanks pressurized and food equipment stowed aboard the spaceships. Five tiny mice packed in a sealed container we put aboard in an experiment to determine the effects of cosmic rays on brain tissue.
After Apollo 17, the United States has no plans to return to the moon in the foreseeable future. Instead, its manned space program will concentrate on earth
orbital flights, starting with the Skylab space station next April.
The Soviet Union also says it has no moon landing plans and that it too will emphasize earth orbital flights which can be of benefit to mankind in the fields of weather forecasting, communications and hunting earth resources.
Dr. James C. Fletcher, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said in a recent interview that if U.S. astronauts return to the moon in this summer, they will be part of a joint expedition with the Soviet Union and perhaps other countries.
For the last Apollo, NASA has selected a scientifically intriguing site named Taurus-Litrow at the landing site for Cernan and Schmitt.
They are to guide the spindly-legged Challenger to a touchdown in a three-mile volcanic valley which CERN termed a "boat" for its rapid ascent by mountains rising up to 7,000 feet.
They plan to record a record 75 hours at this site, driving their moon taxi 23 miles in search of very young and very old lunar rocks that he his expertise as a professional geologist to create this material which he would fill in missing chapters in the evolution of the moon.
While Cernan and Schmitt prowl the surface on three outside excursions, Evans drives through it.
Sec APOLLO Page 8
2
Wednesday, December 6, 1972
Greater Interest in Whomper Urged
By PATTY JOHNSON Kaneon Staff Writer
The Whomper board of directors will begin a drive at the Student Senate meeting tonight for more interest and participation in the Whomper, the University of Kansas Reclamation Center, Kathy Allen, Topena student body vice president, said Tuesday.
Allen will ask the Student Senate members for their cooperation. Ideas for improvement and volunteers to staff the Whomper and to aid in its promotion are needed, she said, so that the Whomper can recycle more material and also meet ex-
Reorganization of the Whomper is in its final phases, Allen said, and its success depends upon the help of KU students and the Lawrence community.
"We've overcome many problems of mismanagement and disorganization of the
A statewide organization of human relations workers is in the planning stages, according to Tom Moore, educational leader at the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights.
Human Rights Groups Plan State Convention
BY LINDA DOHERTY Kansan Staff Writer
"The object of our meetings is to hold this state conference on human relations and then to form a statewide organization of the levels at the operational at the local levels." Moore said.
More said a steering committee of interested human rights workers has met several times to plan a convention tentatively scheduled for Feb. 3 in Toekoa.
The formation of a state organization would improve communication of ideas between workers in different parts of the state, Moore said, and by banding together, human rights workers would be able to increase their political influence.
Royce Mcilley, executive director of the Topeka Human Relations Commission, plans to send out a proposal concerning the convention to all the existing local groups, Moore said, but the convention will still be open to anyone interested in attending.
"Hopefully, the state organization will help local units to develop a sense of competency when they apply for federal funds," he said.
According to Moore, out of 20 cities in Kansas with human relations commissions, only five of the groups are staffed by paid officials. This can create problems, he said, and it is not always able to devote the amount of time necessary for a commission to be run smoothly.
"As a part of the convention, we would like to have several workshops on how to staff and establish a human rights commission." said Moore.
HE SSAID that there was a lack of people to staff the Whomper and also a lack of participation in its promotion, but that this was no justification for giving up the project.
Although the convention will deal with human relations commissions other matters will be dealt with.
past," she said. "I can see the end of the problems."
"Representatives from NAACP the
American G.I. Forum and National Organization of Women will be encouraged to attend," Moore said. "In Topeka, there is also a group concerned about the problems of the physically handicapped and they also plan to attend."
Ray Samuel, director of the Lawrence Human Resources Department, said that the idea for forming a statewide organization for human rights workers was a good one and that he would participate as a representative from Lawrence.
"As human rights workers, we should take the leadership role and coordinate among ourselves," he said. "We in Lawrence can benefit from such an organization through the sharing of ideas with the other cities in this project."
Because the Whomper board does not expect the students or the Lawrence community to participate in something they do not understand, Allen said, a large scale educational and public relations program has been planned.
Whomper board members and volunteers will speak to several civic groups, church groups, Boy and Girl Scout troops and elementary schools in Lawrence. They will explain the operations of the Whomper and the importance of recycling trash and will encourage interest in the preservation of the environment. The development of environmental awareness has already begun at Lawrence High School, Allen said.
THE WHOMPER, at Eighth and New Hampshire streets, was begun January 1971. The materials used in the recycled waste glass, metal and aluminum. The name was derived from an industrial crusher-destroyer known as the "whomper." It was purchased from the Coca-Cola company.
The machine now recycles about 17,000 pounds of glass, 12,500 pounds of steel and 120 pounds of aluminum each month, said the manufacturer, operational director of the Whorner.
Glass brings $23 a ton, steel brings $30 a ton
and aluminum brings $200 a ton.
Agreements have been made with Owens-Illinois Company (crushed glass buyer), American Can Company (crushed steel buyer) in Kansas City, Mo., and Adolph Coors (crushed aluminum buyer). The money received by the Whomper for these services is used to pay for salaries and to help pay operational costs. Ketzel said.
THE MACHINE is now operated only about six hours a week. Ketel said that although response was picking up, a higher volume of recyclables was needed so that waste management could be done. The current deficit and operational costs are the responsibility of the Student Senate.
Recyclable waste materials can be deposited in the barrels in the alley behind the center or at Broken Arrow, Centennial and Sunset elementary schools. Whomper bottles and cans on a regular schedule and deliver them to the reclamation center.
The materials are cleaned and stripped of paper and then sorted by hand by the four masters.
The Senate allocated $5,300 to the reclamation center last spring. Allen said the board of directors had worked hard to overcome financial problems of the
ROGER MARTIN, Shawnee Mission third year law student and Senate treasurer, said the Whomper "could be about ready to break even."
"The people of the Whomper) are trying to reverse that," he said. "They are right at the point where they can make a go of it financially."
He said there had been problems in the way the Whomper was managed and the staff.
Speakers who can relate to the Humanities Lecture Series theme "Time and Mankind" are being sought by the Humanities Committee. The deadline for nominations is Dec. 14.
Humanities Series Seeks Speakers
Nominations may be submitted to Snyder in Room 123 Strong.
LATIN AMERICAN WEEK presented by THE LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION with THE SUPPORT OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB.
Latin America: Reality and Tendencies
PROGRAM:
- EXHIBIT Mon., Dec. 4th till Wed., Dec. 6th
OBSTACLES TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN
AMERICA 1:30 p.m. FORUM ROOM
LECTURE ON VALID POETRY
ture) Wed. Dec. 6th, 7:30 Big Eight Room
The invited speaker for this session of Escobar from the
Spanish & Portuguese Institute.
- FILM ON THE STRUGGLE OF THE LATIN AMERICAN PEOPLE
PLE
Thurs, Dec 7th 2:30, Forum Room
- PLE
• MONOLOGUE BY ADELA ACOSTA: "PUERTO RICO SLEEPS NO MORE" AND WRAP UP SESSION: "NOW WHERE DO WE GO"
Thurs., Dec. 7th, 7:30, Forum Room
Fri., Dec. 8th, 1-20, Inter Park Room
- LECTURE ON LATIN AMERICAN, PALESTINE & VIET-NAM POLITICAL SITUATION by GERALD CHALIAWD. French Writer highly knowledgeable on the issues of Latin America, Palestine & Viet-Nam.
Music Opens Coffeehouse
Folk singers and guitarists will present live entertainment for the grand opening of the AURH coffeehouse 7 p.m. tonight in Lewis Hall. The name of the coffeehouse will be announced tonight and the person who submitted the winning name will receive a $25 gift certificate from the Kansas Union Bookstore.
Hours for the opening night will be from 7 to 11:45 p.m. Regular hours will be from 4 to 11:45 p.m. Monday through Friday and Saturday. There will be no admission charges. There will be no admission charges.
Construction of the coffeehouse began during the first part of November in the concession area of Lewis Hall. The construction was financed by the Housing Department.
Because of the shortened hours opening night, there will be no hot food service according to Jay Atwater, Leaward sophomore and coffeehouse manager. After the opening, food service provided by the Kansas Union will be available from 4 to 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 4 to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Many changes were made in the area. All vending machines were removed, along with partitions, and a new north wall was built for the food service area. A partition was put in front of the west wall as a wind break for the west entrance, a suspended ceiling was installed to cover old pipes and windows. The large stone sheet rock form the south wall, which will be used to display art work. Other walls were painted bright colors.
The coffeehouse, which holds 50 to 60 people, has 36-inch cube tables, chairs with 4-inch foam cushions, two sofa-type benches along the walls and carpeting.
Hitchhiking Popular Travel Form
Early in November, a Bonner Springs youth driving from Kansas City, Mo., to Charlotte offered a roadside ride. The youth offered the hitchhikers a ride and was later found in a roadside ditch near Lawrence, beaten and shot. Another hitchhiker were later found and arrested.
Although this was only an isolated incident in Kansas, cases occur frequently throughout the United States. In Kansas alone, hitchhiking has caused the arrest of 359 pedestrians from January through August 1972. Some of these hitchhikers were identified by police as criminals as murder, assault or AWOL, according to the Kansas Hightway Patrol.
Because of the danger hitchhiking presents, 16 states including Kansas have outlawed hitchhiking in some form through state law. Despite the illegality and the hatchhiking, however, the practice has become an increasingly popular form of travel.
IN LAWRENC, hitchhiking is prohibited by Section 106 of the Standard Traffic Ordinance for all Kansas cities. The ordinance states "No person shall stand on a roadway purpose of soliciting a ride, employment business from an occupant of any vehicle."
Generally, this means a hitchhiker can not stand on the road way itself, but off the street.
Though few people are arrested for hitchhiking in the city, according to L. Vernon Herral of Lawrence police department, most hitchhikers are warned to stay off the road sometimes, at the discretion of the officer, said, personal identification is checked.
A maximum sentence of $100 or 10 days in jail exists for a first time offense in hitchhiking in Lawrence. For the second offense, the penalty is $200 or 20 days. The third offense is more severe and takes months. This is providing, however, all offenses occur in a one year period.
AS FOR hitchhiking at highways, Maj. Carl Gray, director of the service division of the Kansas Highway Patrol, said Kansas law states "no person should stand on a paved surface for the purpose of soliciting a ride (hitchhiking).
Although hitchhiking does exist over most of the state Gray said the highway patrol would offer any assistance to any hitchhiker if possible. The Highway patrol will cooperate, he said, as long as no law is broken.
Besides offering an inexpensive way of travel, hitchhiking provides opportunities for adventure, new experiences, or as one student said, a sense of freedom.
This includes, Gray said, any improved surface of the roadway, such as the concrete pavement or sidewalk.
Yet the spirit of adventure is usually overpowered by the need for inexpensive
"Hitching is a way of life for a lot of people," he said, "out on the road, free from grinds. It's a different way to get to know about the country and the people."
SUE BECKMAN, Burlington junior, said she had hiked about 15 times over both long and short distances. Most of these were the result of trying to travel cheap.
Beckman said hitchhiking provided experi- vements, many of which have provided experiences.
“There’s something about hitching,” Beckman said. “It’s exciting to see more of what’s around you besides being someone. Sometimes you get put out, or meet other people in their experiences. You’re more aware of different types of people around the country.”
Hitchhiking is its own teacher, Beckman said. Experiences have taught her the best approach to hitchhiking, where to hitchhike and how to get out of trouble.
"Older people usually picked me up," Jochems said. "They seem to be interested in younger people besides wanting someone to talk. One of the things I have learned is that people just for rides. Try and experience them. Sometimes they can be a real trip."
ANN JCHEMIS, Omana, Nebi, senior,
and Val Kelly, Columbia, Mo., senior,
consider hitchhiking experiences
memorable in their lives.
"Appearance doesn't make that much difference either," she said. "I have hitched in jeans and sorted of dressed up. But I always carry a knife for protection."
"An older man picked us up then," she said, "and told us about his childhood, and his values in life. He was really nice, bought her a suit, and let us have a motel room for the night."
"When we continued the next morning, we got into a talk about Nixon. He told us to speak our minds and we did. He let us out soon after that."
Jochms and Kelly said any potential hitchhiker should try and go in a group, look like a good conversationist, carry a sign of confidence or be a convenient place for the driver, to stop.
ONE WAY TO eliminate a potential mishap is to find a ride connection before going on the road. This practice, an exercise in trial and error, hitchhiking, is increasing in popularity.
In Lawrence, the Kansas Union ride board offers one such chance of obtaining a seat on a bus from the floor of the union building, the board lists rides to major cities throughout the country.
There are other sources available, however, as one student pointed out. A successful hitchhiker learns to be resourceful, be said, and ride offers can be found in the backpacks of students on the streets to sign up in the headshops downtown or even tacked up on the Union walls.
"Hitchhiker News," a service of radio station KBEY-FM in Kansas City, also broadcasts ride requests and ride offers nightly from 7 to 9 p.m.
Headquarters, 1632 Kentucky, also can
help hikers with rides as waa as offer
fellowship for hikes and tours.
Resourcefulness, he said, pays off and should be the motto of every hitchhiker.
Different Cultures — Strange Food — Tough Work — Long Hours — No Pay — Except, What God Gives You.
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3
Court Prohibits 'Lewd, Naked' Bar Dancing
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 Tuesday that the states may shut down saloons that feature bottomless stalls and other forms of chauffeured rainbowfish.
The decision, in a California case, held that the First Amendment was not intended to prevent real or simulated sexual acts in public.
But the 21st Amendment, besides ending Prohibition, granted state law officers broad authority to guard "public health," and he is expected to serve Justice William H. Rehnquist for the court.
Since the California regulations upheld by the court specifically prohibit the display of genitals, authorities everywhere would stop a green light to ban bottom dancing.
The landmark ruling is likely to have an impact beyond California on bars and nightclubs in all states that sell liquor by the booze law. The Roe v. Wade Rehquz described as gross sexuality.
Justices William O. Douglas, William J. Brennan Jr., and Thurgood Marshall dissented and Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Byron R. White, Harry A. Blackmun and Lewis F. Powell, Jr. supported Rehnounist.
The decision reversed a three-judge panel in Los Angeles which found the regulations to be unconstitutional in a suit brought by a group of bar owners.
The decision established a legal precedent because it separates sexual exhibitions in public bars from movies and books, which are protected by the First Amendment from suppression by officials. The judge said that the court has defined to be obscenity.
SAIGON (AP)—Enemy forces pressed attacks Tuesday in the central highlands. The Saigon command reported one bloodly kill and two wounded in a base camp that might have been overrun.
S. Viets Halt Heavy Enemy Attacks
South Vietnamese military spokesmen reported government troops repulsed several North Vietnamese assaults Monday at the base. Base camp, seven miles north of Kontum.
A third North Vietnamese assault against a government outpost tine miles north of Hanoi. The attack ended with a heavy blow.
A communique from the Saigon command said 65 North Vietnamese were killed in the assaults and 16 weapons were captured. It mentioned that military losses as four dead and 15 wounded.
Fire Base November, four miles north of Kontum, was hit with 40 artillery and mortar shells, causing few casualties, field reports said.
Field reports said 35 government soldiers were missing after the battle, indicating the
outpost may have been overrun. South Vietnamese military spokesmen claimed 15 North Vietnamese were killed during the attack.
In an effort to stop the resupply in the north, more than 30 1328 bombed the area by suicide.
The heaviest enemy activity in recent weeks has been in the central highlands and in the northern regions of Quang Tri Province, and the North Vietnamese are easily repulsed.
The Kontent area under attack is about 25 miles inside the border of Cambodia, Laos and South Vietnam, well within reach of the Ho Chi Minh trail and its arteries.
In northern Quang Tri, North Vietnamese units are resupplied through neighboring provinces.
Bellmon said he and Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey and others on the visit to Russia met with Soviet Premier Kosygin and "every time we'd ask him how much we like it," he said from us next year, he would say. First, tell me what you are going to buy from us."
The bombers also struck supply caches around the North Vietnamese port of Dong Khoi, 270 km north of the demilitarized zone in the U.S. that there were 12 B2 strikes in that area.
In the future, Bellman said, the United States might work out an annual arrangement to purchase natural gas, oil and coal, and, in turn, sell wheat to the Russians.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Nixon administration moved on domestic and foreign fronts Tuesday to curb skylakings and a national air policy through an agreement with Ocala.
The domestic program calls for electronic screening of all passengers and inspection of their carry-on baggage, plus the posting of their documents at the airport, at the expense of airports and air lines.
The plans drew prompt criticism from airport operators and municipal officials groups who want the federal government to full responsibility for security activities.
Skyjack Problem Attacked In Domestic, Foreign Plans
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -U.S. Sen. Henry Bellman said Tuesday his recent trip to the Soviet Union convinced him that the Russians can't afford to make a major wheat purchase from the United States every year.
"They probably will continue to buy U.S. soybeans and corn, but I think their big
Bellmon Certain Economics Limit Russian Purchases
"We're going to be awfully stupid if we urge American wheat farmers to expand their crops on the assumption that Russia will plant in year's big wheat purchase." Bellman said.
A Billings wheat farmer himself, the Republican senator said the United States may be able to work out an annual wheat sale with the Russians sometime in the future. At the present time, he said, they can't afford to buy.
wheat purchase was a one-time thing," Bellman said.
"Barring another crop failure in Russia, I don't believe we will see a purchase in the same quantity that they bought this year," he added.
The main purpose of the visit, Bellmon said, was to find out whether or not they made a mistake in selling Russians a major share of the United States' crescent this year.
Secretary of Transportation John A. Vope announced the promptly challenged security regulations and Secretary of State William P. Rogers had dischieved his sub mitting to Cuban authorities a hijacking agreement intended to forestall further use of that Communist country as a haven for hijackers.
Vohre directed the airlines to implement within one month procedures for electronic screening of all passengers and for in-room carry-on items accessible to passengers.
He said he decided it was a mistake because the Russians were able to make their purchase secretly, thus keeping prices below $20. But he was any wrongdoing by American officials.
"I just feel the Russian grain buyers operate in a very shrewd way," he said.
Meanwhile, at the state Department, the Swiss ambassador to Havana received from Secretary Rogers a proposed hijacking request for submission to Cuban authorities.
Benjamin O. Davis, assistant secretary of transportation, said at a news conference that federal funds would be used to acquire the aircraft. In a program which already is under way,
The Swiss ambassador to Havana, Silvio Masnata, acts in the United States' behalf in the absence of diplomatic relations between Washington and Havana.
But he said the rest of the program-passenger screening and the placement of armed guards would be the responsibility of the airlines and the airport operators.
In addition, 12 BS2 strikes were flown against suspected enemy troop concentrations and staging areas in the central highlands along the Cambodia border in the 18 hours ending at 6 a.m. Tuesday, the command said.
Department press officer Charles W. Bray, while declining to give details of the proposal, said it is "fair to say that we now know what the basis of emphasising basis for proceeding to an agreement"
North Vietnam announced that Hanoi, the capital, has been placed on full alert. That announcement was made in a Radio Hanoi broadcast monitored in Saigon.
No reason was given for the alert, but it indicated North Vietnam believes the United States might resume bombing of the city. But if a peace agreement is not soon reached
He was invited to Washington by Rogers to give a first-hand account of a Cuban proposal which he received from Foreign Minister Raul Ro1 10 days ago.
The bombing of North Vietnam above the 20th Parallel was ordered stopped by the US at Oct. 23 in which administration officials declared a good will during the peace negotiations.
Lung Condition Puts Truman In Hospital
His condition was reported fair.
A hospital spokesman said that no tests or treatments other than continued antibiotics were administered.
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Former President Harry S Truman was taken by ambulance to Research Hospital and Medical Center for treatment with a condition described as congestion.
Mrs. Truman visited the former President in his sixth-floor room. There was no report whether she would spend the night.
hospital for 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.
The 88-year-old former President was admitted to the hospital at 5:25 p.m., the
A news conference was scheduled at the hospital for 10:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Truman's physician is Dr. Wallace Graham.
Turman, who lives with his wife, Bess, at Independence, about 10 miles from the hospital, was taken to Research twice last summer: once after falling in his home, and a week later with what Dr. Graham called a "lower gastrointestinal problem."
The medical center has four categories by which it gauges a patient's condition, good, fair, bad.
A hospital spokesman said last July the second hospitalization was a scheduled, routine examination. Truman underwent a series of tests and was at the hospital for nearly two weeks, delighting fellow patients with frequent strolls down the corridors.
It defines "fair" in this manner: "Vital signs are stable and within normal limits. It is conscious. He is not comfortable or may complications. His recovery is anticipated."
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4
Wednesday, December 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Hilltopper Awards: 'Producers' vs. Plain Folk
During the past couple of years the Jayhawker yearbook has been boxed, serialized, radicalized, and now— finally, normalized.
It had been made relevant—maybe too relevant. The idea behind the yearbook was, I always supposed, to be a history of the good things that happened during a more simple time—a book to collect dust for years until, in a moment of nostalgia, it is opened to all the old faces, places and issues. Somehow, this book helps me remember the shooting deaths of Rick Dowdell and Nick Rice and the bombings and burnings doesn't seem all that nostalgic. This, though, is what the relevant yearbook gave us.
These days, relevance (read political consciousness) is on the wane, saddle oxfordes are back in, pleated pants the rage, and sockhops so far in they're almost out, as the saying goes.
The yearbook this year is in good company.
And with the revitalized yearbook comes the Hilltopter award. The Hilltopters are those few people chosen by the yearbook staff each year to represent what we all should know about sports, and spent a little too much time at Bogart flicks, basketball games, poetry readings, hanging out at the
Union, or just taking it all in. Hilltoppers, they say, "produce" even if it means stepping on a few toes, while the rest of us try to live our life day, getting what pleasure we can without getting in someone's way.
Step on a few tweets and there, "produce" something—what it takes to qualify—and you can get your way in the yearbook as a Hilltoper.
Now, before all you who covet the Hilltop award, or have won it already, get indignant and write me sarcastic letters about my pompous boss. "What's not you but the spirit in which the award is given that is offensive."
This is a hard award for people who make hard things happen—the "producers." For some reason they are held up as our ideals.
There are, though, a great number of people at this University who are not particularly pushy, rarely step on toes, don't often "produce" in the Hilltopper sense of the word—but in the end, are warm, friendly and compassionate people. These people love happiness into the lives of a few good people and they will have lived a good life because of it.
An award for the non "producers" too.
—Thomas E. Slaughter
THREAD
The Light at the End?
After a lull in the excitement caused by the expectation of peace in Vietnam in late October, the chances for some sort of settlement seem to be picking up again. This time it has become very obvious that the United States is negotiating for itself. The desires of President Thieu do not seem to be receiving the same consideration that they have in the past. Thieu has been made to understand that if he does not sign the treaty being worked out by Henry Kissinger and the North Vietnamese negotiator, Le Duc Tho, he might be fighting a war without American money and men.
There is something unwholesome about supporting a government and pretending that government is a free agent. Now that the Saigon government is not dancing for us as a puppet should, we will just release it from its strings. However, when we do that, it appears that we will also take away much of the power that it
had. Nevertheless, I cannot feel too bad about the ruin of a government directed by Thieu.
Now the negotiations seem to take into account that this war was our war and not the South Vietnamese' despite what our various presidential administrations have said about preserving democracy in Vietnam. Our land did not have to endure it, but our equipment, our money and our men fought it. I do not mean to be bellicose any contributions that the Vietnamese military made in dragging this war through twenty years but rather to recognize our responsibility for it.
Finally it is time to get America out of our war. In the interests of peace and Vietnamese citizens I hope that the South Vietnamese government will agree to the treaty. If they don't then they must carry on the fighting by themselves and have a war that really is a Vietnam war.
—Mary Ward
Jack Anderson
Skyjack Scheme a Hoax
WASHINGTON - For *few* weeks, a small plane circled over a lonely area of the Southwest waiting for a signal to toss out a satelite.
The plane was secretly
billionaire Howard Hughes's
bilionaire Howard Hughes's
airline, Airwest, to stop an ex-
pedition from blowing up a
passenger jet.
The bizarre extortion plot, which authorities tried to hush up, began with an anonymous person who was arrested at Airwest's Phoenix offices.
Although confusing on some points, the letter indicated that a pressure-sensitive box, set for a certain altitude, was on board an explosion lasted for 150 hours an explosion 150 hours after Airwest received the letter.
To learn its location, the airplane was to, within three days, collect more than $100,000 and send it aboard a small plane over an a-prearranged course over the barren stretches of the Southwest. The airplane would signal when the satchel was to be dropped from the plane.
Once the satchel was received.
Wild as the scheme was, Air-west chose to take it seriously. Risk a midair explosion with risk a crew and crew aboard was unthinkable.
the letter promised, the airline would be notified which plane was rigged with the bomb.
The airline has 20 jets operating over 9,000 miles of routes. As fast as they hit the ground, they were searched from nose to tail, from wheel well to cabin roof. Once searched, each plane was tour surveillance to prevent a bomb from being seaked aboard.
Despite these precautions, the airline, taking no chances, assembled the cash. It was packed into a satchel and flown to Cessna-150 over the designated area. The team decided to ready drop the satchel, watched for the signal which never came.
protected that during the bomb search its mechanics were kept ignorant of the danger by the airline, FBA and FAA. Union workers are being using the September scare to the FFA, FBA and Congress for guidelines in future cases. He is also asking the Labor Department to rule that employees must be notified of bomb and hijack danger.
sashington Whirl
THEIU-HUNGLAP-
President Nixon entered into direct negotiations with the South Vietnamese after the U.S. embattled government and President Thieu had lost confidence in Henry Kissinger. He left the Vietnamnese, then accepted a draft, Kissinger, and accepted a draft, the North Vietnamese, in making cease-fire agreement. The cease-fire agreement, Thieu objected, was too harsh. It failed to take into account the complexities of the Vietnam War.
NIXON'S NEPHEW-
President Nixon's 26-year-old
nephew Donald A. Nixon, has
been a constant source of
patient efforts by the White
House to keep him out of trouble.
He has turned up as a personal aide in the Bahamas to financier attempts to divert $284 million in the accused by the Securities Exchange Commission of attempting to divert $284 million in his personal use. The White House has prehensive when young Nixon is tasked to work for Nixon's company he has given his trusted aid, John Ehrichman, the delicate, confidential assignment of keeping a wary eye on assignments from his family. So Ehrichman took the Nixon nephew aside and spoke of hours, urging him to behave with care to job and do nothing to embarrass President. There is no evidence involved in any way in Nicec's alleged fraud. But Vesco paid him generously and tried to on the fact he had the President's nephew on his payroll.
PHONY ENVIRONMENTALI-
STS—TO CONSERVATION-minded
congression, Henry Reuss, D
Wis., and John Dongkell, D-Mich.
have caught the federal government trying to pass off strip-minders as environmentalists. They are the National Coal Association, the Dungell wrote to environmentalists so much to ecological spillage, listed in a new federal directory of environmental organizations and Dungell wrote to environment officials that "if the National Coal Association qualifies," then so do the oil, gas and other national sources. He asked Kruckeshus to halt distribution of the coal lobby was stricken from it. The company copied simply acknowledged that his agency had goofed.
EMBARRASSING DETAIL-
Benjamin Ichinose, corporate president of a taco food chain in Florida, has been named in a list of chain discriminates against blacks. The suit comes at a most embarrassing moment for him, just appointed to serve a two-year term on the President's Council for Minority Enterprise.
Copyright, 1972,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Nader Needed Despite Critics
It is interesting to watch the critics of Ralph Nader. For the conservatives, he is too radical—questioning General Motors is running a Devil Providence. For radicals it is too conservative—they don't want to improve the auto industry, but dismantle it. For the system it is too little "within the system" these ideas, he should run for office.
it? Or about anything? That is always the response to a prophet who spots some social weakness. What good could it do for a young
There are others for whom everything he does is wrong. He is a nuisance, but he doesn't act unintentionally—i.e. he does simultaneously too little. He is a one-issue man, and he spreads himself too thin. He doesn't do his own reports, so he does not incarcerate; but what he does is not excessive. He is against the system, yet he has ambitions within it. He is too peripheral, and too "political." He upsetting to many young people.
expecting too many young people.
If I knew nothing else about him, his critics alone would
convince me he is on to something. When any stick is good enough to beat a man with, then he represents a real menace.
Garry Wills
Garry Wills
to his critics. Their desperation is a form of aribute to him: "I hate the matter. Whatever weaknesses he may have, he has obviously found them."
challenged a whole attitude where the nation's conscience was uneasy, defensive, desperate.
man to tell his parishioners to boycott the city's bues?—yet Martin Luther King changed the whole nation's attitudes on race and equality. His efforts did not arise from any disease issue, but from the fact that he
Everything King did was wrong, too. He should stay in the room, or run for office; stick to his life and not regardness of color; discuss moral abstractions, but stay off the war. He was a racist to some, an anti-racists; too political, too impractical, too activist, too non-violent.
But what can one man do about
This kind of catalyst is too controversial for politics, but does more than the politicians. He moved the Catholic Worker movement more for the Catholic Church in America than has any leading bishop. A social worker like Jane Addams brought about more legislation than any legislator who finally voted for the kind of bills she inspired.
What is the point on which our society feels so vulnerable in Nader's case? I think it is our native American assumption that our leaders are morally beyond our own decisions, an official decision. Business is America's morality. But what is America's morality in business.
The strength of such people came from the weak spot they managed instinctively to find.
Nader did not make the old (and ineffectual) charge that businessmen try to cheat each individual salesman can be a businessman was saying that the whole system of an industry could be not only a hoax but an actual menace to the public. The crooked businessman was seen as benevolent. But what if it were not?
That was—for many, still is—an unaskable question. And Nader is telling it, about all our social system, from GM to Congress to the Pentagon. To be honest, the people nervous. We need him.
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 1972
Readers Respond
Engineers
To the Editor:
SCoRMEBE, 5-Story 'Hawk
Your story "Black Engineer Prospects Get Boost" is an example of inaccurate and flagrant reporting. The article lacks the sensitivity and inference required to relay the basic concept.
Initially, SCORMEBE means "Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating, and Educating Black Engineers." SCORMEBE has the scope of "black." Although the name SCORMEBE, we feel that by limiting our organization to blacks we are only con-
trasting with the program was initially founded, combat racial discrimination, not propagate it. As it is now, SCORMEBE means "Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating, and Educating Minority Engineers."
An example of inaccurate reporting is the statement that provided free tutorial services enrolled in engineering. It should be obvious that SCORMEB can not raise funds, recruit and provide free tutorial services in engineering students. Our
present organizational structure limits us to providing tutorial services only for SCoRMEBE members.
It should be noted that School of Engineering expands services and goals if it provides full financial support by the School of Engineering and the University. The present seven per cent investment in the School of Engineering at KU, be doubled or even tripled if SCHOOLBE expands full support.
The News article also states that SCORMEBED and two facets, a summer program and a winter program, will provide the summer program for the purpose of providing the participant with confidence, and which at the end would lead to an academic gap that might exist between the participant and the average freshmen that enters the program if a student plans to enter KU, that student will enroll in regular university courses. The winter program does not exist; students must be regular university semester.
One of the most pertinent issues facing the industry is the involvement of engineering's involvement in meeting the future demands of industry with technology.
affirmative action plan should be required to equivocal support of SCoMRemain firmative action plan should not begin with meeting the demands
Charles Lockhart, J.
Chicago sophomore
Ron Taylor
Ron Taylor
Pontiac, Mich.
Student Rep. SCOREMER
★ ★ ★
Architecture
Editor, The Daily Kansan
The five-story Jayhawk proposed as a design class project and described in the Daily Kansan of Nov. 30, 1972, is concept-deserving not only recognition but an appropriate execution.
One is hesitant to offer critical comment on a project of such striking magnificence, lest one appear to bellate the nobleness of the thought that originated it. But you should be able to further the ultimate aim of your project one may be permitted to offer a few suggestions.
Detailed information on the project was not available in the Kansan report (for example, the diameter of the 15 story tower).
For this reason one is somewhat reluctant to suggest that the seven million proposed for the city should be based on. However, based on proportional relations suggested by the photo and the upright in present conditions, one might venture that a building would be more generously appropriate. Certainly the quality of the execution should be equal to that of the plan.
One might further suggest, since it appears that one of the objectives was to create a Jaywahk "that could be seen from all over Lawrence," that the skyline might reveal a better location. The top of the hill, perhaps even the site of Fraser Hall, offers a much greater for visibility than the proposed Louisiana and Massachusetts Street and 12th Street.
the seven million suggested for the cost of the base could be generous and splendid realization of Jayhawk. Perhaps the Jayhawk itself could be made 10 years later, but it is timorous when thinking big.
Since Fraser Hall already
made it safe, no doubt he would not even be
necessary to build the 15-story
building to serve as a library.
If Fraser were to serve as a store
Can't you see it now? A most glorious joylahk displayed, leaning back against the sky, spread-eagled in the manner of a giant bird on the half-dollar! A foot poised on each of the cupulas and the traditional, wind-windbed flags upheld in the grasp of each wing! The wings are lighted by plastic, lighted from within, and with ruby-like air protection lights twinkling at the tip of each flagpole, this splendid bird could then be seen night and day from Topека, perhaps even further. Imagine how your heart would leap up to see this beacon of information, as well as culture and information, as standing there for all to see.
Curtis Bestinger Professor of architecture and urban design
Griff and the Unicorn
OKAY... YOU'VE CONVINCED ME THAT YOU'RE THE LEGENDARY PHOENIX AND MUST BURN YOURSELF UP SO THAT A NEW PHOENIX MAY RISE FROM THE ASHES.
By Sokoloff
OKAY... YOU'VE CONVINCED ME THAT YOU'RE THE LEGENDARY PHOENIX AND MUST BURN YOURSELF UP SO THAT A NEW PHOENIX MAY RISE FROM THE ASHES.
GO AHEAD... JUMP INTO THE FIRE I WON'T STOP YOU.
I'M CHOKED WITH GRATITUDE
Universal Press Syndicate 1972
I'M
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Wednesday, December 6, 1972
5
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Commission Amends Sidewalk Plan
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
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A lengthy discussion of a skeletal sidewalk plan for the area bounded by 19th, 23rd, Louisiana and Iowa streets ended Tuesday afternoon when the City Commission authorized the city staff to prepare a new plan with two amendments.
The amendments call for the removal of proposed sidewalks on the east side of Naishtim Drive from 19th to 23rd streets from the plan and for the addition of the southwest corner of Iowa and 23rd to the benefit district.
Public Works Director George Williams had introduced the original plan at the Nov. 21 commission meeting. The plan, which Williams said was the product of several years of research and development for 10,997 feet of sidewall in the area, which Williams estimated would cost $9,733.
The plan showed sidewalks on both sides of Naismith Drive from 19th to 23rd, on the south side of 19th from Iowa to Louisiana, on the north side of 19th from Louisiana on the east side of Carolina from 21st to 22nd, on the east side of Ousdahl from 19th to 23rd, on the north side of 21st from Iowa to Louisiana, on a small section of Greever, connecting Alabama and Carolina on 22nd.
THE ASSESSMENT method proposed by Williams Nov. 21 was front footwear, with adjustments for irregular and cul-de-sac lots. Williams estimated the cost at $1.61 a front foot. The sidewalk will be four feet wide and four inches thick.
The benefit district will include the school property of Centennial, Schwegler and Lawrence High, and is generally bounded by 19th, 23rd, Louisiana and Iowa streets. Commissioner Jack Rose strongly urged Tuesday that letters be mailed to each person in the benefit district outlining the plan.
City Clerk Vera Mercer said that after the new proposal has been developed and the match is made, the new plan would be presented in a meeting, "probably sometime in January."
If the commission should then pass a resolution ordering construction of the sidewalks, a public hearing would be set and persons in the benefit district would have 20 days to file a protest petition, Mercer said.
Mayor John Emick said "You can't blame the commission. There seem to be a lot of people in this area who want sidewalks, and they initiated this."
Lloyd Davies, of 1645 W. 19th, asked whether the proposed sidewalks would be made. Williams said they would not be made sanded. Williams said of sidewalk tended to wash out easily.
SEVERAL AREA residents attended the commission meeting to offer opinions on the plan and to ask questions. Mrs. Arthur Chandler, a retired nurse, reported in mission why they were so anxious to put
IN OTHER BUSINESS, the commission rejected two bids for the sale of the old library located on the northwest corner of Ninth and Vermont streets.
Several residents backed the proposal for varying reasons. The increase in traffic in the area in the last several years and the increased number of pedestrians residents walking along Nassmith were cited
more sidewalks in when people in other areas were having trouble maintaining the sidewalks.
Rose said that both bids, which we received Monday morning, did not come up. Ms. Rhea was very happy.
The commission accepted a bid from American LaFrance of Emira, N.Y. for an aerial ladder fire for the Fire Department.
One woman simply said, "I'm tired of walking in the mud."
A bid from Jim Clark Motors of $29,390 for 11 new police vehicles was accepted by the court.
The commission accepted a bid for 15-five-row bleachers, five-10-row bleachers, and eight players' benches for the city park department from Miracle Equipment Co. of Baltimore to its manager Buford Watson said the bleacher was used in the Louie Holcom Sports Complex.
IN OTHER business, the commission:
the county are now approved a site place the Ballen's tail center to be located at the northwest corner of Ballen's property.
--approved resolution No. 3885 ordering the paving and Lynn Street from Haskell Avenida Bayfront
-approved a site plan for the Lawrence Country Club located on Country Club Terra.
-authorized payment of $8,663.75 to the Douglas County Civil Defense Fund for the city's share of the cost of 12 civil defense warring sensors.
- set 10 a.m. Dec. 27 as the date to receive bids for the purchase of several sanitation equipment items, including two packer trucks.
- approved an ordinance ordering no parking from the south side of Greewer Terrace from Carolina Street to Louisiana Street.
authorized the mayor to enter into a depository contract with the First National Bank of Lawrence for the purpose of depositing federal revenue sharing funds.
Beer Now Permitted In 3 More Sororities
By JOYCE PRUESSNER
Kansan Staff Writer
Beer was once forbidden in all sorority houses at the University of Kansas, but this year a few houses are changing their policies to make sorority life less restrictive. Alpha Phi and Alpha Phi and Alpha Chi Omega societies are allowed to drink beer in their houses.
Delta Delta Delta recently was notified that it was one of 10 Tri Delta chapters chosen to participate in a pilot program that allowed beer in chapter houses. The chapter drew up a beer proposal in March and sent it to the national organization.
At its national convention during the summer, Tri Delta's national policy on alcoholic beverages was scrutinized and the pilot program was established. The Kansas chapter was informed Nov. 7 that it would participate in the project.
(continued from page 1)
Academic Officers' Report ..
BEER IS NOW allowed in any non-public area of the Pacific Delta region to drink, park or walk in public areas, for public use.
director, Nichols said that other names he wanted to move fast on the appointment.
"Lonborg was available, he was willing and his career as athletic director qualifies him to play."
The chancellor said the initial work had started on the preparation of next year's budget.
"The internal process is starting now," he said. "The vice chancellors have given the deans some guidelines for the preliminary work of putting recommendations together."
"ALL 18-YEAR-OLDS in Kansas can drink, and there is no reason why we shouldn't also," said Barbara Rademaker, Kirkwood, Mo., senior and Tri Delta president. "The biggest worry of our organization is liability insurance."
The Alpha Phi house has had a beer policy on a trial basis since October. The idea was first suggested last spring, but was defeated, according to Marty Hyten, Wellington junior and president of the house.
In October the beer question arose again, Hyten said, and after securing approval from the governor in favor of an adviser, the Alpha Platinum beaten the house. The trial period will last until the end of the semester and the decision on the continuance of the program will be made in January.
BEER IS NOT allowed on the first floor of the house or in the parking lot, and beer cans must be disposed of in designated waste cans. Hven said.
"IT'S A GOOD possibility that having beer in the sorority may help in encouraging more girls to participate in activity," she said. "You can have beer in homes and apartments. Now you can see what it's like in our type of situation."
Cathy Brown, Wichita senior and president of Alpha Chi Omega, said that during the summer the Alpha Chi Omega code of conduct at its national convention.
"We have a fairly liberal national," she said. "They are quite reasonable."
THE HOUSE made up a list of guidelines regarding the use of beer and sent them to its national organization and to the dean of women at KU for approval. The restrictions allow drinking only in the study rooms and on the back patio.
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The Italian Pizzeria has been here for almost three months without having a GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION, see, and the Family says to quit stallin'. So just to show you that we're really good guys at heart, we are gonna give you these unbelievable low prices:
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Wednesday, December 6, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Family Planning Pushed
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
A program of family planning education could become part of the curriculums of Kansas high schools if two bills recommended for passage by an interim legislative health committee are approved by the Kansas legislature.
The interim committee, headed by Sen. Ross Doyne, R-Concordia, recommended passage of the bills after a series of committees and gave the need for better family planning education.
One of the bills would authorize local school boards to contract with county health departments to supply contraception and birth control information, desiring it. The other bill would authorize the state board of health to provide funds for family planning programs to any agency, public or private, that is engaged in providing information, procedures and summits.
IN AN INTERVIEW WEDNAY, Doyen said the purpose of the bills was to get contraception and family planning information to people who needed it.
He said the hearings found that in some areas of Kansas this type of information was difficult to obtain. The hearings also undersigned about general disease and pregnancy.
Many young women haven't any knowledge about syphilis or gonorrhea, he said. He studied a study of 20 women in which 13 were infected with syphilis, but were unaware of this condition.
He said this did not mean that any group of 20 women would reveal the same statistics, but it did show there was a lack of education in this area.
Doyen stressed the educational aspect of these programs, and said that they were not meant to be a substitute for a teacher.
"THEE JUST should be someone to explain these facts," he said.
Doyen said the program would be handled by qualified people. The Board of Education could have a health department nurse come in and teach classes we have classes a half day each week, he said.
Doyen said he thought there would be opposition to the bills in the legislature. It was too much of a threat.
He also said he realized there would be public opposition to such a program. "Sure there will be public opposition. There is opposition to any change." he said.
"When asked about the effect of possible compromises, Doyen said it was impossible to predict what would happen in the legislature.
DR. DALLE CLINTON of the Douglas County Health Dept. said that information about contraception should be taught on a regular basis and there were no laws to prevent this now.
He questioned the need for new state programs and said there was a danger in
College Awards Seniors, Sophs For Achievement
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences presented awards to three seniors and 24 sophomores Monday for academic excellence at the University of Kansas.
Seniors receiving the Paul B. Lawson Award for high academic achievement were: Am C. Bolinger, Kansas City, Kan., and Paul B. Campbell, Boston, Mass.; and Paul C. Shellit, Wichita state
The Lawson award was established in memory of Paul B. Lawson, a former dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and is presented annually to the student or students who have achieved the highest standing after three years in the College.
Sophomores receiving the Veta B. Lear Award for academic excellence were: Paul Arnold, Leavenworth sophomore; Christine Davis, Leawood sophomore; Elizabeth Dillon, Hutchinson sophomore; Barbara Dohnal, Omaha, Neb., sophomore; Deborah Drummond, Overland Park sophomore; Patrick Gorman, Prairie Village Stephen Gagnon, Zurich sophomore; Patrick Gorman, Prairie Village Stephen Gagnon, Gruffield Lawrence sophomore; Deborah Guy overland sophomore; Toby Hartong, Leawood sophomore; Patricia Hermann, Leavenworth sophomore; and Patricia Hirsch, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore.
Other recipients of the Lear award were:
John Hoffman, Parsons sophomore; Daniel Logan, Topea sophomore; John McNeil, Manhattan sophomore; Eric Meyer, Marion sophomore; John W. Nitcher, Lawrence sophomore; Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs sophomore; Charles Ruder, Ruder Ruder, Hays sophomore; Beverly Sigal sophomore; Mark Sinning, Holton sophomore; Gary L. Taylor, Topea sophomore; and Joel Wallman, Prairie Village sophomore.
SAB Requests Official Status
The School of Education's Student Advisory Board (SAB) decided Tuesday to recommend to the school's ad hoc code revisions committee that SAB be recognized as the school's official student organization.
SAB expects to present the recommendation Dec. 13 to the code revisions committee, which is a temporary group organized to modernize the school's code.
"We want to be recognized as the official voice of the students," said Steve Corder, Oklahoma City senior, and SAB member, "and we would like to have 50 per cent of the total representation on all policy-making boards in the school of education."
such bills because the legislature could make compromises that would weaken the bill and might limit the ability of the health department in the area of family planning education.
Clinton objected to calling these programs family planning and said that they should be called 'contraception' programs. He said that people already knew how to plan families, now they needed to know how to prevent them.
Clinton said there was little that could be done about the problem of venereal disease. The county health department now treats about 60 cases each month.
CARL KNOX, superintendent of schools in Lawrence, said he thought that family planning was an appropriate area for various aspects of the school curriculum. However, he said he didn't think it was necessary for the state to operate in this
Knox said the legislature was a state body and perhaps was not as aware of the problems of education as were the local boards.
He said the local district staffs could determine whether this type of a program should operate in a public health or public school area.
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Monday the production of Kurt Vonnegut's "Happy Birthday Wanda June"
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Wednesday the comedy of David Steinberg the songs of Jimmie Spheres
Thursday the contemporary criticisms of drama critic John Lahr
Saturday the sound of B.B. King
Pomare black ballet troupe
Festival coupon available at enrollment for 6.00 and at the SUA office after enrollment. Individual night tickets worth 10.50.
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7
Wednesday, December 6. 1972
INDIANA 31
32
INDIANA 31
32
34
KANSAS 34
10
32
KU's Barrow Hesitates . . .
CORALA 34
CORALA 0
CORALA 12
Kansan Staff Photos by PRES BRANDSTED
Goes Up for Shot . . .
Leaves IU Players in His Wake
University Daily Kansan
KU's 2nd Straight Home Loss
Hoosiers Overcome Jayhawks, 72-55
The University of Kansas got the opening tipoff against Indiana Tuesday night, but did not retain possession long as senior forward Wilson Barrow was called for traveling. The traveling violation seemed to be a bad嗅en for the Jayhawks as their play improved little and they were defeated by the Hosiers, 72-55.
By DON PF ANNENSTIEL
Kansan Sports Writer
The game before 11,600 fans in Allen Field House started as though it was going to be a defensive battle. Neither team scored until the first quarter, when the score was the 17:34 mark. The score remained close for the first 10 minutes until veteran Hoosier forward John Ritter started an Indiana surge. By the 9:07 mark Indiana had pulled up the ball and the Hawks never threatened again.
Although the Hossiers shot only 35 per cent in the first half, it was their dominance under the Hawks offensive board that played a principle role in their half-time lead. Indiana outbounded the Jayhawks 15-8 at KU's end of the court.
With the help of KU's 26 per cent shooting,
numerous turnovers and a tough Hoosier man-to-man defense, Indiana took a commanding 36-22 lead to the dressing room at half time.
The second half began with a change of faces in the KU队连线. KU coach Ted Owens inserted guard Dale Greenelee and guard Chris Baumgartner, but the switch did not help as Indiana's senior center and leading rebounder, Steve Downing, dominated the boards, and freshman Quinn Buckner's ball lead to 58-36 with 9:23 left in the game.
The 'Hawks did improve on their shooting
in the second half as they shot 48 per cent, but the rebounding totals for the game showed the real downfall for KU, Indiana, led by Downing's 16 rebounds and teammate John Ritter's 14, pulled down a total of 51. KU grabbed 40.
The surprise in KU rebounding totals was the sophomore center Suttle, the Hawks' leading rebounder in the Vanderbilt game, who had only two rebounds for the night. Barrow and Smith led the KU rebounding with 10 apice.
At the 4:00 mark in the second half Indiana grabbed its biggest lead of the game, 68-42, but by this time the Jayhawks were considered out of contention, and Indiana coach Bob Knight was letting his reserves get some playing time.
Downing also led Indiana's balanced kick with back points. He was followed by Jake Anderson, who followed.
If there was any improvement for KU in last night's game compared with the Saturday game against Vanderbilt, it was the personal foil total. Against Vanderbilt Hawks committed 29 fouls, but they gave the opposing only 11 chances at the free throw line.
For the second straight game 6-10 Suttle was KU's leading scoring and only man in double figures as he popped in 14 points. Against Vanderbilt Suttle had 19 points. Marshall Rogers was next on the scoring list as he scored eight points.
15 points and veteran Bitter who scored 14
Indiana's victory was its second of an unblemished 1972 season. For the Jayhawks it was their second straight loss which moved their record to 0-2. The Hawks still have yet to beat an Indiana basketball team as the series record moved to 0-4.
Rodgers Wins Heisman Trophy; Big Eight Stars Dominate Voting
NEW YORK (AP)—John Rodgers, Nebraska's three-treth dynamo, outran his badboy image and was awarded the MVP. He played college football's premier player of 1972.
"I never knew my real father and coach Davenay has been like a stand-in father to me. I'm sorte an 'old' 21, but when I was 18, I saw them wash with the law, but I'm not a bad guy."
Explosive Oklahoma running back Greg Pruitt finished second, and Rodgers' teammate from the Cornhuskers, middle defender Trey Burke, 1-2-3 sweep for the Big Eight Conference.
"Give coach Bob Devaney a lot of credit for this," said Rodgers, a 175-pound wingback who dazzled opponents with his pass catchin' running and punt returning.
Pruitt showed up before the announcement at the Downtown Athletic Club in New York, which awards the prestigious Heisman Trophy. He was open disappointed.
"I'm upset at losing," said the Sooner
speederist, "Johnny won because of two things. He does more than one thing on the phone."
Pruitt and Rodgers each said they were close friends, but the Heisman frontrunners from Nebraska and Oklahoma passed away on December 30. They arrived 30 minutes after the announcement.
Louisiana State star Bert Jones was the top man among 1972 quarterbacks, finishing fourth behind the Big Eight heroes with 351 points and 61 first place nominations.
Rodgers polled 301 first place votes from 942 selectors, pling up 1,310 points. Prutt had 986 points with 117 firsts, and Glover received 652 points with 99 firsts for the No. 3 spot.
"He won, I lost," said Pruitt, "that's life."
Alabama's John Hannah was No. 11 and the three other players announced, in order, were Utah State quarterback Tony Adams, Ohio State's Jake Felt and Louisville runner Howard Stevens.
Alabama quarterback Terry Davis was fifth, followed by Penn State quarterback John Hufnagel, Iowa State quarterback George Amundsen, Purdue runner Otis Armstrong, Virginia Tech quarterback Don Strover and Florida State quarterback Garry
Rodgers, an English major from Ormaa,
set 19 Nebraska records in leading the
Cornhousks to national championships in
1970 and 71 and an 8-21 record this year,
good enough to get them to the Orange Bowl
against Notre Dame.
Huff.
In three seasons, he caught 147 passes for
2,667 yards and 26 touchdowns. His dazzling
putt returns averaged 16 yards and
also ran the ball 133 times for 838
yards.
KU will play its second of three games in a five-day stretch Thursday when the 'Hawks tangle with the Murray State Torburets at Allen Field House.
KANSAS (55)
★ ★ ★
| | Rgcn | rcfm | reb | pf | pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Barrow | 1.5 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Sallie | 1.3 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Sallie | 1.6 | 0.0 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Rogers, M. | 4.17 | 0.0 | 4 | 4 | 0 |
| Rogers, M. | 4.17 | 0.0 | 4 | 4 | 0 |
| Smith | 3.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Smith | 3.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Fideldee | 1.3 | 0.0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Fideldee | 1.3 | 0.0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 944 | 714 | 10 | 15 | 15 |
37, 5 . . . . 50, 0 .
INDIANA (23)
| | IGF-1a | IGF-2a | rab | pg | pts |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Nitter | 3.4 | 1.5 | 15 | 0 | 14 |
| Green | 2.4 | 1.4 | 15 | 0 | 14 |
| Wiltshire | 2.4 | 1.6 | 15 | 0 | 14 |
| Wilhelm | 0.2 | 1.0 | 1 | 6 | 42 |
| Wilson | 0.2 | 1.0 | 1 | 6 | 42 |
| Laskowski | 4.12 | 1.0 | 1 | 6 | 42 |
| Kamatra | 3.5 | 1.2 | 2 | 2 | 7 |
| Noort | 3.5 | 1.2 | 2 | 2 | 7 |
| Neerlhy | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| White | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| White | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| Total | 13.90 | 6.11 | 31 | 17 | 72 |
| Totals | 13.90 | 6.11 | 31 | 17 | 72 |
Indiana 36 35 - 75
Kansas 22 33 - 58
USC Increases Lead Faces 1 More Test
Turnovers—Kansas, 16; Indiana, 14
Attendance, 11,600
Although unanimous No. 1 in Tuesday's final regular season Associated Press poll, the 11-USC team must risk its top-ranking one more time.
By The Associated Press
A Trojan victory would almost certainly earn USC its third national title in 11 seasons. The Cal became the only major unbeaten team during a 45-23 smashing of Notre Dame.
Tennessee was 17th in the poll, followed by Orange Bowl-bound Notre Dame, Gator Bowl team Colorado, UCLA, the Fiesta State and Sun Bowl-bound North Carolina.
Southern California sits atop the college football world, but the Ohio State Buckeyes could rock the boat by upsetting the Trojans in the Rose Bowl Jan. 1.
Post-bowl balloting in the infant hours of 1973 will determine the 1972 national champion since most leading teams have post-eason duty ahead.
Texas, 9-1, was seventh, followed by
Nebraska, 8-2, and Louisiana State, 8-1.
**Table:** Nine games of the season.
The Top Twenty teams, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records and total points, points tabulated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-7-6-5-4-3-2-1
1. Southern Cal (50) 11-0-0 1000
2. Oklahoma (10) 11-0-0 878
3. Ohio State (10) 9-1-0 666
4. Alabama (10) 9-1-0 606
5. Penn State (10) 10-1-0 554
6. Auburn (10) 9-1-0 536
7. Purdue (10) 9-1-0 498
8. Michigan (10) 10-1-0 467
9. Nebraska (10) 8-2-1 385
10. LSU (10) 9-1-1 273
11. Tennessee (10) 9-2-0 259
12. Notre Dame (10) 8-2-0 227
13. Colorado (10) 8-3-0 174
14. UCLA (10) 8-3-0 79
15. Arizona State (10) 8-3-0 68
16. North Carolina (10) 8-3-0 60
17. Louisville (10) 9-1-0 22
18. West Virginia (10) 9-1-0 18
19. Washington State (10) 7-4-0 10
20. Purdue (10) 6-5-3
Raiding out the Top Twenty were Louisville, Peace Park West Virginia, North Dakota and Purdue.
Alabama, stunned by Auburn 17-10 to close its regular season, dropped only from second to fourth with a 10-1 record. The Tide meets Texas in the Cotton Bowl
Ohio State, 9-1, was third and retained hope of overtaking the Trojans in the post-season poll showdown if it spills Southern Cal on New Year's Day at Pasadena.
Penn State, 10-1 and Oklahoma's opponent at New Orleans on New Year's Eve, was ranked fifth and Gator Bowl-bound Auburn moved to sixth with a 9-1 mark.
Southern Cal grabbed all 50 first-place votes from sports writers and broadcasters in a season-season voting in a runaway decision over the No. 1 record, Sugar Bowl bound with a 10-1 record.
the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
Joyente Jambe
(HAPPY LEGS)
Holiday perfect . . .
wide, wide crepe
pant pleaser
plus a little
purr-y-y soft
angora
sweater
922
Mass.
Open
Mon.-Fri.
until 8:30
Indiana was aggressive. The University of Kansas wasn't.
And those, according to KU coach Ted Owens, were two big reasons the Hoosiers beat the Jayhawks, 72-55, Tuesday night in Allen Field House.
Poor Rebounding Hurt 'Hawks, Owens Says
By DAN GEORGE
Kansan Sports Editor
Kansan Sports Editor
"THEY (THE JAYHAWKS) have to realize how aggressive they have to play if they're going to compete here," Owens said.
"I really think they (Indians) are a good, aggressive basketball team," Owens said. "There were two things that hurt us. We did not shoot well and they beat us physically on the boards."
A major factor in the KU loss was Indiana's ability to open up the Jahwak defense under the basket with quick passes, inside inside shot before the defenders could react.
"I's one of two things. Either bad strategy on my part, because we weren't physically able to get back, or we just didn't need it. It might be a combination of both."
"We spread out in pressure," Owens said, and then we didn't recover fast enough. We were shaken.
The Jayhawks, who have yet to have a good rebounding game, came up with only 40 rebounds to Indiana's 51. The Hawks' biggest problem, however, was on offense where, constantly forced to shoot from the outside, they recovered only 16 rebounds.
Owens admitted that part of the Jiyawa's problem might have been that they couldn't find a way to
Owens could have no real reasons for the continual poor shooting of the Jayhawks, but they were able to win from the field and just 25.8 in the first half. They connected on only half of their 14 free throws.
"WE REALLY haven't had control of either game we've played," he said. "I thought at the beginning we played hard, but we just couldn't convert. If we'd gotten ahead . . . if they were down 12 or 14 points early like we were, you tend to over-drv."
"We were pressured into some bane shots," Owsens said. "We allowed ourselves to be pressured, nobody just gets pressured, and some good ones, too, and didn't hit on them."
Owens emphasized that the Indiana team itself was a big reason KU lost.
"THE PLAYED a good, tough, physical game," he said. "They're a sound defense team."
The KU coach was most impressed with
Quinn Buckner, a 6-2 freshman guard, who also started at safety for the Indiana
"It surprised me the level Buckner played with only a week of practice," he said. "He looked more unlike a freshman than anyone out there."
"But I don't want to wilt the players," he said. "I'm as much responsible as anyone."
Midway through the second half, the KU crowd, displeased with the showing of the young Jayhawks, began to boo. Most of the disapproval, it appeared, was directed at the defense, but they were also seven minutes of the second half. The crowd's reaction was not lost on Owens.
"I DON'T like the booing, of course," he said. "The crowd deserves one thing—it deserves effort. If we don't give the effort, then we deserve to be booed."
Owens, who played a total of ten players in the game, said he substituted primarily because the players "weren't doing the job."
Owens was not worried about whether the team's confidence would be affected by the
"I'm not just talking about rebounding," he said. "I mean execution."
"IT TEN'R realistic to think we'll be too aggressive if we don't have confidence," he said. "We'll have to work to get better and earn the confidence to get better."
Are the Jayhawks, perhaps, searching for a leader to give them confidence?
"I don't want to go into that," Owens said. "We're searching for a lot of things."
SMU to Consider Majors for Coach
Majors, who has also been mentioned in connection with the Michigan State and Kentucky positions, took his team to a 5-1 record and a berth in the Liberty Bank.
Robert H. Stewart III, a member of SMU's board of governors, will head a team to find a replacement for SMU coach Hagius Pry, who was fired despite a 7-4 season.
Other coaches to be considered include Ron Erhardt, North Dakota State; Dave Smith, Oklahoma State; Lou Holz, North Carolina State; Bill Dooley, North Carolina; Jim Owens, Washington, and Oklahoma assistant Barry Switzer.
DALLAS (AP)—Iowa State football coach Johnny Mayer arrived in Dallas Tuesday to be interviewed for the head football coaching job at Southern Methodist
Don't Miss OPENING NIGHT TOMORROW!
Mike Adv. tickets Available!
FINNIGAN
Jerry for $2.50 at Kief's and RED BARON
WOOD
Thurs., The
Fri., Sat., Red Baron of course
Nites 804 W. 24th 842-4366
100 100 100
Armetale ... the pewter look
Gardenland is happy to announce they are now stocking the beautiful hand cast Armetale. Armetale makes the perfect gift for every occasion. Stop in today and examine for yourself the deep hand polished finish, the unique surface undulations and the variety of pieces found in this lovely collection now at Gardenland.
THE GARDENLAND
金星路派出所
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00-8:00
Sunday 1-5
914 West 23rd
842-1596
8
Wednesday, December 6. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Pushers Lace Some Drugs
Dope Bears False Labels
By JERRY ESSLINGER Kansan Staff Writer
Drugs available or sold locally as LSD, cocaine, marijuana, marjahana, harbitalkets or methylenedioxymetamine (MDA) are usually what they are allowed to be.
Other drugs, such as mescaline,
pilecibin or tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
often contain none of the alleged
substances.
These are some of the findings of a drug analysis program conducted by Headquarters, an, crisis referral switchboard and walk-in facility at 1628 Kentucky
More than 350 drug samples have been analyzed since the program was begun in August 1970, and in more than half of those samples no evidence for the alleged ingredients have been found.
Callers who suspect that an unusually deceptive or dangerous drug is on the streets and doctors who treat patients for "bad trips" also use information from analysis results, according to Rick Silber, Headquarters director.
Siber said that the analysis program had been fairly successful in making drug users more aware of what they were doing and how to do it. He said the balance on information from drug analyses.
Drug samples are submitted to Headquarters either in person or by mail at a rate of five or six each week and are used for University medical chemistry laboratory.
Although the samples—usually one dosage, pill or "tab"—are not returned, results of analyses are posted on a chart at centers and can be obtained by phone.
Most samples are simply given an identification of their contents, he said, but when a sample contains what is apparently an especially deceptive or harmful drug or
Apollo . . .
(Continued from Page 1)
array of cameras and instruments which will probe the composition of the moon's surface to a depth of half a mile, draw a thermal map of the area over which America passes and measure the constituents of a thin atmosphere.
Cernan, the articulate commander of
Bachman does not believe this is the end of
lunar exploration.
"This is just the end of the beginning of a golden age of space flight," he said. "Man will go back to the moon, he'll establish a planet and go beyond, to the planets and the stars."
compound, a more detailed description is reported.
According to Schulz, there has been an increasing preference for the softer and 'less electric' psychedic drugs, and analyses indicate that these are the drugs which most often do not contain their alleged ingredients.
Schulz that drugs alleged to be mescaline or psilocybin invariably have been found to contain LSD, either alone or laced with PCP, an animal tranquilizer.
'Misinformation and ignorance has always been a basic problem with drugs. By dispensing accurate information we try to enable persons to make wiser decisions . . . '
Eighteen samples of drugs sold as THC have been analyzed since the program's inception and all have contained various amounts of PCP.
Qualities of PCP, when taken with other psycheled drugs, include a danger of long-term build-up in the body and unpredictable effects Schulz said.
Findings since January of this year include:
—Of 23 samples required to be mescaline,
none contained a trace of the drug.
Six contain a variety of
qualities and unknown substances.
Six contained LSD laced with PCP.
—All of 21 samples alleged to be LSD
entailed LSD and alleged to be
- Of 11 samples alleged to be MDA, all contained only MDA.
— Of eight samples alleged to be "speeel"
— no psychisched ampathetinen, seven
— no psychisched ampathetinen, seven
contained none of it.
—Of seven samples alleged to be THC, not one contained even some of the drug and all were poisonous.
Of—one samples alleged to be marijuana or hashish, five contained only marijuana or hashish. Two contained some marijuana but cocaine none of the alleged hallucinogen.
—Of five alleged palliochin samples, one contained only palliochin, one contained LSD and PCP and three contained LSD with unidentified substances.
—Of two samples alleged to be cocaine, both contained only cocaine.
Of four samples alleged to be barburtines, all contained barburtines as the only evidence.
ANTHROPOLOGY BUFFS
Come to a panel discussion with anthrology professors on:
Schulz said he thought the samples were fairly representative of street sales.
“It’s hard to say exactly how representative they are, but probably we do get at least one sample from most of the drug shipments that hit town,” he said.
Of three alleged heroin samples from earlier analysis, one contained heroin, one was unidentifiable and one consisted of opium. None contained methadone.
No samples alleged to be peyote, Hawaiian Woodrose or heroin have been received for analysis this year, but a few samples from the drugs were analyzed before this year.
The Unity of Anthropology Dec. 7 4:00 p.m.
Two peyote samples contained only peye and of five alleged Hawaiian Woodoose samples, four contained only LSD and one contained LSD and PCP.
International Room, Kansas Union
Insurance
(continued from page 1)
enrollment. Students can purchase the policy for coverage for second semester and the summer session at enrollment in January, he said.
The single student rate for second semester and summer school is $42.63; two students who have a coverage ends Aug. 20, 1973, on all policies purchased for the whole year or for only a semester. If a student withdraws from summer school, of coverage will be refunded, Ward said.
ALLEN SAID one provision the Student Senate had requested in the health insurance plan last April was for coverage for all students who were included in the policy would have been birth control pills and diaphragms. She said the Blue Cross representatives in Lawrence did the Blue Crest contraceptive clause, as did the Blue Crest Blue Shield Board of Directors in Topeka.
She said complications arose when the State Insurance Department, which must approve all insurance policies, rejected the policy containing the contraceptive clause.
Some students were caught off guard when the clause was removed. Even the original policy brochure included the contraceptive clause.
Sellen said the contraceptive coverage clause had to be deleted for the policy to be approved. He said if the Student Senate wanted to include the contraceptive clause in its policy for the 1978/74 school year, the government would probably approve the policy. Sellen said the additional coverage would cost a few cents more.
"WE ARE IN an era of preventive medicine now," Sellen said. "I think the Insurance Department will reconsider its rejection of the contraceptive clause and okay it for next year because contraceptives are preventive medicine."
Sellen said KU was the only university in Kansas and the only school in the nation that has covered Blue Cross-Blue Shield. Blue College students at 49 Kansas colleges and colleges
universities.
Allen said she was sure the Student Senate would want to include the contraceptive clause in coverage in next year's policy.
Dr. Schwiegler said the student Blue Cross policy was "an excellent deal" but not as good for a student with a family as for the single student. He agreed with Sellen that students should read their policies carefully to know what benefits they included.
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon
Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
TOSTADO FREE!
Good Every Day
Offer expires Dec. 20
1720 West 23rd Street
RollingStones An unauthorized biography in words, photographs and music
The greatest rock and roll band in the world, set forth in one of the most visually exciting books published.
Everything you could ever want to know about the Stones, in 352 pages. Commentary and criticism by top rock journalists, 350 great photos including 24 pages in full color. With all the words and all the music to just about every song ever done by the Stones. Original text by David Dalton. Designed by Jon Goodchild
tones An unauthorized biography in words, photographs and music
Rolling Stones
Available at your book, record of music store.
An Amisco Publication
Music Sales Corporation
33 West 60th Street
New York 10023
PRE-HOLIDAY
DISCOUNT SALE
ALL DECEMBER
25% OFF ENTIRE STOCK-EVERYTHING!!
- PIANO MUSIC MANUSCRIPT PAPER POP SHEET MUSIC
- 1/3 OFF ALL OPERA SCORES 50% OFF ALL MINIATURE
SCORES POP BOOKS 50% OFF SELECTED MUSICAL SCORES
(Current and Standard)
No special orders included and all sales are final. All sales must be in cash.
© NEW INC.
BELL MUSIC
926 MASSACHUSETTS
Open 9:30-8:30 Monday thru Friday
9:30-5:30 Saturday
ident conar's
cross as
the that fully
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, December 6, 1972
9
Come to Hillcrest, we have something for everyone—From Christmas gifts, to movies or bowling.
BORGEN'S
LIQUOR STORE
IMPORTED & DOMESTIC
Liquors • Wines • Champagne
RUSTY'S 23rd & Louisiana Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 2nd & Lincoln
HILLCREST HARDWARE
RANEY
DRUG STORE
Hillmanst Shipping Cotton
975 IOWA ST.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60044
Acme LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
Owens Optical
Ophthalmic Dispensers
BLANE & JESSE BEAUTY SALON
Kirsten's at HILLCREST
9TH AND IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS
VI 2-086
Kirsten's
at HILLCREST
9TH AND IOWA
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
VI 2-0862
AMERICAN HEALTH and LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
JOHN E. CHANIT, C.L.D.
132 OWN STREET
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044
AMERICAN HEALTH and LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Maupintour
our 20th year of quality tour experience
Maupintour
our 20th year of quality tour operation
P.O. Box 807
Lawrence / Kansas 66044
THE SOUND
Karl Abegg 913 842-6331 John Carlos
DUCKWALL'S VARIETY THE YUK THE BALL PARK HILLCREST TRI-THEATRES HILLCREST BOWL MILLER & MIDYETT REALTY HILLCREST BARBER SHOP LAWRENCE OPTICAL HILLCREST MEDICAL CENTER SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. UNIVERSITY STATE BANK
Christmas shopping doesn't have to be a big hassle . . . if you shop the convenient way, at Hillcrest Shopping Center.
Shopping for Christmas gifts is always exciting, but it’s usually a hectic time too. You can spend an entire day driving all over town searching for those “Just Right” gifts. Hillcrest has a better way to shop. We offer a complete variety of stores, a convenient location, and plenty of free parking. This adds up to a big savings for you, in money and time.
At Hillcrest, convenience and variety make the difference.
At Hillcrest, convenience and variety make the difference.
10
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER A Better Way To Shop
10
Wednesday, December 6. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Escapades To Feature '50s Theme
The escapades, sponsored by the visual arts department and SUA, will be in both the tradition of an artists and models prom and a 1908 prom, according to Bob Nichter, Lawrence senior and one of the organizers of the event. He said the escapades were finally planned for art students, but "maybe can come who would feel comfortable."
Tickets are available at the SUA Office and the visual arts office and will be available at the door. Admission is $2 he said.
"We'd like to have all the accountant-artists, plays, ed. artists, philosophy artists, musicians."
The prom will feature free beer, a "photo palace" for couples to have their pictures taken, live entertainment by "Stud Dutts and the Hard Corps" and a queen.
Students may vote for the queen today,
Thursday and Friday on the third floor of
Strong Hall and at the prom Saturday.
Students are welcome to display and jars for money will be available.
Large Selection of Christmas Gifts
for the Whole Family
We Wrap for Mailing
Luber
Luber GIFT SHOP
843-5160
924 Mass.
Formerly Elring's Open Nights Starting Nov. 30
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa
Ph. VI 133 (53)
Wkdays 8-10
Sunday 10:3
Parts at a discount
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 12 am - Phone Order:
843 735-2000 - We Deliver @ Toll N...
THE HIED in the WALL
21 22
BOKOPON
819 VERMONT
843-9708
Mon.Sat. 11:5:30 approx.
Yesterday's Clubs at Yesterday's Prices
PATTERN-PATTERS
NEEDLE-DRIVER-RUGS
CHEESE-CRASH
"We'll keep you
in stitches."
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841 2656
10.5 Mon. Sat.
★
LENNY ZEROS
Discounted Records A non-profit organization
710 Mass. 841-2200
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
66044
WHY RENT?
Museum of Fine Arts
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843.8499
3020 lowa (South Hwy. 59)
CSC TOYOTA THUMPH
Alexander's
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
—Wide selection of gifts
—Cash & carry flowers every day.
826 Iowa 842-1320
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
If You're Planning on FLYING, Do Maupinouttion. Do Them! When They'll Yell! (NEVER an extra cost for airline tickets)
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Maupintour travel service
PHONE 843-1211
bicycle
KU Union—The Mall's-Hillcrest 900 Mast
A RAILWAY STATION
Malls Olde English Village
843-5552
Apartments
2411 Louisiana Street
Lawrence Kansas
unique design . . . interior roominess . . . wall to wall carpeting .
air conditioning . . . sound conditioning . . . all electric
Fridgegel kitchen . . . dishwasher . . . disposal . . fireplace . . .
sounns.
Come see these surprisingly inexpensive luxury apartments
afternoons weekdays and weekends
Welcome K.U. Alumni and Friends
January 19 & 20 A Very Special Occasion
Earl Scruggs
--saving on our usual low,low prices.Look for the TAG showing the Manufacturer's Suggested Price.Our Usual Low Price—and the SPECIAL 20% OFF PRICE.
His
Family &
Friends
Featuring___
The Earl Seruggs Revue
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
The Byrds
Doc Watson & Son
David Bromberg
Tracey Nelson & Mother Earth
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Joan Baez
Kansas State University
Ahearn Field House January 20
January 19
Two Shows
This is it. Friends and neighbors! A once in a lifetime foot stomp 'collection of the finest musicians in American country and folk music. All will appear each night, so you can pick a Friday or Saturday morning. You can pick 5 p.m. and will lay into the early morning hours. Tickets are $40, $35, and $60 at the following places.
Mahanathan: Uintian ticket window, Conde's, and Gramophone Works
Topeka: Washburn Union Wichita, Budget Tapes and Records Lawrence: Kief's
Mail Orders. Send check payable to "KState University to Chicago College. Activities Center, KState University."
954
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS—over 1,000 items with an additional 20%
Portable and Table Radios
7 CROWN Coin bank radios
4 CRAIG Clock radios both AM and FM/AM types
12 PANASONIC AM small radios
9 LLOYDS Portable and table radios AM, FM and Short Wave types
39 AVR portable AM Radio
CRAIG portable, and table radios
4 RCA AM radios
15 PANASONIC FM/AM portable, table and clock radios
16 MIDI adapters
19 TOSHIBA portable radios AM, FM/AM and multi-band types
8 TOSHIBA clock radios both regular and digital
Cassette Tape Recorders
18 BELAIR Stereo cassette portable, some with FM/AM radio
9 BELL & HOWELL stereo recorders some with stereo radio
9 DENON portable cassettes, some with FM/AM radio
10 ROBERTS MONO and stereo cassettes, some with radios
12 CROWN portable cassettes—1 stereo, some with FM/AM
14 CRAIG portable cassettes, some with FM/AM
9 TOSHIBA cassette portables, some with FM/AM
14 CRAIG Stereo cassettes, some with radios
15 DENON Stereo cassette recording decks
1 FISHER QUAD 4 channel playback deck
1 HARMAN-KARDON stereo cassette deck
6 BELL & HOWELL portable cassettes
3 AMPEX — one with FM/Am radio
PANASONIC portable recorders
STANDARD cassette portables
8 Track Home and Portable Players and Recorders
4 STANDARD cassette portables
5 AUTOMATIC RADIO PORTABLE 8 track stereo player
5 BEAIMATIC RADIO PORTABLE 8 track stereo players
6 BELAIR 8 track stereo portables with FM/AM radios
7 PANASONIC 8 track stereo portables, some with FM/AM radio
14 CRAIG 8 track portables, some with FM/AM radios
7 CRAIG 8 track home stereo players, some with FM stereo/AM radios
15 SKYLINE 8 track home players, some with FM stereo/AM radios
2 BELAIR home 8 track stereo players
1 KINEMATIX 8 track recording deck
2 PANASONIC 8 track home players
24 Assorted 8 track playback decks
1 ROBERTS 8 track recording deck
2 R.C.A. 8 track stereo portables
17 SKYLINE 8 track playback decks
4 STANDARD cassette portables
OPEN EVENINGS TILL 8
AUDIOTRONIC
928 MASSACHUSETTS
Black and W
10 PANASONIC a
1 CRAIG 16" di
2 R.C.A. portable
2 ZENITH portable
T.V. Tabl
17 SKYLINE 8 track portables
Black and White TV's
10 PANASONIC assorted sizes of portables
1 CRAIG 16" diag. screen
2 R.C.A.
3
T. V. Tables, Stereo Tables
26 Assorted GUSDORF tables
Car Tape Players
9 AUTOMATIC RADIO 8 track car stereo players
2 AUTOMATIC RADIO cassette car stereo players
16 CRAIG 8 track car stereos—some with FM
stereo radios
16 Cartridge radio adapters for AM, FM and FM
stereo
22 TOHSIBA 8 track car stereos with speakers
2D IDI 8 track car stereos, some with radios
2 CRAIG Cassette car stereos
2 R.C.A. 8 track car stereos
Entertainment Centers
Stereo Phono Home Entertainment Centers
6 DENON-Columbia home stereos with
1 Electro-Voice HI-FI stereo
OFF
OUR
USUAL
LOW
PRICES!
1 FISHER Compact center
18 DENON—Columbia home stereos all with FM stereo/AM
12 PANASONIC home stereos all with FM stereo/AM radios
2 BASS Guitars
Electric Guitars and Amplifiers
6 12-String Guitars
0% OFF
OUR
USUAL
LOW
PRICES!
15 Multiple pick guitars with solid bodies
1 ALTEC-LANSING Valencia cabinet
3 BELL & HOWEL FM stereo/AM receivers
High Fidelity Components
5 BOZAK Speakers and X-overs
3 ELECTRO-VOICE tuners and amplifiers
8 FISHER speaker systems
2 ADR components
7 BOGEN heavy speaker systems
2 J.B.L. Speaker components
1 McNITOSH Stereo tuner
10 BIGNEER Speaker Systems
4 15" Unmounted speakers OAKTRON
6 OXFORD 3" x 9" horn tweeters, unmounted
6 PEREXF bookshelf speaker systems
7 BOREPS STM store/AM receiver
22 SKYLINE air suspension speaker systems
13 STANDARD tuners, amps and receivers
14 WHARFEDALE speaker systems
11 VERTAS Quad synthesizers
19 SKYLINE receivers, some with 8 track player built-in.
Color TV's
1 PACKARD-BELL 23" diag. console
2 PANASONIC CTV's, assorted sizes, portables
3 P.G.A. 23" Color TV
3 TOSHIBA 11" diag. to 18" diag. screens
4 ZENITH consoles
Record Changers
1 BSR Record changer with base and dust cover
1 FISHER record changer module, complete less dust cover
34 GARRARD changers with bases, cartridges and covers
Some display models only are available—others have a few pieces in factory sealed
cartons. Very limited quantities on all items on this special. All offerings are subject
to prior sale. Sale ends December 23,1972.
Wednesday, December 6, 1972
KANSAN WANT ADS
11
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer : $2.00
each additional word : $.02
Five Days
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
ed
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to students without regard to their educational background. HALL ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 110 FLICT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes... Now on Sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't,
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New
Museum. Town Crier." Campus Manufac-
turer. Town Crier.
We pay top dollars for good clean Volkswagen
cars. Call Jake Volkswagen, 801-237-1217.
801-237-1217
BAGIERS - We have 'em with big cips and plants
and a huge mouth. They are called "Chinese Clay".
compute the new $n$th volume. **LOOK** TIL
TWICE!
BAGGIES- We have 'em with big cuff and pleats
and they're too big. Look at the back.
THE WAHTHOUSE (and Camp Baggie) is
Dual Showroom amplifier: 100 watts, 2 D-140
at ambient condition, $50. Call #884-683-7000
after 8 p.m.
1 male Naimish contract for sale. Room 1023.
841-3047 12-6
2 fernale Naiamia content for se修學基
2 fernale Naiamia content for se修學基
16.4×10^-4
16.4×10^-4
Realistic STA-120 receiver 2 optimus 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
1. Naimith contract, girls. Spring semester, 72.
Must sell immediately. Call 845-158-196, anime: 12-6
1950 VOLVO P-1800-S sport car. Overdive, new
lyrical sound. 750 $43,500. 4 p.m. 12-6.
soundly 750 $43,500. 4 p.m. 12-6.
The museum of Natural History GIH Shop has a
large selection of art and artifacts. The
museum. Come in soon, while the selection lasts. 12-6p
in Room 103. (212) 847-5500.
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Original jewelry, hanging plants, terrariums and decorative accents are up to $150. Prices to fit the slimmed budget. You've got to buy an UPPER DECK to believe it. 11-12. $139
1970 green Schwain. Variety, 10 speed. Front end
(50) (42). Weight, 128.0 lb. Height, 32.6 in.
Condition number, 841-2847 after 3.00 a.m., 12-6
How about giving a unique Christmas gift, e.g. a custom-made candle or stocking. Tom attendances at 843-644 or evening?
Kittens, 8 wks. old, free, Call 842-1762 or stop by 1000 Ohio.
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant
planthouse for Christmas at Christina's
15, W 9th Bldg. 12, 12
Swarver up-dyne. Dyne-425 as speakers and amplifiers, excellent condition, $12.75 Best offer.
The largest handcrafted jewel selection in the
world, this 12-piece set includes the
Hodge Pledge 15 W. BILI 10-12
and the
For once avoid rush, the (Christmas) rush that it is. Students are advised to bring Big 8 room in the Student Union. Introduce merchandise of reasonable prices. Doors will be open from 11 a.m. to 8 a.m. Everyone is welcome Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 a.m.
2 Naimih Hall contracts for Spring semester
3 Naimih Hall contracts for Spring semester
4 841-3734 or 842-2909
Attention Audiophile! A acoustic Research 48 & 28
Acoustic Research 10 & 9. Audiophile's warranty is for the pair M. Musthawk
or L. Musthawk.
1989 Cullom S. Power, brakes, power steering, air bags, and in very good condition. Call Jeff Jones at 212-705-4330.
1965 Ford LTD. 4 Dr. Ht. P-B, S-P. A-C, nearly
good condition in good good condition.
842-1818 at 6:00 p.m.
1970 WV Sedan, 4-q. yellow, AM radio good,
1925 *I265* Carport Motor Mast, 1318 W. 52'
1988 Open Balloy Kadet, red. 4 gpd. full instrument.
1989 Balloy Kadet, blue. 5 gpd. full instrument.
1990, *MSS Campus Motor* Mnt. 118, W 2328 F
1991, *MSS Campus Motor* Mnt. 118, W 2328 F
Bogert T3- enlarger with 50mm / 1.5Vose lens
Christmas gift. Call 412-7278 at 5:00 p.m.
or visit www.bogert.com
166. Chev Impala 2 door hdpi. Good condition.
166. Chev Impala 3 door hdpi. An offer. A Citra aircon.
Mon. Thurs. 10am-4pm. Fax 918-759-4520.
CAMPUS MOTOR MART GET ACQUAINTED SALE
1 set of snow tires with each vehicle mounted from 2-4 to 7-2 to Get Acquired Sale* from 2-4 to 12-7-2
1970 Toyota sedan, 4 qd, lite in, top tire; 1970 Toyota camper, automatic, AM radio, rear tire; 1970 Toyota camper, automatic, AM radio, rear tire; 1970 WV Bus, 8 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Win Bw, 4 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Win Bw, 4 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Win Bw, 4 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Win Bw, 4 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Win Bw, 4 pass, AM radio, $125
1969 Mustang hardtop, BW, A-C, Automatic, power steering -A-C, new
1518 W. 23rd 842-3903
THE
sirloin
LAWRENCE RADIUS
Family Fun Place
Delicious Food and
Superb Service with
Complete Menu
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our motto is and has always been
There is no substitute for quality
in good food.
1. Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Phone
861-7431
Sirloin
Open 4-30
Closest To Sundays
JWUK~110 lb. weight set. Make offer. Old photo
of your new car. See attached list. 12-8
Vox vcom皂箱 82 $449.99 12-8
19165 Certification, MV s u n i t o, red.租耍 to 12 g-
9165 Certification, MV s u n i t o, red.租耍 to 12 g-
9165 Certification, MV s u n i t o, red.租耍 to 12 g-
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. 2刀 on Highway 19.
Antiques, collectables, used furniture and thats of other items. Also, we have fruits and nuts. Open-8-9 days. 842-315-8. Altenbend. 12-12
One black Labrador. Retrier female puppy, or human pup? It can be either humane or dog. Call Dog 3-4248 or V3-2355
Naismith Hall contract for sale for spring semester.
Call 843-0252, Rich. 12-8
Two metal studded Goodyear polylasters tie up
the band of a double hooded Linemark-like New York
$60. Evenings, $82-93
62 Chevrolet, 6 cylinder, 3 speed, good, good transportation. Ask for Stevie. 841-739-2080.
SkI bootes to TeLaptop size 81 mhz. M Excel-
board 82-4600J after 4.30.
Bios 82-4600J after 4.30.
TACR 4020 tape recorder or deck. Automatic re-
tract. TACR 6050 tape recorder or deck. Automatic
re-tract. New $890, imprint $325, #B4-7108. -i
8-8
Microphone-1 - Electro-Voice model 623 mukens
Microphone-2 - Electro-Voice model 623 mukens
0.30 takes xmns with case, with case 822. 12-8
0.30 takes xmns with case, with case 822. 12-8
26' boys three speed bike. $20 will buy. Needs
843-844. -834 must before Christmas. 12:57
Sony stereo cassette recorder. Non-portable comp-
bilant. Built-in retail old Retail $12 will sell for $75. Call 843-6410.
"Craile" stage player tamer .bcp $4 or best offer. see at 2448 Winterbrook. 814-340-88. 12-7
French-made (Penumb) ex condition. $100 or best off. See (484) Winterbrook 841-305-7482.
**1986 MGC-TG** Low mileage, perfect body, 3 liter engine. New! shocks and tires. Must sell $250. New! shocks and tires. Must sell $250.
Stereo Equipment, Marantz 1272 receiver with base, Dual 1218 turntable with cover and base speaker, Nokia X3000, Rectilinear III Low Boy speakers, AREXA speakers, Alpha 203 speakers. Inquire at #431-1572.
For sale or trade, @89 Opel Rally Caddett. Looks
good in a white or black leather jacket or
a Triumph and give boot. 842-123-73
601-578-8181
Witchcher model 104 20 gauge shotgun. Impregnated model 108 20 gauge shotgun. Impregnated model 94/4 and 66/8 barrels. Excellent calibration. Includes a precision meter.
1955 Chevy Impala. 4 d H.T., V8, PS, PA, Air.
1960 Chevrolet Impala. 4 d H.T., V8, PS, PA, Air.
$500 box. $500 best 123-421. 123-421
1970 Chevy Camaro. 4 d H.T., V8, PS, PA, Air.
1969 Great Lakes horse mount 13 × 65, carriage
located on a track for lorries. Great Lakes Village,
location on a track for lorries.
BOOTH-2W are closing out men's Atmos and
SWE-2W are closing out women's Atmos.
Price $195 for price $190 and $195. Sizes 6 to 18
are $249, 7 to 16 for $239, and 10 to 14 for $219.
71 Datuson 2002, Silver with black int., AC, magnes
18,000 miles. 842-381). 12-12
Must sell innermedly! 168 Chevy Blair-Alr 4 dr.
must sell innermedly! 168 Chevy Blair-Alr 4 dr.
$hoo $h0o -74006 Cal anytime. Call anytime.
$hoo $h0o -74006 Cal anytime. Call anytime.
EXTRA CHARTA One Alvarez classical guitar, one saxophone, two clarinet and one sax. Model: HAWKIN a string, one sax. Models: 12 speakers apiece. All items will be sold at a low ½ price! 843-6420. 12-12
1963 Ford Econoline van. Very good condition.
Built by Crown Automotive, mechanically and overall in 1965.
Built engine: 2.5L.
SKIS-HURRY! Get them for Christmas. Rossig-
son is at 5 p.m. 811-342-6500, surface arite-
ship 2 to 3 p.m. 811-342-6500.
NEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Try Naiam Hall.
NEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Try Naiam Hall.
CONTRACT for sale. Call 835-7821. 12-12
CONTRACT for sale. Call 835-7821. 12-12
Panasonic AM/FM stereo cassette recorder. Featuring AM/FM stereo cassette recording, level control, and ability to record from level control.
Iriah Seller, male. 11 weeks old. ARC, shoes.
Great Christmas gift. 814-2248. 12-8
Cheap Charlie disney leather galore-wonder-
land jacket and sports shirt, tuxedo, all new
with zip. Cheap 15% off. Free Shipping.
Pre-Christmas sales on all dresses and gowns (10%) are:
New arrivals, half price goods, bulk galler. Boxcockets,
weather goods-parcel. Boxcockets, winter
1. 1915 Honda scooter, too good condition, never
well maintained.
Pro. 3 woods, 8 iron, bats, bd. 742-793, 864-120-8
10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34
FOR RENT
Must sell '44 Rambler automatic. Brand new bottel call: 812-350-7060. Bottel condition: $300 or best offer. 842-754-2960.
For rent to 4 responsible girls, Avanamee LLC.
Complete 2nd story 4 bedroom furnished apart-
ment and township $50 per month plus
per month utilities. Plus other amenities
and all days Saturday and Sunday. At 927 Ohio
TOF CAR FROM CAMPUS? OFRIED OF STEEPER
BARKING IN FAR-FLURG LOTS?
Try 2. bakeries in your campus from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Cable internet; high-speed internet; rateable rates; furniture available. Ideal roommates: Savanna Ave., 1123 St., Apt. 9 or 843-251-611.
TRAILRIDGE . . . . . . 1, walk; and 2 bedroom apartments, water and gas paid. IWalk in closets, fully equipped kitchens, private patio balconies. See Mrs. Cook or call m8473-7530. Sight Width: 12-17th.
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows and fireplaces, street parking, borders K.U. and near low walls, water supply.
Studio eight—rooms with a view $62.50, every paid paid, no deposits. 1329 W. 9th. 12-11
Homes for rent, 2 and 3 bedrooms. Students more than welcome. 843-3600. UF
Look for something to rent? Contact us at 82-751, for 24 hr duplexes and I-3-R bargains. Prices start at $1000 a month. All are available for immediate payment. After hours call Gail Strong 842-7851.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now new dorms, offices, furnished and unfurnished apart. for students to heat and laundry. beating and air conditioning. Call 843-8250 or see at 7141 W. 19th, ap. 5B
CIRCLE REALTY
looking for something to buy
Apartment for rent. Comfortable, 2 bedroom,
furnished, all utilities. Excellent location on Ohio.
1 block from campus. Take immediately or at
summer. 843-8527. Sexy Marc or Crazy Geez.
Want to schedule a gut from Jan. 1st to May 20th? Larger
amounts are available. All utilities paid electrocity, $179 monthly.
Sellout fees apply.
Apartment for rent, one block from Union, suit-
tled room, available Jan 1st, furnished to
841-296-966.
Apartment to sub-lease. Jan.-August. Santee
Apartment to sub-lease. $120. No phone on stop.
125 Indiana, Niles 124.
MUST SURELLER FOR SECOND SEMESTER
In order to ensure that we receive
rhinoceros skin utilities paid, we will take a
sustainable option. Please contact us.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
ment, think possible in these beautiful apartments which touch the court yard. Walk to the school's gymnasium and enjoy the basketball, play basketball, enjoy the sauna, play basketball, play basketball on a place on a cold winter night. The Mall is now furnished apartments are available. Come see us at our apartment.
Must rent two bdm-2, 2 bath out. fully carpeted.
Must have furnished or unfitted. must begin January 1st.
Join the Ridges Community and you'll find
the many benefits of our home. In 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, more Wet Lawn, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments.
Beautiful unfurnished 2 bedroom apartment in
Meadowbrook to sublet. Hi a fireplace in
12-7
Want fun or quiet for study? Consider this $56
big room, all utilities included, males only.
kitchen and bath, 1 block from Union and Jay-
son, and Wheel on Ohio St. Closet
3079. 12-6
Most subst 3rd chamber 1 bd. apr., carpeted,
or netting, in place of floor coverings,
air conditioned, not too expensive. Cal-
limate room, is adequate.
APP. FOR REST 9th and Emery, bedroom furniture
Christmas. C81 841-3569 after 5
12:13
Apartment for rent. One block from Union- Suit-
case for two available Jam it is, furnished: 19
& 20th Floor. Valid to the end of September.
8:45 - 9:30 AM.
To add substitute one bedroom apartment All
applicants must reside in the same home and be com-
pany with nice view, good KD location. AB utili-
zates office space for business. No prior commu-
nication required.
ROMS. Available end of Dec. for 2nd round at ROMS.
Students only 84-7423 for 5, or 84-7425, 12-11
Must rent duplex for second semester. It has a kitchen, living room downstairs and three bedrooms upstairs. Fully air conditioned, quiet, fully furnished. If interest calls 841-3580 or 843-9603. 12-12
ATTENTION: APT. AVAILABLE NOW—NO
EQUIPMENT.
Select the phone number you wish to
select for the contact person, please give
good information.
Apt. for rent 4 bedrooms 2 baths large kitchen, large living room carpet and carpet heat. Call 841-211-7500, 12-12-12
Apartment for rent. Two bedroom, large new
room, 240 sq ft. Parking 244 New Hampshire, 81-6042,
12-12
7 Bedroom in apt 4 in plk, up to aubition. Resawnable
in the same way as the other bedrooms.
13 MWF 20 and later. TR 48 and later.
WANTED
FREE! Brief month rent deposit of 2 a birmingham.
FREE! Substitute term rent for a birmingham.
subseason spring semester contract. Call 843-737-9171
- Guitars
2 bedroom apt, dishwasher, utl, paid except
Close to Campus. Furnish $178, 814-306-067
Need to substitute a fully furnished 2 bedroom apartment (paid your money when you leave) this service is very expensive and it will cost you extra.
SUBLEASE-LARGE 3 bedroom, 1 bath apartment
AC, Wi-Fi, Bathroom, Kitchen, AV
AC, power supply. Available Jan. 1, quitting
before Christmas.
Nicely furnished house available 1.5 month
nightly accommodation to camp with range
and outdoor adaptor to garden. Call for
details.
HAIPINFEN is living with friend in an establishment and board room for $4k ask for establishment.
Take over contract for 2nd semester. Beautiful 2 bdm, 12 bath, spatious spa, in quiet 8 pix. w/w shaw carpet, fireplace, complete kitchen, £410, 619, Morningside kitchen, 453-9592. 12-12
Female fommats wanted. Quit, comfortable at park at 25k. Call before 2.00 p.m. (8) 314-767-6000.
Sleeping rooms. Furnished, with or without cookware.
Bedrooms. Furnished, with or without cookware.
Cafeteria. Not furnished.
KU and town. No pats. 843-7577. 12-12
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment
for the children and families on Wednesday night. Janet assists these interested groups in arranging for their special events.
Female roommate wanted to share japhawk Town-
view and great living. Any questions call Jasmine
at (855) 342-1600.
Female roommate wanted to share an ap with a
boy in a dorm. Roommate is quiet, disquiet,
inquiring, roommate, furnished. Call 842-351-9100.
*9 girls needed to share apartment with other girl*
*8 girls needed to rent $78 per month.* 15-44
442-507-798
Activate the computer to try to rerun new
accounts and restore the ones you used.
Instruct the computer to try to rerun new
accounts and restore the ones you used.
Banc' for High School Christmas semi-formal
Banc' for High School Christmas caterer and 18-27
Vineland in 19-12 after a 29-30
Vineland in 19-12 after a 29-30
Need papers type3 English education grant was £120. Need papers type3 English education grant was £120. Need papers type3 English education grant was £120.
Page 75a - a page 643 - Cell 843-6637 after the instructions.
[Signature]
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67/month
for 2nd m娘. Call: 843-8619. 12-12
Joe is getting married? Need someone to take his place. We'll try to make sure this doesn't happen to you. Part 25 Apartment. $45 plus utilities, furnished, two bedrooms, two bath, two Bedroom. 814-724-268
- Amps
Need one or two girls second semester at Jaya-
bridge, 843-567 or come by C449. Jayabridge 12-8
843-567 or come by C449. Jayabridge 12-8
• Music • Recorder
• Accessories
Open Evenings
Rose
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Departately need a female roommate(s) for a house on the Upper West Side. Toward it, if at all interested please, call 817-255-9641.
already, fluffy puppy for Christmas present. Prefer
already house broken. Call 841-2544. 12-8
Need 1 or 2 male roommates to share house $20-
per person. Room size is 8x10. #843 or #874-788 (evenings) for Run. 12-18
for Sleep.
Country western acoustic guitar in near
condition. Call 843-0017 after 7 p.m. 12: 8
Person interested in the afts wanted to share
the information of Mpt. mpt. Female or male females
845-4977 10-12
Need 2 or more people to take over Jawwahker
and call the inmates' memorial. Call 14:28
for further information.
Female to take over my contract at Jayhawker Towers. Call Emily, 841-2817. 12-12
2 female grad students need roommate immediate
room apartment bedding 35 plus unit
84-9229-2680
DRIVE-IN
AND COUN OP
LAUDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843 5304
7 days per week
Open 24 hrs. per day
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843-9631
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
NOTICE
Independent COIN
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
GASLIGHT VILLAGE
MOBILE HOMES
2) Cedar Carport with Storage Area
For Free Birth Control information for preg-
nancy only, visit www.womencenter.org.
Women Center 861-4441. If no answer call
850-329-3777 or visit www.womencenter.org.
Lawrence Auction House Bell your household
information for congregation information g442-7000
for congregation information g442-7000
115 Michigan St. bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Q in an americana 75 $7. A sash to住 on bate to be a large rib plate 85 $7. A sash to住 on bate to be a large rib plate 85 $7. The pound of beef sandwich. W
Mature journalism student needs furnished hatchback. *Cary, NY* W. Hurutub, P.O. Box 1008, Moskau, KGZ 6202. W. Hurutub, P.O. Box 1008, Moskau, KGZ 6202.
6) OVER 60 per cent STUDENT OCCUPANCY
for next semester
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
3020 Iowa 842-2828
RADIO AUDIO STEREO WARHORSE. The Times
at a cocktail at 6pm or later. Phone:
842-2041-247, Island
Hills. Phone: 842-2041-247.
Choice locker meat. Aged and guaranteed. Sides:
Wholemeal Meats. 3rd, 14th and Ivory. 18-33. 12-19
12-20
BAGHIES - We have you with the bouts and plaats
of our best customers. We're the complete new,
the most classic, the best book. The
creative one.
西
4) Swimming Pool
5) Basketball Court
Students Have your Xmas kaiag party at Danae
miles from the campus in Perry, Kansas. 12-12
miles from the campus in Fresno, California.
WANTED: More courses included in FEEDBACK. Uprase your instructions to participate! 12-4
RAMADA INN
Fiqua Salon
842 2923
CAR WASH
MISCELLANEOUS
House new Union needs female coaches for housekeeping, food preparation, air-conditioning, dishwashing, garbage.
RMS Electronics, quality products and stores
RMS Equipment, quality products and stores
*Lawrence* 'Lawrence' Large Store Shelves, 1448 West 69th Street, New York, NY 10027
1) Chain Linked Fences
Look at What You Get一
3) Clubhouse for Private Parties
4) Swimming Pool
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own tree with its banded ornamentations. Bring the tree to your banded ornamentation. Bring the Lawnwork. East on highway 10, 4 mile east of you will be open. West on highway 10, 4 mile west. We will be open 12 weeks before端午. Christmas 9-5
The Hodge Patty has a nice selection of gifts.
$5. Come down and visit with us 12-12
W. 9th.
A complete selection of Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley including Risk, Monopoly, Owlja, Sawel, Swift, Clue, Scratchy, Aggravation, many many can be had at the Duckwalls. 12-8
9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
Dusaili Jade Deva of Ananda Marga Yoga Society
on reading *The Body in Education* on meeting
1.30, Istanbul 1.30, Urumqi 1.30
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
- Locally owned and operated
A birds proudly display their raiment, so must
be proud of their original clothing. 100s Mans. Bae-429-12.
5833567777777777
"SAMPLE BRIDAL GOWNS" up to 75% off Fabrics and styles for all seasons. Size 8, 10, 12 appointment only. 824-9085 (number not in directory). GALENKER BRIDAL 91. Kentucky, in United States.
WHEN DO YOU GIVE A HEAD FOR CHRIST-EN-
THAN WHAT LEON J. Leon Renault *Call Bent Cardi*
Cancer Research Foundation*
9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
THE NEEDLE POINT. 538 W. 23rd, answers all your CHRISTMAS needs with a wide selection of gowns for custom hand-painted designs. Jayhawks, check back. Hand-painted frames, eye glass cases and pillows. **12-6**
TYPING
HELP WANTED
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
Younger energy intelligent woman needed for
career training. Apply in person. Vista Real
laurant, 1527 W. 6th Floor.
Typing on elite electric typewriter in my mouse.
Need the thesis. Please Mrs. Hayes:
0058 15-12-18
Models: male-female. Radio-television agency-
with experience for TV broadcast and good wite
experience for TV broadcast and good wite
SERVICES OFFERED
The Museum of Natural History Gift Shop is interested in consigning local handicrafts for the House and Bazaar on Dec. The museum buys McKesson's at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcarts at the Museum Gift Shop or call 126-8463-Mcard
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and prompt service. Proofread. Mail spotted correcting. PhD: 845-934. Ms. Wright
Expert manuscript typist with through knowledge of spelling, punctuation, and grammar will type these, term paper, etc. 4 days experience. Must be fluent in English and French. 10 a.m. or 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. 12-8
Fast, accurate measure on carbon ribbon type.
Master, accurate measure. Reasonable rates. Cases 12-12
4568 or 82-9734.
(10)
Typing, my home. IBM LBA. Please idea. Flightwrong, bad form. Illustration. Proofreading done. Automated illustration. Proofreading done. Automated illustration.
Rewarding summer for sophomore and older college men in Colorado mountains counseling faculty and other program drivers. Write now, including program director. Campus, Florissant, Colorado 80816. 12-9
DOSERVERS WORK $2 an hour Call Don
Schoenberg 346-571-8990 After 5:00 call Jill Klose, 842-1275.
After 5:00 call William T. Cockman, 842-1275.
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis,
articles, conference proceedings, and AFTERNOONs and EORs. 842-3385.
If you need help, call 842-3385.
Secretary wanted part time to start full time
Secretary general dudes general Jodhkishore J
Joe McHugh. 843-443-2000
Babyitting in my home, Man. then Friday, Close
up at the daycare. No time to sit or play.
One child 14 years exp. Phone 843-288-122
phone 843-288-122
MOTHERS * The First Presbyterian Church
has a few openings in both their
morning & evening classes.
teachers, personal attention, and excellent
form of further information call 842-6411 or
842-6299.
Black and white portraits. Two x 8 inches for $19 or
more; two x 10 inches for $24. Money refunds Cald Ed or Cald En.
Check out our online catalog.
PERSONAL
Helper for family or couple during Spring semester in for room, board. Call: 842-1088-127-8
Students Have your Xmas key club party at Danae
Morrison's campus in Perry, Kansai. Kids miss
miles from the campus in Perry, Kansai. 12-18
REAL, Jesus People REPENT of their sins. is a woman in the Holy Ghost. GH of the Holy Ghost. They speak in Tongue from God You need to rap Blaud out with us in the Ghost
For you lover at Christmas, provide yourself a
Hodge Dodge, 15 W. 9th, Kumu Sati
The Hodge Dodge, 15 W. 9th, Kumu Sati
LOST
$0 reward. Left dark brown sheepkin coat at
4:59. Right dark brown sheepkin coat at
12:38.
Call Rons, 842-7620 or 843-8437. 12:38
Tony's 66 Service
Small female dog Reddish brown with white
hair. 12-7 yr. 84-823. Reward. 12-7
yrs. 84-823. Reward.
Be Prepared!
tune-ups starting service
928
Mass
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
UDIOTRONICS
The Stereo Store
SALES & SERVICE
043
0500
KARNAZE AMERICAN-JEEP
STUDENT DISCOUNT ON ALL PARTS and LABOR
when you show a student I.D. Card—You'll save money with us even if you don't drive an A.M.C. car, "no imports please."
Location: across from KROGER.
1116 W.23rd
SALES & SERVICE
SALES & SERVICE
843-8080
12 Wednesday, December 6, 1972
Budweiser Brewing Chart ADOLPHUS BUSCH
MATTHIAS
Chart
Ⅰ
Ⅱ
Because malt is so important in brewing, we use the finest Western two-row barley available in addition to the Midwest six-row variety. The extra cost of this premium barley is worth it, since it makes for a milder, more pleasant beer. Here, our barley is first cleaned, graded, washed and steeped, then allowed to germinate for a minimum of five days under a gentle stream of humid air in slowly revolving drums.
Penetrating heat heats the sprouting process and dries the grain. Root shoots are screened off.
II
VII
The cleaned barley malt is stored until needed for grinding in the Brew House.
grinding in the Drew House.
Meanwhile, specially selected rice is crushed in separate mills and weighed. Budweiser is brewed with rice (including actual table-grade rice) even though many brewers use corn syrup instead because it is much cheaper. But cheaper is not for Budweiser.
V
cad
The ground rice and barley malt are wetted with clear, filtered water (absolutely ideal for quality brewing) and cooked. This mash is then strained in huge tanks, producing a clear amber liquid called scort.
VII
Hops are the "seasoning" of fine beer. Only the choicest imported hops from the honored fields of Central Europe and the very best of domestic blossoms from the western United States are used in brewing Budweiser. (Absolutely no extract is used!) The result is Buds's rich, mild aroma and snappy, refreshing taste. Here, these choice hops are added to the wort, which is boiled in giant brew kettles until the wort has assumed just the right delicate hop flavor.
The hopped wort is strained, pumped to cooling towers, and then to fermenting cellars. Yeast, made from our own special pure culture, is added and fermentation begins.
The hopped wort is strained, pumped to cooling towers, and then to fermenting cellars. Yeast, made from our own special pure culture, is added and fermentation begins.
In these patented Anheuser-Busch fermenters, the brewers' yeast changes sugars from malt and rice into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
IX
In these patented Anheuser-Busch fermenters, the brewers' yeast changes sugars from malt and rice into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Many beers would be ready for artificial carbonation, filtering and bottling at this point, but not Budweiser. Instead, it goes to huge tanks in the lager cells. Here, beechwood strips are spread across the bottom of each lager tank, beer is pumped in, freshly yeastedwort is added, and the beer is allowed to carbonate itself naturally as it ferments and ages, slowly and quietly a second time.
(This is the exclusive Budweiser Beechwood Aging process. It takes more time [actually as much as three times as long as the process some beers use] and costs more money, but the strips of beechwood provide extra surface for the brewers' yeast to cling to—and help clairify the beer naturally.)
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Research on Defense Projects Minimal, Officials Say
Kansan Staff Writer
By JIM KENDELL
Editor's Note: This is the first story of a two-part series discussing University of Kansas research activity that is related to the U.S. Defense Department.
With every upsurge of antwar activity at the University of Kansas, rumors about KU's military involvement waft across the campus.
KU and the Center for Research, Inc. (CRINC), do some defense work, but they are not working on any classified defense contracts, according to Bill Barr, executive director of CRINC and professor of mechanical engineering.
CRINC is an independent corporation, situated in the Space Technology Building, which was established to promote basic and advanced research in particular interdisciplinary research.
Barr said recently that although KU and
CRINC were not working on any classified contracts, both could handle classified information and that CRINC had classified reference material in its possession.
Information can be classified by the U.S. government as confidential secret or top secret. Beyond these classifications, data are sometimes coded or restricted by type, for instance certain nuclear data are restricted.
DISCLOSURE of data classified top secret "could result in exceptionally grave damage to the nation," either war or other damage to national defense, such as involvement of vital scientific secrets, according to a U.S. Defense Department pamphlet.
Secret data might cause "serious damage" to the country if they were disclosed, the pamphlet states. "Confidential information may be publicly exposed in the defense of the nation if it were known."
A limited number of government officials decide what information is classified. Much of the classified information is of a technical nature.
About 45 people at KU and CRINC have been "cleared" to handle classified information, according to Barr. Of these 45, about 20 have been cleared to handle classified information in any one year.
Barr said that KU and CRINC had "security clearances" so that certain professors could keep abreast of developments in their fields.
IF RESEARCHERS weren't aware of classified developments in their fields, Barr said, they might try to research something that's already been done.
"The material that we do have is not very sensitive," Barr said. "Some of the professors say some of it shouldn't be classified.
"Technology changes so rapidly that any
classification and declassification system is somewhat slugish in response."
Barr said that KU and CRINC were cleared to handle secret and confidential documents. KU was first cleared shortly after the fall of 1964, according to Barr.
William Argeringsi, vice chairperson for research administration, said that KU had not worked on any classified contracts since 2014 and that the university has no classified work, according to Barry.
A TABULATION of research grants awarded to KU which is published quarterly by the University Office of Research Administration, shows that 10 current universities are combined with U.S. Defense department money. The lists are available in Watson Library.
The total funding for these 10 is about two of the two projects listed were planned for 2014.
report was issued Oct. 4 for July, August and September.
Three of the 10 were funded by the U.S. Army, two by the U.S. Office of Naval Research, two by the U.S. Navy Ordinance Laboratory, one by the U.S. Navy, one by the U.S. Army Research Office and one by the Rome Air Development Center.
Research, published last spring by CRNC and available from them, lists 30柄 used partially by defense force. Four of those appear to overlap with those listed by KU
RICHARD K. MOORE, professor of electrical engineering and director of the CRINC Remote Sensing Laboratory, said Tuesday that approximately 15 per cent of CRINC's $1.3 million annual budget came from the U.S. Defense Department.
All but three of the 30 projects are being performed by the Remote Sensing
Laboratory which occupies about half of the Space Technology Building.
Research labs 179 projects at CRINC, of which I are in the remote sensing laboratories.
Ten of the CRINC projects are funded jointly by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and Project THEMIS, which are monitored by the U.S. topographic Laboratories. Seven are funded U.S. Naval Ordinance Laboratories.
Four are funded by NASA and the U.S. Army, three by Project THEMIS and two by the U.S. Army. One is funded by the Rome Air Development Center.
One of the projects gets its money from the U.S. Geological Survey and Project THEMIS. One is funded by the Bureau of Mines, NASA and Project THEMIS. One is
See DEFENSE PROJECT page 10
COLD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year. No. 69
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Regent Post To Be Filled By Woman
Thursday, December 7. 1972
Mary Prudence Bennett Hutton, newly appointed member of the Kansas Board of Regents, said Wednesday night that she did not anticipate any problems being the first woman to serve on the board in the last 30 years.
KU Profs Doubtful of COCAO Goals
See Story Page 2
"I hope to work on the board as an individual," said Hutton after being named earlier in the day by Gov. Robert Docking to replace T. J. Griffith, who died last month.
Hutton, a 45-year-old parttime English instructor at Bachelé College in Newton, said she was grateful to be appointed to the position as an adviser to working together with the other regents.
"I am committed to higher education and am looking forward to assessing and studying the situation," she said. "The question of higher education funding is an issue. I am looking forward to doing homework and I will be able to answer such questions."
In announcing the appointment, Docking said Hutton was "eminently qualified to serve on the board." She has a firm understanding of higher education through her unusual interest in young persons and because of her own personal, day-to-day involvement and interest in higher education," he said.
Claiming she was not a part of any woman's political organization, Hutton said she knew she had been recommended by those who said, 'but declined to say who they were.'
The governor was under no pressure to choose a woman and did so to add "balance to the board," according to Jim Shafer, the governor's press secretary.
Chairman of the Board of Regents Jess Stewart of Warameq said Wednesday night that he was pleased with the governor's statement. "She was 'glad to have a woman on the board.'"
To familiarize Hutton with board operations, Stevens should be given a Friday friday in New York.
Stewart, whose own term expires at the end of December, said he had not heard from Gov. Docking about serving another term on the board and would not make a decision until he had heard from the governor.
Shafer said Hutton was selected from a list of 30 to 40 names submitted by persons and groups. He said he did not know Ms. Cassas Women's Political Caucus, which name evidence to suggest a list of possible candidates last week end, was among the groups.
"Women will offer a new dimension to the board," Stewart said in reference to Hutton, only the fourth woman to serve on the board. "I won't treat her any differently than a man, and I don't think she would want it any other way."
10
Ice Walking
Kansan Photo by CARLA DENNIS
snow kept many humans from driving their cars on the streets. Whether animal or human, there seems to be no way to beat the winter cold. With winter just beginning, both species will just have to live with it.
Two dogs found the fountain near the Chancellor's house more suited to eating sugary treats.
Apollo Finale Begins Despite 2-Hour Delay
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)—Delayed for more than two hours by a computer problem that developed in the last seconds of the scheduled liftoff, Apollo 17 vaulted toward the moon Thursday morning, propelled by a fiery rocket on what could be man's last voyage to another world in this century.
The last flight of the historic Apollo series began at 12:33 a.m. EST as a thundering Saturn 5 rocket thrust Navy Capt. Eugene C. Aernan, geologist Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt and Navy Cmdr. Ronald E. Evans away from their home planet on a scientific expedition to fill in missing chapters of moon history.
The Saturn 5 flashed to life with the brilliance of the sun and sent a cascade of flame rushing like a waterfall over its launching pedestal.
WITH AGNOIZING slowness, the big rocket, the most powerful in the world, rose skyward, the roar of its engines assaulting and shaking the ground for miles around.
The rocket screamed up, effortlessly climbing through an almost clear sky.
The astronauts rode quietly, calling out the routine readings on their instruments.
"At three minutes, we're go," said Schlumberger. "We've first stage rocket burned out and fell away."
"You're going right down the pike," said Mission Control.
Despite the delay in launch, Apollo 17 went smoothly into earth orbit.
To reach the moon, the spacecraft orbits the earth twice in slightly more than three hours. Then, another rocket burst from the moon and collides with it will send the spacemen toward the moon.
MISSION CONTROL the tardy launch would not affect the Dec. 11 arrival time at the moon. The lost time would be made up by performing a more powerful rocket thrust when the spacecraft blasted out of earth orbit.
Hundreds of thousands of persons jammed viewing sites in the Cape Kennedy area to bid farewell to Apollo and to watch the blazing departure in the first after-dark launch of an American manned space flight.
They all had to wait two hours and 40 minutes beyond the planned liftoff time when expert worked on the problem, which required the device called an automatic sequencer.
The countdown proceeded smoothly to within 30 seconds of the originally planned liftoff time of 9:53 p.m. EST when the device failed to pressure an oxygen tank in the Saturn 5. On the Saturn 5, this caused the computer device to call an automatic halt to the count down.
LAUNCH CONTROL recycled the countdown to 22 minutes and resumed, only to be halted again eight minutes before it reached zero. The problem experts more time to resolve the problem
Launch spectators were rewarded for their long wait by the most dazzling liftoff in
the history of this spaceport, where more than 3,000 rockets have been fired in 22
Technicians here and at Marshall Spaceflight Center in Huntsville, Ala., worked against the clock to overcome the problem that delayed the launch.
Experts here determined that a computer which controls the countdown was not able to accept the fact the third stage oxygen tank was being pressured manually instead of automatically as planned. They worked out a new program which told the computer to accept the manual pressurization.
After more than an hour of testing, technicians determined that the new system would be a viable option.
THE NEW PROCEDURE was worked out on a mockup of the system at Marshall Center, which was responsible for development of the Saturn 5 rocket.
The technicians worked against the 1:31 a.m. EST deadline—determined by the position of the earth, moon and sun—before they could have had to wait until Thursday night.
Launch control center said that launch controllers monitoring the sequencer detected the failure to pressurize the third stage oxygen tank and tried to do it manually by flipping switches in the control center.
Senate Cuts Off BSU Co-Op Funds
The BSU was also criticized by several senators for expenditures from co-op funds. The BSU had been criticized for its
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate voted Wednesday night to eliminate funding of the Black Student Union's (BSU) food co-op for the remainder of the semester and freeze the education for the co-op until the BSU submits a new plan for the program's operation.
The bill proposing the action was submitted by Gus dizi Zerova, Wichita graduate student, after representatives from the BSU told the Senate that the food co-op program was not operating now because of the restrictions in obtaining a location for the co-op.
THE ORIGINAL allocation for food for children should be made only for 'nutritional foods'.
Educational Services (SES). The purchases were authorized by former Senate treasurer Bill O'Neill, Bailin, Mo., senior.
Representatives from the BSU asked the Senate to strike the "nutritional" requirement, but after several opposing statements from the floor the requirement was retained.
The first section of the measure will provide all BSU food allocations immediately.
Senate Continues Subsidy of Buses
The bill, which passed the Senate by a wide margin, is divided into three steps.
The bill, presented by Gus diZerega, Lawrence graduate student, asked the Senate to repeal an act that allowed the campus to assign each student a Campus Privilege Fund for its purpose of supporting the campus bus company provided by the Lawrence Bus Company.
By PATTY JOHNSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The Student Senate voted to retain the campus bus service Wednesday night by that would have discontinued the Senate subsidy to the Lawrence Bus Company.
"We have a cutoff," mission control said, announcing the halt.
Under the present system the bus service is losing over a $1,000 each week because few students ride the bus.
"I think we should give serious consideration to repealing the bus system and the expenses it involves", *dizEmerge* said.
He said alternative methods of providing transportation should be considered more seriously. He suggested that apartment complex managers, resident hall governments and individual students organize car pools to get students without transportation to campus. He said this was currently done in some fraternities.
The astronauts, working from the memory of years of training, quickly disarmed pyrotechnic systems aboard their craft as a safety measure.
According to diterga, continuing the bus service undermines pressure that could be caused by a lack of traffic.
David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president, opposed the bill. He said that it would be unfortunate to stop the service when the bus was about to make money, and that the bus could run on the $1 annual Privilege fee for the rest of the team.
He said the zoning in Lawrence prevented construction of large apartments close to campus, forcing many students to seek housing and perpetuating a need for the bus service.
making a long term effect of continuing the bus service harmful.
Dillon asked that the transportation committee work on a contract to set bus routes, and to determine possible cuts in the fares.
Several senators argued that the bus system was needed by many students particularly in the winter months. There were also arguments on the feasibility of using buses because of the possibility of increased traffic problems around the campus.
The second part of the bill states that the BSU must submit to the Senate a plan for operation of the BSU food co-op that would make the program self-supporting within the campus on checkfund years. The plan must pass examination by professors in the business school.
The launch halt was the first to occur so close to loftoff in the 11-mission, manned Apollo 11.
THE THIRD section states that $3,000, the remainder of this semester's BSU food allocation, be subtracted from the BSU's total budget allocation. The food allocation for next semester would be frozen until the operations plan was submitted, with each week a portion being submitted at the end of each month which passes without a plan being submitted.
The Senate passed a bill submitted by John House, Lawrence special student, which decreased the Campus Privilege Fee used to subsidize the campus bus system. A bill submitted by diZerega to eliminate the campus bus service was defeated.
DAVID DILLON, Hutchinson senior and body student president, announced the appointment of Cindy Steineger, Kansas City, Kan., junior, as the new chairman of the Student Senate (StudEx). Steineger succeeds House, who is leaving school at the end of the semester.
The Senate elected three new members of the University Council. They were John Remark and Zane Lewis, Lawrence Lawrence, and Paul Rankin, Lawrence junior.
Louis Scott, vice chairman of the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx), announced his resignation during the meeting. Scott will graduate in December.
In other business, the Senate allocated $1,444.80 to keep the KU libraries open for
longer hours during finals this semester and next
The Senate also passed a bill providing for the selection of a Student Senate Secretary.
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Former president Hary S Truman, battling lung congestion and bronchitis, remained on the critical list early today, but hospital officials said he had been through an ultra-critical period."
Truman's condition was downgraded from serious to critical late Wednesday, and John Drewes, spokesman for Research Hospital, said he had received a "temporary relapse." He said Tillman's condition later stabilized, however.
A spokesman at Research Hospital and Medical Center, where the 88-year-old Truman was taken Tuesday to the hospital, said remains remained critical as of 12:15 p.m.
But the hospital's hourly bulletin reported "he is not in a coma and is becoming more responsive to stimuli." An hour earlier, the spokesman had said Truman was in a "deep stupor but responsive to painful stimuli as differentiated from a coma—when the patient is unresponsive."
Truman Still Critical But Condition Stable
At Truman's bedside were his wife Bess and her sister-in-law, Mrs. George Wallace, the hospital said.
Truman's temperature was 102.8 degrees, the hospital said, indicating 'he is not responding to antibiotics administered intramuscularly, necessitating the administration of the antibiotics intravenously.
"This administration is being performed with extreme care to prevent adverse reactions because of his known allergies," a hospital spokesman said.
An hour earlier, the hospital said Truman's condition was in a "very delicate and critical balance."
Dr. Wallace Graham, Truman's long-time personal physician, was also at his bedside, the statement said, and he said that he had been in attendance since early evening.
in a jet provided by the White House.
Dreves said reports on Truman's
condition would continue to be issued
hourly.
Truman was taken by ambulance to the hospital late Tuesday. His condition at first was termed fair, but deteriorated to serious during the night.
2
Thursday, December 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By the Associated Press
Butz to Stay
CAMP DAVID, Md.-President Nixon is keeping Earl Butz仕 U.S. Secretary of Agriculture but is replacing Commerce Secretary Bob Ritter in Carolina textile manufacturer Frederick B. Dent, the White House said Wednesday. As part of President Nixon's second-term government, it is expected to take a temporary special mention of Europe and Asia, then return to private life.
Boggs' Vacancy
WASHINGTON—House Democratic leaders have decided that the House itself should vacant the seat of Rep. Hale Boggs, D-LA, opening the way for a special election in August that diemerma caused by the disappearance of Boggs on an airplane flight in Alaska Oct. 16, Louisiana law has no provision for an early finding of death in such cases. Both Boggs's family and Gov. Edwin Edwards of Alabama should assume the responsibility. Mrs. Boggs is expected to be a candidate to succeed her husband.
Talks Continue
PARIS--Henry A. Kissinger and North Vietnam's Le Duc Tho had an apparently cordial 54-hour meeting Wednesday on the grounds of the embassy in peace talks, but they gave no hint of their progress. The White House announced that Kissinger and Tho would meet again Thursday afternoon. Their scheduled meeting was canceled without explanation.
Prize Guernsey
BOSTON — Gail Madden, 24, a fashion designer, won a pregnant cow named Florence in a yogurt recipe contest. Ann Herzog, the public relation director, said the cow decided to leave shortly after her arrival. As five men tried to hold the cow back, Florence charged across the red carpet in the ballroom, knocked down a set of stairs, and left some people from the room. Miss Madden said she had decided to keep the black and white Guernsey at the Essex Agriculture School.
KU Professors Skeptical of Council Report
By EMERSON LYNN
Kanson Staff Writer
The report by the Council of Chief Academic Officers (COCAO), which has recommend that the university of Kansas should place the program on provisional status, has caused several KU professors teaching those programs to doubt the report's effervescence.
The professors do not believe that streamlining the graduate programs will produce a more economical or efficient graduate program.
A novel approach to coordinate the six Kansas state colleges and universities was formalized in 1969 when, with the approval of President M. D. Cao, residents of the schools established COCAO.
The presidents asked this group to review the programs of the six institutions. The committee was directed to determine the nature and extent of duplication in the offerings of the colleges and universities and to prepare specific recommendations for
Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics and astronomy and chairman of the physics department at COCAO's point in trying to eliminate duplication of the unnecessary graduate programs but that he was not convinced that the department should be in this category.
the development of a more economical and efficient system in Kansas.
KU Law Grads Appointed Assistant County Attorneys
SOME KU professors doubt that COCAO will accomplish its goals.
George Worth, professor of English and chairman of the department, said COCAO's recommendation for discontinuance of the program did not have much effect on the instructors.
"They are viewing us as many separate programs," Wiseman said. "I think they should look at the program as a whole. They should lump physics and astronomy together and consider it as one entity instead of dividing the departments."
Two 1989 graduates of the University of Kansas law school were named Wednesday as assistant county attorneys at the Douglas County commissioners meeting by incoming Douglas County attorney, David Berkowitz.
Reed served as assistant general counsel for the State Corporation Commission until last week when he ran for public office. Reed served as assistant to the county attorney Dec. 16.
THE REASON it was recommended for discontinuance. Worth said, was that the
Walker will begin work in the county attorney's office Feb. 1, after completion of Air Force ROTC obligations at Lubbock, Texas. Before entering the Air Force, he practiced law for one year in Douglas County.
Douglas J. Walker was appointed first assistant county attorney and Herman Reed, unsuccessful democratic candidate in the judge, second assistant county attorney.
The Douglas County commissioners approved salaries for the assistants and heard plans to expand law student participation in the county attorney's office.
The new program would give law students course credit for work in the office. Paul Wilson, professor of law, is coordinating the program.
Students participating in the program will
Report Summarizes Jail Facilities Survey
"Therefore, you can't tell from looking at police record, arrested and who police recorded."
"I think the council is a reasonable group," Worth said. "In the future, we have enough students who have expressed interest in the program, we will marshal them to the Board of Regents who, I sure, will give proper attention to the matter."
The group encountered several difficulties in compiling the data. Arald said,
Arnold also said the methods of record keeping employed by local law enforcement agencies were incomplete in the past, he says, "follow an offender through the system."
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Criminal offenses reported to local law enforcement officers averaged about 10 a day during 1971, according to a report presented Wednesday night to the Douglas County Committee on Correctional Services and Jail Facilities.
"Police agencies use the word 'detain' in a different manner than those of us in corrections," he said. "If the police hold a suspect, they should say whether they intend to put him in jail or not."
Arnold said the survey was a "10 per cent sample" of police and court records. Six survey groups from the committee reported in conjunction with a guide issued by Clearing House on Correctional Programming and Architecture in Urbana, Ill.
UNDER THE sample system, survey workers reviewed every 10th file in studies of Sheriff's records, and also police, juvenile court, county court and district court records. Those figures were then multiplied by ten, resulting in a representative "sample" figure, Arnold said.
Bill Arnold, associate professor of sociology and a member of the committee, presented the report, which summarized the progress of a correctional facilities survey begun by the committee in May. The meeting, one of several monthly meetings organized by the committee, took place in the auditorium of the Lawrence Public Library.
DATA PRESENTED by Arnold showed that 1,260 people were detained by city police in 1971, of whom 930 were charged. The sheriff's office detained 880 people.
According to a Lawrence fireman on the scene, the fire apparently started in a second floor room where a drape caught fire from a nearby candle.
Fire attributed to a lighted candle caused about $100 damage to the Chi Omega School.
Fire Causes Damage In Chi Omega House
The fire, which was first spotted by passersby, destroyed the drapes, some bedding in the room and damaged the wall slightly, according to firemen.
Once the graduate programs have been dropped it would be difficult to reinstate the programs, Paul Mosfert, professor of math and chairman of the department, said.
Cases in Juvenile Court totalled 545 in 1971; in County Court, 2,680 traffic cases and 860 criminal cases; and in District Court, 70 cases.
program had not had many interested people over the last few years. He said there was not one person in the program at the present time.
Arnold noted that persons detained by the sheriff were spoken of as charged.
Arnold emphasized the data were "incomplete and preliminary" and would not provide specific recommendations about correctional facilities that the committee hoped to present to the Douglas County Commission in March.
"Data about the past don't tell you what to do in the future," he said.
"The committee hasn't made a firm decision about applying to them for funds, but if we do, it would help if we had followed their guide," he said.
ARNOLD SAID the committee used the National Cleaning House guide because it's our understanding that requests for its services are funneled into facilities are funneled into the NCH.
Committee Chairman Forest Swall said the data would be used in "developing recommendations" for the county commission.
Not all of the 14 persons who attended the meeting agreed that the data presented by Arnold were correct. Anita Strecker, a reporter for the Lawrence Journal-World, amended several figures presented by Arnold and visited the courthouse regularly as part of her work in the newspaper, and that many of Arnold's data were insufficiently researched.
THE PERSONS detained were predominantly male, the report showed. The Lawrence police detained 1,110 males and two sheriff's office, 800 males and 90 females.
Under aged groups of persons detained, persons ranging from 19 to 25 years of age, are the highest of the several age groups studied. Students under age 470, and the sheriff's office 620 in 1971.
Arnold's data also showed that of the persons "dernished" in local laws in 1971, most stayed one day or less; 1,010 in the city jail and 480 in the county jail. The next month, they were four-day stays, which showed 130 detained in the city jail and 110 in the county jail.
Keith Meyer, an associate professor of law at KU and a member of the committee, and the committee would not be able to do the work that needed. A complete records were made available.
Swall also recommended at the meeting that all local criminal justice oriented programs be coordinated through the Douglas County chapter of the recently formed Police on Crime and Delinquency. Arnold is chairman of the Douglas County chapter.
work as investigators, handle misdeemer cases and do other legal work. Berkowitz said that his program would offer extra help to the student if he office without additional cefn to the county.
"The inconsistency of these figures has to be cleared up," Meyer said, in reference to Strecker's comments.
Federal Funds For Lawrence Are Delaved
The first half of $555,000 in federal revenue sharing funds, which city officials expected to receive during the first week in March, were discussed at City Clerk Mercer, said Wednesday.
"You always have trouble in dealing with a bureaucracy," he said. "In years to come, COCAO may look back to the 1972 report on how to run government programs program then why should we reinstitute it."
Mercer said she received a letter from the Department of the Treasury's Office of Revenue Sharing in Washington, D.C., last week. The letter would receive half of the money levy.
Mercer also said she was not certain whether the check would be mailed to her or to the First National Bank of Lawrence. The City Commission authorized Mayor John Emrick on Tuesday to enter into a depositary contract with the First National Bank for purposes of depositing the revenue sharing funds, as required by federal law.
Since the city has not received the funds yet, Mercer said she did not know when to file a claim.
The Treasury Department said Tuesday that states should not be surprised if they receive less than they expected. The complicated formulas used to determine allotments will not be updated until early next year.
MOSFERT SAID that although the graduate program program was not a very active program, the faculty should be involved in deciding its future and should not be the decisions of a central judging committee that was not familiar with the program.
According to the revenue sharing plan, about 39,000 government jurisdictions will be subject to the program.
Sally Sedloy, professor of linguistics and computer science and a member of the executive council of the American institution for Peace Research (AUAP), used with Mosfet. She said the majority of 400 AUAP members were upset that COCAO didn't give the University the opportunity in deciding which of the graduate programs she discontinued or put on provisional status.
The COCAO report explains that for a graduate program to avoid being recommended discontinuance, it must produce at least five graduates over a three year period.
THOSE PROGRAMS failing to meet the productivity criteria for continuation will be identified in the annual institutional report to the Board of Regents. Normally, COCAO recommend to the council of presidents that programs be placed on provisional status.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian Studies and chairman of the department, said he though the East Asian program would eventually be dropped.
He considered COCAO a facial job and its effects cosmetic.
"They are just remodeling a face without
Union Damage Is Investigated
An investigation was continuing Wednesday by University of Kansas Traffic and Security into reported vandalism to the Kansas Union Tuesday evening.
Jeffrey D. Lough, activities supervisor at Tuesday night that eight juveniles and sprayed fire extinguishers over the floors of the ballroom and basement at 8:35
The suspects, described by Lough as black males 11 to 16 years of age, have not been identified.
Damage to the Union was estimated at $75.
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changing the appearance of the underneath," Leban said.
He said that the master's program in East Asian Studies did not cost the department any extra money and that eliminating the smaller programs would not lower total costs of graduate programs, a by-product COCAO was aiming for.
LEBAN SAID he thought the recommendations were unhealthy for graduate programs. He said that small departments such as the East Asian department might be burdened by the guidelines and sneak students through without doing acceptable work.
"I have to keep a standard in the department," Leban said. "I think it's foolish to require each of the graduate out from a specified number of graduates. It's hard for the production plant herding so many cattle. In their requests are totally unreasonable."
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Corps Affirms Flood Control Plan
By CHUCK POTTER Kansan Staff Writer
A revised draft of an environmental statement on the controversial Mud Creek flood protection project was issued Wednesday by the National Park Service Engineers. However, Mayor John Emick said a decision regarding selection of a plan to provide flood protection control for Mud Creek would not be made until a final assessment had been issued, probably in several weeks.
Emick said the decision would be made jointly by city officials, the Carw and Kaw firms.
The draft statement specifically endorses the Corp's 1969 plan, which the Corps and the city had planned to implement three years ago until pressure from environmentalist groups forced investigation of alternatives.
Basisically, the 1969 plan calls for 4.7 miles of stream channelization and 4.3 miles of levee on the right bank of Mud Creek, which enters the Kansas River about four miles east of the downtown Lawrence bridge, flow southeast.
Bob MacDonald of the Corp's Environmental Resources Section in Kansas City, said recently that the Corps recommended the 1989 plan because "you have to recommend something when you issue an environmental impact statement."
HOWEVER, MacDONALD said, comments received by the Corpus within the next 30 days from various state and local officials who received copies of the statement could possibly affect the Corp's final recommendation.
The Corp's final recommendation will be included in the Environmental Impact Statement to be issued in January, as will the Proposed Receipt received by the Corps, MacDonald said.
The draft statement lists several adverse environmental effects which would result from implementation of the 1969 plan, including loss of a section of natural stream
and wildlife habitat, loss of wildlife"corridors" in the Mud Creek area and possible disruption of potential archeological sites.
The statement also sites several reasons for the Corp's recommendation of the 1969 plan over several alternative plans, none of which involve stream channelization.
NONE OF THE other plans, with the exception of two "diversion plans," would offer protection to the land along the left bank of Mud Creek. All of the other plans would have been left bank flooding problem than Mud Creek's natural condition, the statement says.
The statement cited as "objectionable due to their high costs" the diversion plans, which would involve diversion of high Mud Creek flows into the Kansas River. Five other plans, all of which involve less federal expenditure and an increased local cost, would "place a financial hardship upon the city of Lawrence."
The draft statement, which the Corps issued in accordance with requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, is the second environmental impact statement issued by the Corps. The Corps published the first statement in January.
CONSIDERABLE RESPONSE to the first statement, particularly in opposition to stance of authorization, led the Corps to review the report, and choose alternatives to the 1989 plan.
On Nov. 9 the alternatives were presented by the Corps at a public meeting conducted at Grant School in Lawrence. While almost everyone present agreed that flood control motion for north Lawrence was necessary, reaction to the alternatives was varied.
KU Allegedly Charged With Sex Prejudice
City officials, county officials and residents of the north Lawrence area favored the 1969 plan. However, environmentalist groups such as the National Audubon Society (NAS) favored selection of either of two alternative plans calling for construction of a setback levee. Neither of the plans involved stream channelization.
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
As a result of a complaint filed by a group of University of Kansas women, the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights has alleged sex discrimination against the University.
According to Peggy Scott, Lawrence senior and press contact for the group, the complaint names the University of Kansas, Chancellor Raymond Nichols and the Kansas Board of Regents in the discrimination charge.
CHARLES OLDFATHER, University attorney, said Wednesday night that he had not officially been notified about the charges.
The complaint requests an investigation in the areas of faculty hiring policies, salaries, promotion, tenure, student financial aid, graduate admissions and the lack of females in administrative positions, Scott said.
"Normally when the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights gets around to investigate, if and when they investigate, they issue a notice of the charge and take actions accordingly.
"I was able to confirm the fact that some charges, which I heard about over the phone but still have not seen, have been filed against the University," Oldfather said. "The University has received no notice of the charges either officially or unofficially."
Tony Lopez, director of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, would neither confirm nor deny Wednesday that any actions were being taken against the University. He said it was not the policy of the Commission to make such statements.
RICHARD VON ENDE, executive secretary, said Wednesday night that he knew of no formal notification of such a suit received by Nichols.
Scoff said she had received notification from the Commission in November that an investigation was underway.
"We have received official notice that the suit has been filed," she said.
According to Scott, charges by the Commission are based on statistical data released by various offices of the University. The compiled facts allegedly show
salary and promotion discrimination against women of the faculty and of the university.
"ALL THE FIGURES have been officially released by the University," Scott said, "and are the results of several years of study."
The group of KU women filed their complaint with the Commission in July and with advice from Commission members in August through October, Scott said, from August through October, Scott said.
The petition was signed by University faculty members, male and female; administration personnel; classified and unclassified University staff; and students, undergraduates; and was returned to the Commission on Civil Rights, she said.
INFORMATION from the Office of Al-farmative Action for Women Report on the 1971-72 Faculty Salary Study, which was taken as evidence, according to Scott, included:
On the average, females earn less than
males in every rank from instructor to full
pupil.
On the average, faculty women,
disregarding rank and experience, are an-
numerous high school math major candidates.
Differences between male and female salaries on the associate professor, assistant professor and lecturer levels increased in 1971-72.
SCOTT SAID the complaint was filed with the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights because the Commission was "one of the most powerful agencies on the state level." necessary the Commission has the legal authority to order compliance with state discrimination laws, she said.
The proportionate representation of women in higher ranks of the faculty decreased in 1971/72 from that of 1970-71. Women were only 3% of the faculty promoted to full professorship this year.
Frantic Last Minute Gasp Engulfs Watson Library
As students scramble to write last-minute term papers and to study for impending finals, they have been frequenting Watson in increasingly large numbers, according to H. Robert Malnowsky, assistant director for reader services.
"One reason the complaint was filed is that the Affirmative Action Plan is now under consideration and perhaps this will serve to remind the University of the need for a strong plan," Scott said. "Also, if the plan does not turn out to be satisfactory, these charges will serve as an alternative action of that can be taken."
Last week 12,933 people passed through the library turnstile as compared with an average daily total of 17,535. Peak hours seem to be morning and mid-afternoon, said Malinowski.
Watson Library is fast replacing the Red Dog Inn at the hot spot in Lawrence.
According to circulation librarian Nancy Bangel, the normal checkout and return rate is books a day. On Monday, however, 1,278 books were checked out and 1,241 were returned.
Not only have more students been coming to the school, but more books they have been reading and more books.
Ron Klatasek, representing the NAS, said in November that stream channelization was the most environmentally destructive and imperative methods of limiting flood damage.
By semester break, Genier expects totals to run as high as 2,000 books per day.
The increased library usage and the limited library staff may cause delays in acquiring materials they want.
OTHER ENVIRONMENTALIST LISTS present at the November meeting who
Senate Allocates Funds to Keep Libraries Open
★ ★ ★
The Student Senate allocated Thursday a total of $1,444.80 for maintenance of Watson Library and branch libraries for the week preceding and the first week of finals.
The library will be open Dec. 11 through Dec. 20, and April 30 through May 13 from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday through Thursday, and from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Friday. The library will continue to close at 5 p.m. on Saturday.
Jayhawk Audubon Society, the Lawrence
Sierra Club and the Douglas County Coon
Comments on the draft environmental statement can be addressed to Lewis G. Hirsch, Department of Resources Section, Department of Army, 700 Federal Building, Kansas City.
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Thursday, December 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Book Hoarding By KU Profs
In a recent research effort, I was nearly thwarted when I discovered that three major works relating to my subject were checked out by one of the faculty. Inasmuch as I did gain access to the works in time to finish the paper I was doing, I suppose I should feel lucky, but even so, there are a few questions still around in my mind. How, for example, can you honestly need to have a book checked out for over two years? Two of the books I wanted had been checked out since Nov. 1970, according to both the University records and the stamp in the books. Or for that matter, why should a professor need both his own copy of a book and the library's as well? When he apologetically met the book, and explained that he wasn't sure where the library copy of one of the books was, so he was loaining his personal copy instead. While I
certainly appreciate his consideration in loaning me his personal copy. I don't really understand why we copied two copies in the first place.
There is a simple solution to such abuse of privilege. The library should institute a system of fines for failing to return books before the due date, or returning books before the due date.
Those faculty members who really needed the extended use of library materials would find such fines to be no real handicap. Since faculty members are allowed to check books out for four months, those who wanted to keep books indefinitely could do so by returning the books to three times in a year. If the material is truly needed, this would constitute a small handicap; only those who don't really need the materials would consider such a system to be a great burden.
—Robert Ward
Garry Wills
Left Meets Right In Kooky Middle
Two years ago, when I described Richard Nixon as the defender of a dying liberalism, this position was trusted as an allegory. And Richard Nixon was a right-wing ogre, the liberals' favorite villain.
Yet one of the most striking aspects of this last election was the political advertisement, endorsing the President, printed with lists of old-line liberals appended. It is recognized that the anti-busters have hostages out and but people were surprised when they encountered Nixon's side from a vivid fear of the New Left.
Even those who did not openly endorse the President had much to fear if McGovern should prevail. What if we should reevaluate all the bases of the Cold War, as well as of the Constitution, much much the Establishment fears this development. It took the risky embarrassing step of making William Bundy—an interested party, to say the least—the editor of Foreign Affairs. And guess who supported him, against Left criticism? The wealthy members of National Review. The enemy of my enemy is my friend.
The revisionist Left is an acute menace to the Cold War Establishment—and Nixon is the custodian of the myth that has always protected the Establishment by the myth of America's virtue.
But it goes deeper than that. The menace of the New Left, now splintered and debilitated, is still exaggerated in the Old Left's eyes. These children were their favored heirs of liberalism to turn on it, reject it, call it a privileged self-guarding establishment—nothing could hurt the official guardians more. Now they fill the pages of Commentary with cries about a new barbarian, the collage of the radical left, and the end of American tradition—the mean, of course, the end of liberalism.
Against such a radical challenge, the essential unity of the liberal tradition reasserts ideas of work, and of "self-determined" nations. William Buckley and MPat Moynihan mount the barricades together. Inside are Nixon and Kleinfeld. In the approaches, Norman Foolhardy and Irvist Kristol.
The false eminutes of a decade ago now dissolve to an embattled unity. I remember, some while unacknowledgmental, an alarmist right-winger saying that Robert Kennedy was a new Hitler. Now comes liberal pressure, and the student traumatized by campus unrest, saying "the performing self" (he means an Abbie Hoffmann) is the principal menace to our society.
But who takes Abbie seriously anymore? Professor Nisbet, that's who. In a Washington Post essay, he scans the horizon fearfully, looking for an Abbie grown outsize and to awe supe power. The candidate he finds is Senator Edward Kennedy.
Teddy's crime for Professor Nisbet—just like Bobby's crime for my right-wing friend—is that he has become, in Nisbet's words, a liberal intellectual Left in America." In short, the kids like him. if they do, that he must be cool. The wook right and kooky Left have performed an intricate dance in toward each other, where, united great landslide President, they now form the kooky Middle.
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 1972
RIGHT-WING
"REBELLION"
NIXON
"Oh well ... His leftist-sister
isn't all that bad..."
James J. Kilpatrick
Kilpatrick Backs Legalized Pot
WASHINGTON—In *the*, current issue, the editors of National Review grapple with the matter of marijuana, but with deference to my conservative colleagues, I think they let the main conservative questions slip away.
The principal article, which urges that marijuana be legalized, comes from Richard C. Buckley, a former president and Jeffrey Hark take a generally opposing view. William F. Buckley, Jr., editor-in-chief, fairly support C. Buckley, "for one reason, that it is plausible, but overwhelming."
On the face of it, this is an astonishing position to be taken by the nation's leading journal of conservative opinion. Yet if we are prepared to accept the position as the advanced by the proponents of pot, the position is not astonishing at all.
The question is deeply troubling, but it is not unusual. The same issues are involved in such matters as homosexuality and pornography. And if the teacher one finds the same principles, applied in reverse, in such diverse matters as the automobile air bag and the fluoridation of public water supplies, she can define the proper role of government in a free society.
The conservative philosophy holds, if I understand it correctly, that within certain limitations, a free people should be just that—that they are the limitations fixed by the impact of my conduct on your rights. As a general proposition, conservatives hold that no human condition should be prohibited by that conduct causes positive harm to the innocent bystander or to society as a whole.
We see this proposition at work in a thousand ways. In theory, a man is free to build a glue facet where it causes offense to his neighbors. The citizen is free to play his stereo; but he is not free to play it at full volume at 2 a.m. When he leaves the house, he pleases, and he has to stop at the stop lines. An activist is free to harangue a crowd, but he cannot provoke a riot. And so on. We see this proposition simply the harm that is done.
When homosexuality was held in nearly universal abhorrence, a valid case could be made against the employment of homosexuals in sensitive government positions—they were subject to blackmail. The argument is of the justification for law against pornography lies in the belief—a belief not susceptible to easy proof—that pornography corrupts society as a whole.
The other side of the proposition, as I say, lies in conservatives' hostility to laws that do not undertake to prohibit evil, but seek to compel good—the requirement for air bags, the fluoridation of public water supplies. But put those aside.
Getting back to the matter of marijuana. If criminal laws against the smoking of pot are to be justified, they have to be justified in terms of the harm that marijuana causes, not to the individual, but to society. There is some evidence, I understand, that marijuana tends to slow physical reactions, so that a drug on marijuana becomes a danger on the highway. Coconat flatly denies this. In any event, this is an argument against smoking-and-driving, not against smoking.
A second line of argument holds that the marijuana habit
leads to heroin addiction, heroin is universally regarded as a serious social evil, imposing heavy burdens upon society as a whole. If this causative theory is correct, this argument would suffice, and other serious students of the subject deny it absolutely.
These are the questions conservatives ought to be asking. Most persons of my generation are doubtlessly against it. We equate it vagely with sin, with misery, but keep coming back to Mencken's law, that is, in the absence of provable social harm, when A undertakes by law to impose his moral values on B, A is a scoundrel. If conservatives are to be consistent in their philosophy, they should join Cowan and Buckley to impose criminal sanctions against more possession and use of marijuana be repealed.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
NUKE AND
AMERICA IT OR LEAVE!
UNITARY OF
LABOR
"WELL, CABINET MEETINGS ARE PICKING UP"
Readers Respona
Houseperson or Housewife?
Pavcheck
To the Editor:
According to the Chase Manhattan Bank, the average housewife works a 90.6 hour week and receives no paycheck. If Robert Ward was really as concerned about the future of housewives as he was about the future of "Degrading Freedom," (Nov. 30) he would not waste his time putting down women's liberation. He should ask the following two questions:
that theoretically favors equality, yet in actuality seeks to limit the options open to me and others. In contrast, a binary basis of sex difference
Cindy Kissee Olathe, Junior
Why not make housewifey a real job, with a 5-day, 40-hour work schedule? Some women more become housewives? Women's liberation is not against housewifey. It is more appropriate. The discrepancy between a society
Twist
Robert Ward's editorial "Degrading Freedom," (Nov. 30) utters the standard criticism against the feminist movement—feminists are degrading women who have been an elitist twist has been added—feminists should stop degrading housewives because there are all these mediocre women who can't be great (i.e., politicians' favors should not be assigned by the socialization process to the ranks of
To the Editor.
housewives in order to protect them from the frustration of unfulfilled aspirations that result from having alternatives.
Accusations that feminists degrade the role of the housewife are most often heard from women who have been widely promulgated in the male-dominated media. I suspect a sort of divide and contested underlies this hidden concern for the status of housewives.
The accusations, however motivated, are false. Feminists demand alternatives in roles for women. We do not bellittle housewives either we damn the feminist role or we damn the process which tells us this is the only appropriate role for us. The feminist role is the movement is successful being
a houseperson will assume greater significance. Women and men who choose this occupation will give it status by their selection. Degradation results from the current limitation of a woman's role which gives it a slave-like quality.
The sham of Ward's argument is obvious in his wistil approach. He is not sincerely concerned the mediocere dignity. He clearly considers the less valuable than the elite, a value judgment which also accrues to the roles he considers appropriate for each—housewife or professional professional or the elite. He is kind enough to feel that we should not deprive the "mediocere of their sense of human dignity"—even though we are by permitting them choices in occupations.
Griff and the Unicorn
GYARR!!
GYARR!!
GYARR!
STOMPO!
GODZILLA
I'M NOT...
GYARR!
STOMPO!
By Sokoloff
GODZILLA
I'M NOT...
Universal Press Syndicate 1972
Ward is right in saying that the whole American society does need liberation so all persons will be able to choose their own roles and occupations and that their needs will be met. However, this goal is not accomplished by designating certain roles as mediocre (i.e. housewife), and socializing certain groups within these them as their only appropriate alternatives. Human dignity is denied, not enhance'
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, doubled and exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to the instructions according to space limitations and their students must provide their name, year in school and job, and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name
--by such (male) elitist management.
1
Lawrence Graduate Student
Monument
To the Editor:
In regard to your article of November 30 concerning the proposal for a Jayhawk program for the awarding program for the promotion of the Jayhawk and the proposed monument I should like to suggest to students McLane and Neil McLean that I work to the Alumni Association or the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The program perhaps could be utilized in campaigns for the University of Kansas students.
BARBARA NONICK
Shawnee Mission. Sophomore
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
NEWS STAFF
Published at the University of Kansas
and its affiliated colleges and
hospitality and examination colleges. Mail
Second class postage paid at Lawrence, KS.
Third class postage paid at Lawrence, KS.
Employment employment offered to all
students without regard to色情, crime or
necessarily the University of Kansas
or its affiliates.
Adviser Susanne Shaw
News Advisor .. Suanne Adams
Associate Editor .. Jack Spurrier
Associate Editor .. Joe Niewerman
New News Editor .. Joey Nawran
News Editor .. Sally McCutron, Jojue Duncan
Assistant Campus Manager .. Akiva Kopp,
Sports Editor .. Dan George
Sports Editor .. Elaine Zimmerman
Editorial Writers .. Elaine Zimmerman
Mary Ward, Robert M. Mark, Barbara
Wright, Michael A. Bradley,
Make Editors .. Jude Duncan, Steve Hale
Photographers .. Joe Coleman,
Researcher .. Pris Brandon
Linda Chapel
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser Met Adams Advertising Manager Norm麦斯
Associate Advertising Nick Newick
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Thursday, December 7. 1972
5
University Daily Kansan
Halls Meet Fire Standards, Lack Sprinklers
University of Kansas residence halls meet state fire codes standards, and regulations, but there is always the fear of a fire in the building. The director of University housing, said Tuesday.
A recent rash of fires in big-rise buildings across the country has aroused concern about fire precautions and escape routes. Several persons in these fires were killed when they jumped from windows to escape the blazes.
Presently none is equipped with sprinkler residence halls
One reason that the halls do not have
sprinkler systems is that many false alarms are turned in at residence halls and a sprinkler system could cause a large amount of water damage, Wilson said.
"All university inspections are taken care of by the state," said Walter Parker, opn-
pologist with the University of Texas.
The fire department regularly inspects the downtown area, but conducts inspections in private homes only when requested to do so.
Wilson said that there were constantly small trash fires in residence halls, but most were extinguished quickly and, usually, the only damage was from water.
"We try to educate the students about the proper way to behave in case of a fire and ask them not to disturb the alarm system unless it is needed." Wilson said.
Parker said that a false belief by many students was that residence halls were connected to the fire department by their alarms.
"They need to call us after setting off the alarm to get everyone un." he said.
All residence halls are set up for the best precautions and escape routes possible, on-site.
"We have regular inspections," he said,
"and so far we have had an excellent
According to city fire officials, overloaded circuits and furnaces in need of repair were two of the major causes of fire for this time of year.
Parner said that another major cause of this was negligence in the handling of cigarettes in her office.
15
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Thursday, December 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Mistrial Declared in Gould Case
OLATHE (AP)—Judge Phillip L. Woodworth of the Johnson County District Court declared a mistrial in the bombing trial of Randolph Gould Wednesday. The judge cited repeated attempts by the prosecution to introduce prejudicial testimony in defiance of a previous court ruling.
because James A. Wheeler, Johnson County attorney, twice defied his ruling not to use a new trademark.
Judge Woodworth said he made the ruling
testimony regarding Gould in Douglass County and Kansas City could not be used in this case.
Gould was charged with damaging property and possession of pipe bombs in connection with the June 1970 bombing of a police station in Pittsburgh. On Monday, Judge Woodworth ruled that
Gould is scheduled for trial next week in Douglas County on charges connected with the May 1970 bombing of the Dougherty home. The suspect, who also is named in federal bombing charges,
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Conard Recalls Days as Speaker of the Kansas House
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
Newly elected Speaker of the House of the Kansas legislature, Duane S. (Pete) McGill, R-Winfield, will be participating in a process that has changed little in the last five years, according to John Conard, the former Speaker of the House and a former Speaker of the House.
Conard, first elected as a Representative from Kiowa County in 1856, served five terms in the legislature and was elected Speaker in 1867.
"Being Speaker is a very interesting position," Conard said Wednesday. "In my opinion, it's the most interesting position in all of state politics."
Just as McGill was unchallenged in his bid for the House position, Conard was uncontested when he sought the position of Speaker. He had not opposing legislators for anyone else, but did
"WHEN THE legislature convened in
Museum to Host Annual Bazaar
The second annual open house and bazaar of the Kansas University Museum of Natural History will be held from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight in Dyche Hall. Among the activities planned are folk dancing, uniting of new exhibits, tours and a gift shop called Hil "H - A Prairie is Forever" will be shown each half hour in Dyche Auditorium.
The KU Folk Dance Club will present international folk dances from 7 to 8 to 3 p.m. and the Barn Dancers square dancers will perform from 8:10 to 10 p.m.
1967, my support was so strong that there were no other candidates." Conard said.
According to Conard, as soon as the Speaker has legislative support he begins to exercise his authority by organizing the House. He said that through House rules and customs, the Speaker has almost complete control over its organization.
The Speaker's duties include making appointments for House positions and assigning committee chairmen, as well as assigning House members to all the committees.
When I was Speaker, there were about 30 or 40 committees, so it was quite a job. Now, some of the committees have been formed, so it isn't quite so bad." Conard said.
WITH HIS powers of appointment, to some extent, the Speaker can determine the direction the legislature will take, said Conard. His choice of personnel to paraphrase committee members can balance them so they will be favorable towards certain issues.
In the opening days of the first session, the Speaker must insure that appropriate legislation is passed to adopt new rules and regulations of the House, Conard said, although few changes are made from one session to the next.
"I had a standing joke with the press," Conard said, "that "I was strongly in favor of changes in the House, immediately after I left office. As a matter of fact, the greatest challenge in the making of the committees, did take place after I left office, but that was purely confidential."
WHEN THE FORM of the legislature is established, the Speaker of the House should ask the Governor, Conard said, he
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needed only that his chief did not
enjoy about his position as Speaker was the
excessive pressure sometimes exerted by
lobbying groups.
842-8664
must pay special attention to major bills and may even have to keep watch over their day to day progress to keep them from getting bogged down in committees.
"The chairman of the calendar committee and I conferred every day and arranged the calendar for the next day's session," Conard said. "It's a very important task, because if a bill is placed at the bottom of the calendar every day, it can
Another responsibility of the Speaker is to arrange the calendar* that the committee will use.
Although he has no plans to seek another political position, Conard still maintains an actual role.
" ONE TIME 5,000 PTA women descended on Topeka pushing for appropriations for education. It was a little bad. They even told me they corner me in the elevator." Conard said.
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"I miss it—the inside political activity. I still so some things. In fact, I serve as a precinct committeeman here in Lawrence," he said.
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"I intend to keep working some for individual candidates. I don't have plans."
a candidate although I can't divorce myself from a very important part of my life," she said.
Conard said that now the greatest portion of interest was primarily in high education.
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LAWRENCE'S LARGEST MENU
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University Daily Kansan
'Hawks Hope to End Field House 'Jinx'
Thursday, December 7, 1972
9
Murray St. Next in KU Lineup of Toughies
By DAN GEORGE Kansan Sports Editor
Perhaps wondering what has happened to that old Allen Field House charm, charied by the talented Owens and his witness Jayhawks will set in search of their first win for the third time this season when they take on the Murray Trophy night in Allen Field House. Tropp is 7:35.
The 'Hawks, plagued by cold shooting and poor rebounding in their first two contests, are off to their poorest start in 19 years. The last time KU lost its first two games was under Dr. F.C. (Phog) Allen in 1953 when it dropped a pair to Tulane, 69-52.
and Louisiana State. 68-63.
But even stranger, is that both losses have come at Allen Field House, a place usually used for high school football games, to a curse on the opposing squads. The opening defeats to Vanderbilt and Indiana were the first twins losses ever for the Knicks, and the first for any KU squad since 1964.
Owens, of course, is hoping for a change of luck for tonight's contest, but he is well aware that the high-score Throughbreaks and the lowest points as the Jayhawks' first two opponents.
"They're a good team," he said. "They're undefended, although they haven't played
really stiff competition yet."
Murray State, a member of the Ohio Valley Conference, has posted four victories so far. The Thoroughbreds opened with a 91-61 victory over the touring Australian National team, and have since ripped off three straight wins over Samford, 99-79; Tennessee Wesleyan, 86-57, and Missouri Southern, 83-71.
Pacing the Thoroughbreds, who have averaged 89.3 points per game to their opponents 69.0, is Les Taylor, a 6-2 senior who hit at a 74.3 dip in the three games.
The rest of the strating squad, although not as experienced, has been just as ef-
Favored Jayhawk Swimmers Gear For Tough Invitational Competition
By BRETT MARSHALL
Kansan Sports Writer
University of Kansas swimming coach Dick Reason and his five-time defending Big Eight Conference champions get their first taste of outside competition Friday and are planning to travel to Stillwater, Okla., to compete in the Big Eight Invitational meet.
Returning 18 lettermen from the championship team of a year ago, the Jayhawks appear solid favorites to capture their sixth straight crown. Although the conference team has not won in three games, the Hawks have assembled their deepest team in history, according to Reasonam.
"We have at least one good man in each event, but there are three areas in which the competition could be improved," Reamon stroke and the individual medulla.
Reamon said the freestyle events would continue to be the strength of the Jayhawks and the Warriors.
"The freestyle is definitely our strong point," Reason said, "and we are strong for this."
This will make our team a better one from last year."
Heading the list of returning performers is Tom Kemp, Bartlesville, Okla., junior. Kempf was voted the outstanding swimmer in the Big Eight Conference in 1972 and comes back to defend his individual titles in the 500 and 1650-meter freestyle events.
Senior captains Ingham, Overland Park and Rick Heiding, Tulsa, Okla., also return to bolster the KU swim team.
Ingham is the defending 200-yard freestyle champion. Holdinger finished the third at the U.S. Open.
"We have put together a team that combines experience and leadership with outstanding youth," Reamon said. "We feel we are in the right balanced team for the 1972-73 season."
Reamon is also very happy about his relay teams, which return intact from last year after winning the 400- and 800-yard races.
“This will be our best chance to place in the national meet,” Ramson said, saying the every individual should attend.
relay teams should rank high nationally."
Reasonam told the invitational at Sullwater this weekend was entirely different than the other meets they would compete in this year.
"The events are shorter than in other meets," Reason said, "and this will make it a stronger meeting for sprinklers. We will be bigger different personnel to the meet since there is more room for races. Our depth will be very important in the meet as most teams are strong in the sprint events."
Reamon said the "Hawks biggest competition would come from nonconference teams."
"These two team will give us the most
Reamon said, so we will have to be
reserve."
The University of Kansas women's volleyball team, rated first in the state, will host the Fifth Annual Kansas State Women's Department Saturday in Robinson Gymnasium.
KU, which has won the tournament all
straight times is favored to take its fifth
straight title.
guard Steve Barrett, who has averaged 7.3 points per contest.
★ ★ ★
fective, Junior Marcelo Starks, a 6-8 center, has averaged 19.3 points per game and against Missouri Southern pumped in 26 and grabbed 18 rebounds. Forwards Mike Coleman (6-8) and T.C. Jamison (6-5), and Dellahi (adl 5-11) are only sophomores with 11 and 11.3, respectively. Another player who will probably see considerable action is 9-9
Other than its high-powered offense, which has hit at a 83.7 per cent clip from the Murray State's biggest strength is its rebounding. The forward-boundrys have averaged 50 per game.
Although the Jayhawks have averaged just 59.5 points and 40.5 rebounds in their first two contests, Owens is hopeful they can improve on this against the Thoroughbucks.
The Jayhawk coach is expected to go with basically the same lineup that faced Indiana in 2015, and will lead scoring with an 16.5 average, will start at center. At guards will be Tom Kivisto (6-2) and Marshall Rogers (6-2). At forwards will be Justin Dobrowolos and elfthus Tommy Smith. (4-Digi Hale, Stuart
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The preliminary game between the KU junior varsity and Missouri Western originally scheduled for 5:30 p.m. tonight has been canceled because of injuries to several KU players. Because of this, Owens said, the Jahawks have also canceled the junior varsity games scheduled for Saturday and Monday.
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MURRAY STATE (3-0)
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10
Thursday, December 7, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Black Greeks Face Image Problem
By MIKE LEWIS
Kansan Staff Writer
By MIKE LEWIS
To most members of the University of Kansas community, the black Greek and Jewish communities are the main
Their image tinged by personal bias and distorted by stereotypes handed down from generations past, the four black Greek organizations recognized by the University find themselves misunderstood not only by whites but also by blacks.
Members of both races often see the organizations as black imitations of white institutions, an impression that is not totally accurate. In fact, these organizations basically the same selling points as their white counterparts; a close tie with fellow members, contacts in the University and a strong sense of community.
Vicki Powell, Newton senior and president of the Alpha Kappa Alpha, an all-scoriority, said "At one time Greek sororities were very selective social. This is in direct opposition to the promotion of black solving of the problems of black women."
POWELL SAID that to now the sorority will offer financial aid to a prospective member who needs it. This move was intended to eliminate economic discrimination.
"Previously membership was based more or less on social criteria," Powell said. "Now if someone expresses the desire to pledge and she meets the requirements, then she has a lawyer who was a doctor of a lawyer she has the opportunity and someone else doesn't."
Social advantages to fraternity or sorority living are common to both white and black organizations, but black Greeks say the need is greater for the black, who must learn to cope with the frustrations and challenges of an overwhelmingly white University.
Cheryl Smith, Baton Rouge, La. junior and member of Delta Sigma Theta, an all-black sorority, said, "It's really hard to come up here and find an organization you can feel like an important part of and whose interests you share.
"THE THINGS that I'm interested in I found a lot of Delbore are interested in. I have been asked to write about them."
The black fraternity or sorority offers a "home base" to its members just as its officers provide a predominantly white Greek organization involves identification with a cosial group; blacks say membership in one of their organizations provides identity with the member's race.
Powell said part of her reason for joining a black sorority was that she saw a group of black women 'taking a step forward and doing something in something and working toward empowering'.
"Because we're so close to our national chapter we get feedback from them," she said.
The black organizations may offer a chance to help in the advancement of the race and may also make personal setbacks the struggle for equality a little easier to handle.
ONE BLACK FRATERNITY member said that a person coming to KU from a predominantly black environment could "foretet that he's black."
"He doesn't realize that he's not going to be totally accepted by whites everywhere," he
"We give him a kind of a home, and a chance to cope with it. If something happens to him and he's on his own, who is he going to talk to?" he said.
Black Greeks say they enable the person who might have come from a black high school a chance to ease into his new environment with the knowledge he can fall back for help on a group of people with similar backgrounds.
The history of the black Greeks in the United States dates from 1906, when Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity was founded at Cornell University.
KU's history of black Greeks began ten years later when the fourth chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority was organized at Mount Oread. The KU chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, the only group now living in a house, was organized in 1917.
IN 1920 Kappa Alpha Pi fraternity formed a chapter here and four years later the chantering of a Kansas chapter of Delta Beta. It collected the list of black Greek organizations
Founders of black Greek organizations stressed service as one of their purposes, and service to the community is a top national and local levels, members said.
"If we want to remain functional," Milan said, "we must remain a service frater-
the relevancy of the fraternity must be gauged by its record.
According to Terry Milan, Milan City senior and president of Kappa Alpha Psi.
"WE WOULD like to be more of a public service than we can afford to be," he said. Food drives, big brother and big sister programs, black awareness programs in schools and early childhood of time and effort to programs sponsored by Black Student Union and the Office of Minority Affairs are among the projects the groups have undertaken.
The limits of manpower—combined initiated membership of the four groups is less than 50—and consequently limited funds are the biggest problems in attempting to carry out a major service project, according to Smith.
Pledge projects in the community interest are encouraged and often required. One such project raised $400 for a Kansas City organization involved in fighting stickle cell anemia.
The problem of low membership is partially the result of decreasing interest in the Greek system as a whole. Disenchantment with pledge programs and some organizations as a regimented lifestyle has among black as well as white organizations.
NUMBERS ARE also a part of the
must be divided among the four groups.
Defense Projects . . .
In addition, black organizations must fight the stereotypes blacks have concerning black organizations based on white structures.
(continued from page 1)
funded by the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center and Project THEMIS.
According to Barr, CRINC's classified reference material was obtained through a NASA program. The equipment with which the data must be classified, so the data must be classified.
Specifically, according to a Defense Department letter to the Daily Kansas,an Air Force flight commander of the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, the U.S. Army Engineer Topographic Labs at Fort Belvoir, Calif., and the Development Center at Griffin Air Force Base.
More said, "Everything we're doing has direct application to the non-military needs of our country."
Project THEMIS was started in September 1967 to create new defense research centers and "to achieve a wider geographic distribution of Defense research funds," according to Army Research and Development Newsmagazine.
"In Project THEMIS," Moore said, "the Defense Department was to great length and depth."
Research at KU and CRINC involving classified information is governed both by University policy and U.S. Department of Defense regulations.
KU's policy on classified research was
adopted by the University Senate Oct. 23, 1969.
The basic statement of policy is: "This University will accept no theses, dissertations, research grants, contracts, assignments, or agreements which are classified," although there are four exceptions.
The first exception is data unavailable to the public, or classification of material from sources. In the scientific field, most names from the government or corporations.
Barr said that the limited use of classified information that KU and CRUN had fell under this exception, because no classified data were used and no classified products result.
The second exception is short-term secrecy of a process—a way of making or doing something. The third exception is the product, either research data or hardware.
No product can fall under this third exception for more than a year and the exception must be approved by the Office of Research Administration.
The final exception to doing classified work is "in time of national emergency" in Congress, according to Research, a perennial subject by the Office of Research Administration.
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Crowd Packs Coffeehouse For Opening Celebration
live entertainment, food service and a capacity crowd marked the opening of "Up Your . . . Alley," the AURH coffeehouse, Wednesday in Lewis Hall.
The coffeehouse coordinating committee received more than 100 suggestions for names according to Ed Schons, a senior senior and committee member.
Jessie Bission, Pittsburgh, Pa., graduate student, submitted the winning name and received a $2 gift certificate from the Kansas Union Bookstore.
Some of the rejected suggestions were:
"House of Caffeine," "Lewis Hall Coffeehouse," "The Purple Percolator," "The Dry Office," "130 Dig" and "Freeze Dry Palace."
Dave Ledgin, Kansas City. Mo., sophomore, taught freshman and senior in which sophomore provided the
entertainment. They sang and played guitars.
Representatives of the 110 state school districts will convene in Topeka today at the request of the 12 largest school districts to support the financing public education in Kansas.
Carl Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools and one of the three local district representatives, said Wednesday that the meeting would examine the present status of proposals that are now before state legislative committees.
Jay Awater, Leawood junior and coffeehouse manager, said he was pleased with the turnout for the opening. He said the coffeehouse was full of people all evening.
District Envoys Will Examine Fund Proposal
He said the meeting would be an informative session and not for any particular action. There might also be reports by state agencies and the state board of education, he said.
The present method of financing education, through mill levies in the local district, has been declared illegal by a district court. A legislative statute has until July, 1973, to establish an alternative method of financing or to accept a method established by court decree.
The other two local representatives are Kenneth Fisher, assistant superintendent, and Richard Holzmeister, school board member.
Jan Stokes, Cincinnati freshman and Coffeehouse Coordinating Committee member, said that the committee received support from the Housing Office and the Kapsas, Union.
The Housing Office paid for the building of the coffeehouse and the Kansas Union
A new sound system will be given to the coffeehouse at the beginning of the semester by the Pearson Trust Fund, accumulated which is on the Pearson Trust Fund Board.
The Coffeehouse Coordinating Committee received more than 100 suggestions for names according to Ed Schons, Tonganoxie senior and committee member.
The meeting was scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. in the Teopae Area Vocational Tech Center.
Some of the rejected suggestions were:
"House of Caffeine," "Lewis Hall i quit."
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Mat. Sat. Sun. 1:45 & 4:15
Hillcrest
"One of the biggest movies year after year. Surprise year after surprise." — Plavko
Banan Ishkanski's Film of MACBETH
"Brought vividly, heartily, excitingly," to life. — New York Post
Eve 7:10 8:15
Mat. Sat. Sun. 1:45 & 4:15
Woody Allen's what's up tiger Lily?
Eve 7:10 8:15
Mat. Sat. Sun. 1:45 & 4:15
Hillcrest
Ends early.
WOODY
WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY?
All University Students Eligible Game also open to non-students
Qualifying for Midwest Intercollegiate Regionals
Eat 7:40 & 9:15
Wow! Alien's
what's up tiger city?
THE HILLCREST 3
BROADWAY, BROADWAY & ALEXANDRIA
Student Union Activities
The image is too blurry to accurately recognize any text. It appears to be an abstract monochrome artwork featuring two figures in close proximity, possibly embracing or kissing each other. The background consists of various irregular shapes and patterns, creating a dynamic and somewhat chaotic effect. There are no clear labels or identifying marks that can be read from this piece.
faces & trees
Lucus MeGee's
Unusual apparel for folks of Doth genders.
Handmade leather goods candles, and various other paraphenalia.
Wishing you a joyous holiday Season and a peaceful New Year!
"TAKING OFF"
The Years Most Critically Acclaimed Picture Has Won The Coveted
JURY PRIZE AWARD
AT THE CANNES INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL,
Competing With The Best Pictures Produced
Throughout The World.
"TAKING OFF" IS ABOUT PEOPLE. People like your neighbor. People like the family down the street. People like yourself.
"TAKING OFF"
Woodruff Dec. 8 & 9
60°
7:00 & 9:30
THE FILM RELEASES ON 24 JUNE 1980.
SIR ARUN KIYAN
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, December 7, 1972
11
Officers, Kief's Resolve Dispute
The Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) and Kie's Record and Stereo, W17. 92W STL., have resolved a misunderstanding concerning a discount contract between the two companies according to Raoul Berman, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore and CPA codirter.
Berman said that the complaint, which was filed with the CPA Friday by John Hackney, Wichita senior and class president, arose because of a misuse of his trademark. Hackney over the wording in Kief's discount policy.
Berman said the CPA found no violation of any contract obligations by Kiefer and that Kiefer "was conducting normal business practices."
"Kleifer thought every knew his policy and acted in good faith," Berman said.
"As far as the CPA is concerned," said Berman, "the misunderstanding over the contract is resolved because both parties now know the policies of the contract."
The contract concerns a 20 to 50 per cent discount agreement on any Kier's merchant liability.
A sign in the store explains that Kief's will sell merchandise at a 20 to 50 per cent discount or at a sale price, whichever is the lowest price.
Hackney filed the complaint on behalf of the Board of Class Officers saying that some students had complained that they had not gotten their discounts.
Campus Briefs
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Abortion
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a benefit fashion talent show from 1:30 to 10 p.m. Friday in the ballroom of the Kansas Union. Admission to the show is $1.00 an adult and $2.50 to the Supportive Educational Services, a tutorial service for minority students.
Fashion Show
The Women's Coalition is meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Women's Center in the Wesley Foundation to discuss future action for legislative abortion reform.
Dadiji Jagadevea, a Dutch yoga achyara, will speak at a meeting of the Ananda Yoga Society at 1:30 p.m. today in Pararion A of the Kansas Union. He willcessus yoga and answer any questions. The meeting is open to the public.
Yoga Society
Three Days
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
McQUEEN'S JEWELERS
Selection of Genuine Stone Set Rings at
is fantastic CHECK THIS OUT
Sunday at 4:30 p.m.
WEEKEND SPECIAL SHOW
This Friday & Saturday
at 7:30 p.m.
Congress for Bangladesh with G. Harrison, E. Clapton, B. Dylan, B. Preston, L. Russell, and R. Starr.
-Medicine Ball Caravan with B. W. King, Alice Cooper, D. Kershaw, Delaney and Bonnie. French-Amer. Co-production
Advance Tickets — $1.75 Sold at Budget Records and Tapes and Lenny Zeros Records
ANTHROPOLYGY BUFFS
Come to a panel discussion with an
thropology professors on:
Anthropology
The Unity of
International Room, Kansas Union
Dec. 7 4:00 p.m.
YARN-PATTERNS
NEELEDPOINT-RUGS
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2656
each additional word: $.0
One Day
25 words or fewer : $1.50
Each additional
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to their financial standing. HARING ALL CLASSIFICATIONS TO 111 FLINT BANK
FOR SALE
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
25 words or fewer : $2.00
each additional word : $ 0.00
Western Civ. Notes: Now on Sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
1.
you're at an advantage.
t. If you don't,
Either it is at nfloodstage, the same thing—"New Ether." It is civilization. "Civilization." Campus Manus,
Town Court, Town House.
Realistic STA-120 receiver 2 optimum 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Furniture, jewelry, hanging plants, tortillas and wine; red crab apples; the perfect Picnic to fit the dimmer budget. You've got to buy an UPPER DECK to be霆! It should be 12-18 inches.
Stores set-up. Dynasca A-25 speakers and ampli-
sators with excellent condition. Best offer.
12-7
Kittens, 8 wks old, free, Call 842-1762 or stop, 12-7
1000 Ohio
For once avoid rush, the (Christmas) rush that in Jan. 2015, when it starts at 4 p.m., big 8 room in the Student Union on 6 Fri. & 7 Sat. will be available for merchants at reasonable prices. Doors will be open from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Everyone is welcome Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant
cupcake for Christmas for the children.
15 W 10 R 9 F 12-12
The largest handcrafted jewelry selection in the
world, featuring gold and silver from a gift
from the Hodge Pода 15 W. B. W.
Attention Audiophiles 1 Acoustic Research 4 KWK 5297, 5298, 5299, 5300, 5301, 5302, 5303, 5304, warrant $5 for the mat. M: Burkhorst 8207, Burschwitz 8210, Burschwitz 8211, Burschwitz 8212, Burschwitz 8213, Burschwitz 8214, Burschwitz 8215, Burschwitz 8216, Burschwitz 8217, Burschwitz 8218, Burschwitz 8219, Burschwitz 8220, Burschwitz 8221, Burschwitz 8222, Burschwitz 8223, Burschwitz 8224, Burschwitz 8225, Burschwitz 8226, Burschwitz 8227, Burschwitz 8228, Burschwitz 8229, Burschwitz 8230, Burschwitz 8231, Burschwitz 8232, Burschwitz 8233, Burschwitz 8234, Burschwitz 8235, Burschwitz 8236, Burschwitz 8237, Burschwitz 8238, Burschwitz 8239, Burschwitz 8240, Burschwitz 8241, Burschwitz 8242, Burschwitz 8243, Burschwitz 8244, Burschwitz 8245, Burschwitz 8246, Burschwitz 8247, Burschwitz 8248, Burschwitz 8249, Burschwitz 8250, Burschwitz 8251, Burschwitz 8252, Burschwitz 8253, Burschwitz 8254, Burschwitz 8255, Burschwitz 8256, Burschwitz 8257, Burschwitz 8258, Burschwitz 8259, Burschwitz 8260, Burschwitz 8261, Burschwitz 8262, Burschwitz 8263, Burschwitz 8264, Burschwitz 8265, Burschwitz 8266, Burschwitz 8267, Burschwitz 8268, Burschwitz 8269, Burschwitz 8270, Burschwitz 8271, Burschwitz 8272, Burschwitz 8273, Burschwitz 8274, Burschwitz 8275, Burschwitz 8276, Burschwitz 8277, Burschwitz 8278, Burschwitz 8279, Burschwitz 8280, Burschwitz 8281, Burschwitz 8282, Burschwitz 8283, Burschwitz 8284, Burschwitz 8285, Burschwitz 8286, Burschwitz 8287, Burschwitz 8288, Burschwitz 8289, Burschwitz 8290, Burschwitz 8291, Burschwitz 8292, Burschwitz 8293, Burschwitz 8294, Burschwitz 8295, Burschwitz 8296, Burschwitz 8297, Burschwitz 8298, Burschwitz 8299, Burschwitz 8300, Burschwitz 8301, Burschwitz 8302, Burschwitz 8303, Burschwitz 8304, Burschwitz 8305, Burschwitz 8306, Burschwitz 8307, Burschwitz 8308, Burschwitz 8309, Burschwitz 8310, Burschwitz 8311, Burschwitz 8312, Burschwitz 8313, Burschwitz 8314, Burschwitz 8315, Burschwitz 8316, Burschwitz 8317, Burschwitz 8318, Burschwitz 8319, Burschwitz 8320, Burschwitz 8321, Burschwitz 8322, Burschwitz 8323, Burschwitz 8324, Burschwitz 8325, Burschwitz 8326, Burschwitz 8327, Burschwitz 8328, Burschwitz 8329, Burschwitz 8330, Burschwitz 8331, Burschwitz 8332, Burschwitz 8333, Burschwitz 8334, Burschwitz 8335, Burschwitz 8336, Burschwitz 8337, Burschwitz 8338, Burschwitz 8339, Burschwitz 8340, Burschwitz 8341, Burschwitz 8342, Burschwitz 8343, Burschwitz 8344, Burschwitz 8345, Burschwitz 8346, Burschwitz 8347, Burschwitz 8348, Burschwitz 8349, Burschwitz 8350, Burschwitz 8351, Burschwitz 8352, Burschwitz 8353, Burschwitz 8354, Burschwitz 8355, Burschwitz 8356, Burschwitz 8357, Burschwitz 8358, Burschwitz 8359, Burschwitz 8360, Burschwitz 8361, Burschwitz 8362, Burschwitz 8363, Burschwitz 8364, Burschwitz 8365, Burschwitz 8366, Burschwitz 8367, Burschwitz 8368, Burschwitz 8369, Burschwitz 8370, Burschwitz 8371, Burschwitz 8372, Burschwitz 8373, Burschwitz 8374, Burschwitz 8375, Burschwitz 8376, Burschwitz 8377, Burschwitz 8378, Burschwitz 8379, Burschwitz 8380, Burschwitz 8381, Burschwitz 8382, Burschwitz 8383, Burschwitz 8384, Burschwitz 8385, Burschwitz 8386, Burschwitz 8387, Burschwitz 8388, Burschwitz 8389, Burschwitz 8390, Burschwitz 8391, Burschwitz 8392, Burschwitz 8393, Burschwitz 8394, Burschwitz 8395, Burschwitz 8396, Burschwitz 8397, Burschwitz 8398, Burschwitz 8399, Burschwitz 8400, Burschwitz 8401, Burschwitz 8402, Burschwitz 8403, Burschwitz 8404, Burschwitz 8405, Burschwitz 8406, Burschwitz 8407, Burschwitz 8408, Burschwitz 8409, Burschwitz 8410, Burschwitz 8411, Burschwitz 8412, Burschwitz 8413, Burschwitz 8414, Burschwitz 8415, Burschwitz 8416, Burschwitz 8417, Burschwitz 8418, Burschwitz 8419, Burschwitz 8420, Burschwitz 8421, Burschwitz 8422, Burschwitz 8423, Burschwitz 8424, Burschwitz 8425, Burschwitz 8426, Burschwitz 8427, Burschwitz 8428, Burschwitz 8429, Burschwitz 8430, Burschwitz 8431, Burschwitz 8432, Burschwitz 8433, Burschwitz 8434, Burschwitz 8435, Burschwitz 8436, Burschwitz 8437, Burschwitz 8438, Burschwitz 8439, Burschwitz 8440, Burschwitz 8441, Burschwitz 8442, Burschwitz 8443, Burschwitz 8444, Burschwitz 8445, Burschwitz 8446, Burschwitz 8447, Burschwitz 8448, Burschwitz 8449, Burschwitz 8450, Burschwitz 8451, Burschwitz 8452, Burschwitz 8453, Burschwitz 8454, Burschwitz 8455, Burschwitz 8456, Burschwitz 8457, Burschwitz 8458, Burschwitz 8459, Burschwitz 8460, Burschwitz 8461, Burschwitz 8462, Burschwitz 8463, Burschwitz 8464, Burschwitz 8465, Burschwitz 8466, Burschwitz 8467, Burschwitz 8468, Burschwitz 8469, Burschwitz 8470, Burschwitz 8471, Burschwitz 8472, Burschwitz 8473, Burschwitz 8474, Burschwitz 8475, Burschwitz 8476, Burschwitz 8477, Burschwitz 8478, Burschwitz 8479, Burschwitz 8480, Burschwitz 8481, Burschwitz 8482, Burschwitz 8483, Burschwitz 8484, Burschwitz 8485, Burschwitz 8486, Burschwitz 8487, Burschwitz 8488, Burschwitz 8489, Burschwitz 8490, Burschwitz 8491, Burschwitz 8492, Burschwitz 8493, Burschwitz 8494, Burschwitz 8495, Burschwitz 8496, Burschwitz 8497, Burschwitz 8498, Burschwitz 8499, Burschwitz 8500, Burschwitz 8501, Burschwitz 8502, Burschwitz 8503, Burschwitz 8504, Burschwitz 8505, Burschwitz 8506, Burschwitz 8507, Burschwitz 8508, Burschwitz 8509, Burschwitz 8510, Burschwitz 8511, Burschwitz 8512, Burschwitz 8513, Burschwitz 8514, Burschwitz 8515, Burschwitz 8516, Burschwitz 8517, Burschwitz 8518, Burschwitz 8519, Burschwitz 8520, Burschwitz 8521, Burschwitz 8522, Burschwitz 8523, Burschwitz 8524, Burschwitz 8525, Burschwitz 8526, Burschwitz 8527, Burschwitz 8528, Burschwitz 8529, Burschwitz 8530, Burschwitz 8531, Burschwitz 8532, Burschwitz 8533, Burschwitz 8534, Burschwitz 8535, Burschwitz 8536, Burschwitz 8537, Burschwitz 8538, Burschwitz 8539, Burschwitz 8540, Burschwitz 8541, Burschwitz 8542, Burschwitz 8543, Burschwitz 8544, Burschwitz 8545, Burschwitz 8546, Burschwitz 8547, Burschwitz 8548, Burschwitz 8549, Burschwitz 8550, Burschwitz 8551, Burschwitz 8552, Burschwitz 8553, Burschwitz 8554, Burschwitz 8555, Burschwitz 8556, Burschwitz 8557, Burschwitz 8558, Burschwitz 8559, Burschwitz 8560, Burschwitz 8561, Burschwitz 8562, Burschwitz 8563, Burschwitz 8564, Burschwitz 8565, Burschwitz 8566, Burschwitz 8567, Burschwitz 8568, Burschwitz 8569, Burschwitz 8570, Burschwitz 8571, Burschwitz 8572, Burschwitz 8573, Burschwitz 8574, Burschwitz 8575, Burschwitz 8576, Burschwitz 8577, Burschwitz 8578, Burschwitz 8579, Burschwitz 8580, Burschwitz 8581, Burschwitz 8582, Burschwitz 8583, Burschwitz 8584, Burschwitz 8585, Burschwitz 8586, Burschwitz 8587, Burschwitz 8588, Burschwitz 8589, Burschwitz 8590, Burschwitz 8591, Burschwitz 8592, Burschwitz 8593, Burschwitz 8594, Burschwitz 8595, Burschwitz 8596, Burschwitz 8597, Burschwitz 8598, Burschwitz 8599, Burschwitz 8600, Burschwitz 8601, Burschwitz 8602, Burschwitz 8603, Burschwitz 8604, Burschwitz 8605, Burschwitz 8606, Burschwitz 8607, Burschwitz 8608, Burschwitz 8609, Burschwitz 8610, Burschwitz 8611, Burschwitz 8612, Burschwitz 8613, Burschwitz 8614, Burschwitz 8615, Burschwitz 8616, Burschwitz 8617, Burschwitz 8618, Burschwitz 8619, Burschwitz 8620, Burschwitz 8621, Burschwitz 8622, Burschwitz 8623, Burschwitz 8624, Burschwitz 8625, Burschwitz 8626, Burschwitz 8627, Burschwitz 8628, Burschwitz 8629, Burschwitz 8630, Burschwitz 8631, Burschwitz 8632, Burschwitz 8633, Burschwitz 8634, Burschwitz 8635, Burschwitz 8636, Burschwitz 8637, Burschwitz 8638, Burschwitz 8639, Burschwitz 8640, Burschwitz 8641, Burschwitz 8642, Burschwitz 8643, Burschwitz 8644, Burschwitz 8645, Burschwitz 8646, Burschwitz 8647, Burschwitz 8648, Burschwitz 8649, Burschwitz 8650, Burschwitz 8651, Burschwitz 8652, Burschwitz 8653, Burschwitz 8654, Burschwitz 8655, Burschwitz 8656, Burschwitz 8657, Burschwitz 8658, Burschwitz 8659, Burschwitz 8660, Burschwitz 8661, Burschwitz 8662, Burschwitz 8663, Burschwitz 8664, Burschwitz 8665, Burschwitz 8666, Burschwitz 8667, Burschwitz 8668, Burschwitz 8669, Burschwitz 8670, Burschwitz 8671, Burschwitz 8672, Burschwitz 8673, Burschwitz 8674, Burschwitz 8675, Burschwitz 8676, Burschwitz 8677, Burschwitz 8678, Burschwitz 8679, Burschwitz 8680, Burschwitz 8681, Burschwitz 8682, Burschwitz 8683, Burschwitz 8684, Burschwitz 8685, Burschwitz 8686, Burschwitz 8687, Burschwitz 8688, Burschwitz 8689, Burschwitz 8690, Burschwitz 8691, Burschwitz 8692, Burschwitz 8693, Burschwitz 8694, Burschwitz 8695, Burschwitz 8696, Burschwitz 8697, Burschwitz 8698, Burschwitz 8699, Burschwitz 8700, Burschwitz 8701, Burschwitz 8702, Burschwitz 8703, Burschwitz 8704, Burschwitz 8705, Burschwitz 8706, Burschwitz 8707, Burschwitz 8708, Burschwitz 8709, Burschwitz 8710, Burschwitz 8711, Burschwitz 8712, Burschwitz 8713, Burschwitz 8714, Burschwitz 8715, Burschwitz 8716, Burschwitz 8717, Burschwitz 8718, Burschwitz 8719, Burschwitz 8720, Burschwitz 8721, Burschwitz 8722, Burschwitz 8723, Burschwitz 8724, Burschwitz 8725, Burschwitz 8726, Burschwitz 8727, Burschwitz 8728, Burschwitz 8729, Burschwitz 8730, Burschwitz 8731, Burschwitz 8732, Burschwitz 8733, Burschwitz 8734, Burschwitz 8735, Burschwitz 8736, Burschwitz 8737, Burschwitz 8738, Burschwitz 8739, Burschwitz 8740, Burschwitz 8741, Burschwitz 8742, Burschwitz 8743, Burschwitz 8744, Burschwitz 8745, Burschwitz 8746, Burschwitz 8747, Burschwitz 8748, Burschwitz 8749, Burschwitz 8750, Burschwitz 8751, Burschwitz 8752, Burschwitz 8753, Burschwitz 8754, Burschwitz 8755, Burschwitz 8756, Burschwitz 8757, Burschwitz 8758, Burschwitz 8759, Burschwitz 8760, Burschwitz 8761, Burschwitz 8762, Burschwitz 8763, Burschwitz 8764, Burschwitz 8765, Burschwitz 8766, Burschwitz 8767, Burschwitz 8768, Burschwitz 8769, Burschwitz 8770, Burschwitz 8771, Burschwitz 8772, Burschwitz 8773, Burschwitz 8774, Burschwitz 8775, Burschwitz 8776, Burschwitz 8777, Burschwitz 8778, Burschwitz 8779, Burschwitz 8780, Burschwitz 8781, Burschwitz 8782, Burschwitz 8783, Burschwitz 8784, Burschwitz 8785, Burschwitz 8786, Burschwitz 8787, Burschwitz 8788, Burschwitz 8789, Burschwitz 8790, Burschwitz 8791, Burschwitz 8792, Burschwitz 8793, Burschwitz 8794, Burschwitz 8795, Burschwitz 8796, Burschwitz 8797, Burschwitz 8798, Burschwitz 8799, Burschwitz 8800, Burschwitz 8801, Burschwitz 8802, Burschwitz 8803, Burschwitz 8804, Burschwitz 8805, Burschwitz 8806, Burschwitz 8807, Burschwitz 8808, Burschwitz 8809, Burschwitz 8810, Burschwitz 8811, Burschwitz 8812, Burschwitz 8813, Burschwitz 8814, Burschwitz 8815, Burschwitz 8816, Burschwitz 8817, Burschwitz 8818, Burschwitz 8819, Burschwitz 8820, Burschwitz 8821, Burschwitz 8822, Burschwitz 8823, Burschwitz 8824, Burschwitz 8825, Burschwitz 8826, Burschwitz 8827, Burschwitz 8828, Burschwitz 8829, Burschwitz 8830, Burschwitz 8831, Burschwitz 8832, Burschwitz 8833, Burschwitz 8834, Burschwitz 8835, Burschwitz 8836, Burschwitz 8837, Burschwitz 8838, Burschwitz 8839, Burschwitz 8840, Burschwitz 8841, Burschwitz 8842, Burschwitz 8843, Burschwitz 8844, Burschwitz 8845, Burschwitz 8846, Burschwitz 8847, Burschwitz 8848, Burschwitz 8849, Burschwitz 8850, Burschwitz 8851, Burschwitz 8852, Burschwitz 8853, Burschwitz 8854, Burschwitz 8855, Burschwitz 8856, Burschwitz 8857, Burschwitz 8858, Burschwitz 8859, Burschwitz 8860, Burschwitz 8861, Burschwitz 8862, Burschwitz 8863, Burschwitz 8864, Burschwitz 8865, Burschwitz 8866, Burschwitz 8867, Burschwitz 8868, Burschwitz 8869, Burschwitz 8870, Burschwitz 8871, Burschwitz 8872, Burschwitz 8873, Burschwitz 8874, Burschwitz 8875, Burschwitz 8876, Burschwitz 8877, Burschwitz 8878, Burschwitz 8879, Burschwitz 8880, Burschwitz 8881, Burschwitz 8882, Burschwitz 8883, Burschwitz 8884, Burschwitz 8885, Burschwitz 8886, Burschwitz 8887, Burschwitz 8888, Burschwitz 8889, Burschwitz 8890, Burschwitz 8891, Burschwitz 8892, Burschwitz 8893, Burschwitz 8894, Burschwitz 8895, Burschwitz 8896, Burschwitz 8897, Burschwitz 8898, Burschwitz 8899, Burschwitz 8900, Burschwitz 8901, Burschwitz 8902, Burschwitz 8903, Burschwitz 8904, Burschwitz 8905, Burschwitz 8906, Burschwitz 8907, Burschwitz 8908, Burschwitz 8909, Burschwitz 8910, Burschwitz 8911, Burschwitz 8912, Burschwitz 8913, Burschwitz 8914, Burschwitz 8915, Burschwitz 8916, Burschwitz 8917, Burschwitz 8918, Burschwitz 8919, Burschwitz 8920, Burschwitz 8921, Burschwitz 8922, Burschwitz 8923, Burschwitz 8924, Burschwitz 8925, Burschwitz 8926, Burschwitz 8927, Burschwitz 8928, Burschwitz 8929, Burschwitz 8930, Burschwitz 8931, Burschwitz 8932, Burschwitz 8933, Burschwitz 8934, Burschwitz 8935, Burschwitz 8936, Burschwitz 8937, Burschwitz 8938, Burschwitz 8939, Burschwitz 8940, Burschwitz 8941, Burschwitz 8942, Burschwitz 8943, Burschwitz 8944, Burschwitz 8945, Burschwitz 8946, Burschwitz 8947, Burschwitz 8948, Burschwitz 8949, Burschwitz 8950, Burschwitz 8951, Burschwitz 8952, Burschwitz 8953, Burschwitz 8954, Burschwitz 8955, Burschwitz 8956, Burschwitz 8957, Burschwitz 8958, Burschwitz 8959, Burschwitz 8960, Burschwitz 8961, Burschwitz 8962, Burschwitz 8963, Burschwitz 8964, Burschwitz 8965, Burschwitz 8966, Burschwitz 8967, Burschwitz 8968, Burschwitz 8969, Burschwitz 8970, Burschwitz 8971, Burschwitz 8972, Burschwitz 8973, Burschwitz 8974, Burschwitz 8975, Burschwitz 8976, Burschwitz 8977, Burschwitz 8978, Burschwitz 8979, Burschwitz 8980, Burschwitz 8981, Burschwitz 8982, Burschwitz 8983, Burschwitz 8984, Burschwitz 8985, Burschwitz 8986, Burschwitz 8987, Burschwitz 8988, Burschwitz 8989, Burschwitz 8990, Burschwitz 8991, Burschwitz 8992, Burschwitz 8993, Burschwitz 8994, Burschwitz 8995, Burschwitz 8996, Burschwitz 8997, Burschwitz 8998, Burschwitz 8999, Burschwitz 8900, Burschwitz 8901, Burschwitz 8902, Burschwitz 8903, Burschwitz 8904, Burschwitz 8905, Burschwitz 8906, Burschwitz 8907, Burschwitz 8908, Burschwitz 8909, Burschwitz 8910, Burschwitz 8911, Burschwitz 8912, Burschwitz 8913, Burschwitz 8914, Burschwitz 8915, Burschwitz 8916, Burschwitz 8917, Burschwitz 8918, Burschwitz 8919, Burschwitz 8920, Burschwitz 8921, Burschwitz 8922, Burschwitz 8923, Burschwitz 8924, Burschwitz 8925, Burschwitz 8926, Burschwitz 8927, Burschwitz 8928, Burschwitz 8929, Burschwitz 8930, Burschwitz 8931, Burschwitz 8932, Burschwitz 8933, Burschwitz 8934, Burschwitz 8935, Burschwitz 8936, Burschwitz 8937, Burschwitz 8938, Burschwitz 8939, Burschwitz 8940, Burschwitz 8941, Burschwitz 8942, Burschwitz 8943, Burschwitz 8944, Burschwitz 8945, Burschwitz 8946, Burschwitz 8947, Burschwitz 8948, Burschwitz 8949, Burschwitz 8950, Burschwitz 8951, Burschwitz 8952, Burschwitz 8953, Burschwitz 8954, Burschwitz 8955, Burschwitz 8956, Burschwitz 8957, Burschwitz 8958, Burschwitz 8959, Burschwitz 8960, Burschwitz 8961, Burschwitz 8962, Burschwitz 8963, Burschwitz 8964, Burschwitz 8965, Burschwitz 8966, Burschwitz 8967, Burschwitz 8968, Burschwitz 8969, Burschwitz 8970, Burschwitz 8971, Burschwitz 8972, Burschwitz 8973, Burschwitz 8974, Burschwitz 8975, Burschwitz 8976, Burschwitz 8977, Burschwitz 8978, Burschwitz 8979, Burschwitz 8980, Burschwitz 8981, Burschwitz 8982, Burschwitz 8983, Burschwitz 8984, Burschwitz 8985, Burschwitz 8986, Burschwitz 8987, Burschwitz 8988, Burschwitz 8989, Burschwitz 8990, Burschwitz 8991, Burschwitz 8992, Burschwitz 8993, Burschwitz 8994, Burschwitz 8995, Burschwitz 8996, Burschwitz 8997, Burschwitz 8998, Burschwitz 8999, Burschwitz 8900, Burschwitz 8901, Burschwitz 8902, Burschwitz 8903, Burschwitz 8904, Burschwitz 8905, Burschwitz 8906, Burschwitz 8907, Burschwitz 8908, Burschwitz 8909, Burschwitz 8910, Burschwitz 8911, Burschwitz 8912, Burschwitz 8913, Burschwitz 8914, Burschwitz 8915, Burschwitz 8916, Burschwitz 8917, Burschwitz 8918, Burschwitz 8919, Burschwitz 8920, Burschwitz 8921, Burschwitz 8922, Burschwitz 8923, Burschwitz 8924, Burschwitz 8925, Burschwitz 8926, Burschwitz 8927, Burschwitz 8928, Burschwitz 8929, Burschwitz 8930, Burschwitz 8931, Burschwitz 8932, Burschwitz 8933, Burschwitz 8934, Burschwitz 8935, Burschwitz 8936, Burschwitz 8937, Burschwitz 8938, Burschwitz 8939, Burschwitz 8940, Burschwitz 8941, Burschwitz 8942, Burschwitz 8943, Burschwitz 8944, Burschwitz 8945, Burschwitz 8946, Burschwitz 8947, Burschwitz 8948, Burschwitz 8949, Burschwitz 8950, Burschwitz 8951, Burschwitz 8952, Burschwitz 8953, Burschwitz 8954, Burschwitz 8955, Burschwitz 8956, Burschwitz 8957, Burschwitz 8958, Burschwitz 8959, Burschwitz 8960, Burschwitz 8961, Burschwitz 8962, Burschwitz 8963, Burschwitz 8964, Burschwitz 8965, Burschwitz 8966, Burschwitz 8967, Burschwitz 8968, Burschwitz 8969, Burschwitz 8970, Burschwitz 8971, Burschwitz 8972, Burschwitz 8973, Burschwitz 8974, Burschwitz 8975, Burschwitz 8976, Burschwitz 8977, Burschwitz 8978, Burschwitz 8979, Burschwitz 8980, Burschwitz 8981, Burschwitz 8982, Burschwitz 8983, Burschwitz 8984, Burschwitz 8985, Burschwitz 8986, Burschwitz 8987, Burschwitz 8988, Burschwitz 8989, Burschwitz 8990, Burschwitz 8991, Burschwitz 8992, Burschwitz 8993, Burschwitz 8994, Burschwitz 8995, Burschwitz 8996, Burschwitz 8997, Burschwitz 8998, Burschwitz 8999, Burschwitz 8900, Burschwitz 8901, Burschwitz 8902, Burschwitz 8903, Burschwitz 8904, Burschwitz 8905, Burschwitz 8906, Burschwitz 8907, Burschwitz 8908, Burschwitz 8909, Burschwitz 8910, Burschwitz 8911, Burschwitz 8912, Burschwitz 8913, Burschwitz 8914, Burschwitz 8915, Burschwitz 8916, Burschwitz 8917, Burschwitz 8918, Burschwitz 8919, Burschwitz 8920, Burschwitz 8921, Burschwitz 8922, Burschwitz 8923, Burschwitz 8924, Burschwitz 8925, Burschwitz 8926, Burschwitz 8927, Burschwitz 8928, Burschwitz 8929, Burschwitz 8930, Burschwitz 8931, Burschwitz 8932, Burschwitz 8933, Burschwitz 8934, Burschwitz 8935, Burschwitz 8936, Burschwitz 8937, Burschwitz 8938, Burschwitz 8939, Burschwitz 8940, Burschwitz 8941, Burschwitz 8942, Burschwitz 8943, Burschwitz 8944, Burschwitz 8945, Burschwitz 8946, Burschwitz 8947, Burschwitz 8948, Burschwitz 8949, Burschwitz 8950, Burschwitz 8951, Burschwitz 8952, Burschwitz 8953, Burschwitz 8954, Burschwitz 8955, Burschwitz 8956, Burschwitz 8957, Burschwitz 8958, Burschwitz 8959, Burschwitz 8960, Burschwitz 8961, Burschwitz 8962, Burschwitz 8963, Burschwitz 8964, Burschwitz 8965, Burschwitz 8966, Burschwitz 8967, Burschwitz 8968, Burschwitz 8969, Burschwitz 8970, Burschwitz 8971, Burschwitz 8972, Burschwitz 8973, Burschwitz 8974, Burschwitz 8975, Burschwitz 8976, Burschwitz 8977, Burschwitz 8978, Burschwitz 8979, Burschwitz 8980, Burschwitz 8981, Burschwitz 8982, Burschwitz 8983, Burschwitz 8984, Burschwitz 8985, Burschwitz 8986, Burschwitz 8987, Burschwitz 8988, Burschwitz 8989, Burschwitz 8990, Burschwitz 8991, Burschwitz 8992, Burschwitz 8993, Burschwitz 8994, Burschwitz 8995, Burschwitz 8996, Burschwitz 8997, Burschwitz 8998, Burschwitz 8999, Burschwitz 8900, Burschwitz 8901, Burschwitz 8902, Burschwitz 8903, Burschwitz 8904, Burschwitz 8905, Burschwitz 8906, Burschwitz 8907, Burschwitz 8908, Burschwitz 8909, Burschwitz 8910, Burschwitz 8911, Burschwitz 8912, Burschwitz 8913, Burschwitz 8914, Burschwitz 8915, Burschwitz 8916, Burschwitz 8917, Burschwitz 8918, Burschwitz
100 Food LTD, 4 Dr. Ht. P-B, S-P. A-C, nearly
843-1818 at 6:00 p.m. II-12
10-7
2 Nathan Hall contracts for Spring arrest
841-3734 or 842-5290 to send illicit
841-3734 or 842-5290 to send illicit
1987 Cullins S. Power brakes, power steering air, and in very good condition. Calls Jeff Jones and is in very good condition. Calls Jeff Jones
190 WV Sdon. A4, tpd. yellow, AM radio, good tires 1255, Carson Motor Mart. 1518 W. 38'R.
1988 Open Railway Kadet, reel 4, qud. full instrument. WWW.GS.BOX.TECH.NUF.
=905, Campus Mobile Makt. 118 W.232 W.247 W.260 W.278 W.288 W.296 W.304 W.312 W.320 W.328 W.336 W.344 W.352 W.360 W.368 W.376 W.384 W.392 W.400 W.408 W.416 W.424 W.432 W.440 W.448 W.456 W.464 W.472 W.480 W.488 W.496 W.504 W.512 W.520 W.528 W.536 W.544 W.552 W.560 W.568 W.576 W.584 W.592 W.600 W.608 W.616 W.624 W.632 W.640 W.648 W.656 W.664 W.672 W.680 W.688 W.696 W.704 W.712 W.720 W.728 W.736 W.744 W.752 W.760 W.768 W.776 W.784 W.792 W.800 W.808 W.816 W.824 W.832 W.840 W.848 W.856 W.864 W.872 W.880 W.888 W.896 W.904 W.912 W.920 W.928 W.936 W.944 W.952 W.960 W.968 W.976 W.984 W.992 W.1000
Bogen T-35 encharger with 50mm / 1.75 Vox lens
Christmas gift. Christmas card.
Call 811-279-3000 at 3:00 p.m.
JUWK—110 lb weight set. Make Old offer photo
JUWK—110 lb weight set. Make Old offer photo
Vx Vox combo organ $25.84 -82/9783
Vx Vox combo organ $25.84 -82/9783
166 Chev Impala 2 door htd kit, Good condition,
169 Chrysler Imperial 2 door htd Kit, Astra
Airport thru Monday, 34th January - 81-253
Chevy Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19107
105 Ford; Mustang, V8, auto, red. ready to go.
Only 755 Campus Motor M8, W2d. 12wk. 12sR4
Northside Shop, 707 N. 2nd on Highway 12. Art gallery on highway bridge. Arts collection, collectables used furniture, and sand of other items. Also, we have fruits and fruits. Open 9-5 every days. 843-7158. Herb Allenbard.
Naismith Hall contract for sale for spring semester.
Call 843-0125, Rich 12-8
Two metal studded Goodyear polylaser tires
two metal studded Goodyear polylaser tires
Like new Like new DIEH 823-933
$60 Evening $423-933
$BsI \text{ boo} - LeTapePru. Ladies size 8'1/4M. Excel-
tion tape for ladies only one meter long.
BsI-844-001) after 4.30.
TEAC 4200 tape recorder or deck. Automatic retransmission. No built-in recorder. 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$2850,950; $2855,950; $2860,950; $2865,950; $2870,950; $2875,950; $2880,950; $2885,950; $2890,950; $2895,950; $2900,950; $2905,950; $2910,950; $2915,950; $2920,950; $2925,950; $2930,950; $2935,950; $2940,950; $2945,950; $2950,950; $2955,950; $2960,950; $2965,950; $2970,950; $2975,950; $2980,950; $2985,950; $2990,950; $2995,950; $3000,950; $3005,950; $3010,950; $3015,950; $3020,950; $3025,950; $3030,950; $3035,950; $3040,950; $3045,950; $3050,950; $3055,950; $3060,950; $3065,950; $3070,950; $3075,950; $3080,950; $3085,950; $3090,950; $3095,950; $3100,950; $3105,950; $3110,950; $3115,950; $3120,950; $3125,950; $3130,950; $3135,950; $3140,950; $3145,950; $3150,950; $3155,950; $3160,950; $3165,950; $3170,950; $3175,950; $3180,950; $3185,950; $3190,950; $3195,950; $3200,950; $3205,950; $3210,950; $3215,950; $3220,950; $3225,950; $3230,950; $3235,950; $3240,950; $3245,950; $3250,950; $3255,950; $3260,950; $3265,950; $3270,950; $3275,950; $3280,950; $3285,950; $3290,950; $3295,950; $3300,950; $3305,950; $3310,950; $3315,950; $3320,950; $3325,950; $3330,950; $3335,950; $3340,950; $3345,950; $3350,950; $3355,950; $3360,950; $3365,950; $3370,950; $3375,950; $3380,950; $3385,950; $3390,950; $3395,950; $3400,950; $3405,950; $3410,950; $3415,950; $3420,950; $3425,950; $3430,950; $3435,950; $3440,950; $3445,950; $3450,950; $3455,950; $3460,950; $3465,950; $3470,950; $3475,950; $3480,950; $3485,950; $3490,950; $3495,950; $3500,950; $3505,950; $3510,950; $3515,950; $3520,950; $3525,950; $3530,950; $3535,950; $3540,950; $3545,950; $3550,950; $3555,950; $3560,950; $3565,950; $3570,950; $3575,950; $3580,950; $3585,950; $3590,950; $3595,950; $3600,950; $3605,950; $3610,950; $3615,950; $3620,950; $3625,950; $3630,950; $3635,950; $3640,950; $3645,950; $3650,950; $3655,950; $3660,950; $3665,950; $3670,950; $3675,950; $3680,950; $3685,950; $3690,950; $3695,950; $3700,950; $3705,950; $3710,950; $3715,950; $3720,950; $3725,950; $3730,950; $3735,950; $3740,950; $3745,950; $3750,950; $3755,950; $3760,950; $3765,950; $3770,950; $3775,950; $3780,950; $3785,950; $3790,950; $3795,950; $3800,950; $3805,950; $3810,950; $3815,950; $3820,950; $3825,950; $3830,950; $3835,950; $3840,950; $3845,950; $3850,950; $3855,950; $3860,950; $3865,950; $3870,950; $3875,950; $3880,950; $3885,950; $3890,950; $3895,950; $3900,950; $3905,950; $3910,950; $3915,950; $3920,950; $3925,950; $3930,950; $3935,950; $3940,950; $3945,950; $3950,950; $3955,950; $3960,950; $3965,950; $3970,950; $3975,950; $3980,950; $3985,950; $3990,950; $3995,950; $4000,950; $4005,950; $4010,950; $4015,950; $4020,950; $4025,950; $4030,950; $4035,950; $4040,950; $4045,950; $4050,950; $4055,950; $4060,950; $4065,950; $4070,950; $4075,950; $4080,950; $4085,950; $4090,950; $4095,950; $4100,950; $4105,950; $4110,950; $4115,950; $4120,950; $4125,950; $4130,950; $4135,950; $4140,950; $4145,950; $4150,950; $4155,950; $4160,950; $4165,950; $4170,950; $4175,950; $4180,950; $4185,950; $4190,950; $4195,950; $4200,950; $4205,950; $4210,950; $4215,950; $4220,950; $4225,950; $4230,950; $4235,950; $4240,950; $4245,950; $4250,950; $4255,950; $4260,950; $4265,950; $4270,950; $4275,950; $4280,950; $4285,950; $4290,950; $4295,950; $4300,950; $4305,950; $4310,950; $4315,950; $4320,950; $4325,950; $4330,950; $4335,950; $4340,950; $4345,950; $4350,950; $4355,950; $4360,950; $4365,950; $4370,950; $4375,950; $4380,950; $4385,950; $4390,950; $4395,950; $4400,950; $4405,950; $4410,950; $4415,950; $4420,950; $4425,950; $4430,950; $4435,950; $4440,950; $4445,950; $4450,950; $4455,950; $4460,950; $4465,950; $4470,950; $4475,950; $4480,950; $4485,950; $4490,950; $4495,950; $4500,950; $4505,950; $4510,950; $4515,950; $4520,950; $4525,950; $4530,950; $4535,950; $4540,950; $4545,950; $4550,950; $4555,950; $4560,950; $4565,950; $4570,950; $4575,950; $4580,950; $4585,950; $4590,950; $4595,950; $4600,950; $4605,950; $4610,950; $4615,950; $4620,950; $4625,950; $4630,950; $4635,950; $4640,950; $4645,950; $4650,950; $4655,950; $4660,950; $4665,950; $4670,950; $4675,950; $4680,950; $4685,950; $4690,950; $4695,950; $4700,950; $4705,950; $4710,950; $4715,950; $4720,950; $4725,950; $4730,950; $4735,950; $4740,950; $4745,950; $4750,950; $4755,950; $4760,950; $4765,950; $4770,950; $4775,950; $4780,950; $4785,950; $4790,950; $4795,950; $4800,950; $4805,950; $4810,950; $4815,950; $4820,950; $4825,950; $4830,950; $4835,950; $4840,950; $4845,950; $4850,950; $4855,950; $4860,950; $4865,950; $4870,950; $4875,950; $4880,950; $4885,950; $4890,950; $4895,950; $4900,950; $4905,950; $4910,950; $4915,950; $4920,950; $4925,950; $4930,950; $4935,950; $4940,950; $4945,950; $4950,950; $4955,950; $4960,950; $4965,950; $4970,950; $4975,950; $4980,950; $4985,950; $4990,950; $4995,950; $5000,950; $5005,950; $5010,950; $5015,950; $5020,950; $5025,950; $5030,950; $5035,950; $5040,950; $5045,950; $5050,950; $5055,950; $5060,950; $5065,950; $5070,950; $5075,950; $5080,950; $5085,950; $5090,950; $5095,950; $5100,950; $5105,950; $5110,950; $5115,950; $5120,950; $5125,950; $5130,950; $5135,950; $5140,950; $5145,950; $5150,950; $5155,950; $5160,950; $5165,950; $5170,950; $5175,950; $5180,950; $5185,950; $5190,950; $5195,950; $5200,950; $5205,950; $5210,950; $5215,950; $5220,950; $5225,950; $5230,950; $5235,950; $5240,950; $5245,950; $5250,950; $5255,950; $5260,950; $5265,950; $5270,950; $5275,950; $5280,950; $5285,950; $5290,950; $5295,950; $5300,950; $5305,950; $5310,950; $5315,950; $5320,950; $5325,950; $5330,950; $5335,950; $5340,950; $5345,950; $5350,950; $5355,950; $5360,950; $5365,950; $5370,950; $5375,950; $5380,950; $5385,950; $5390,950; $5395,950; $5400,950; $5405,950; $5410,950; $5415,950; $5420,950; $5425,950; $5430,950; $5435,950; $5440,950; $5445,950; $5450,950; $5455,950; $5460,950; $5465,950; $5470,950; $5475,950; $5480,950; $5485,950; $5490,950; $5495,950; $5495,950; $5499
Microphones-2 - Electro-Voice model 621 mules
Microphones-3 - Electro-Voice model 718 mules
$0.30 takes with case, with case 5-9783
$2.49 takes with case, with case 5-9783
30" bikes three speed bike. $20 will buy. Needs
harness. Must be in mountain biking clothing. Call after
8:43-6:24 Must pass.
Sony stereo cassette recorder. Non-patentable. Compatible with Sony VCRs. Retail price will for $75. Battery 648-910-610.
"Graig," stereo tape player-player "b50" or best see. Offer at 234 Wintersbrook. 841-368-100, 12-7
1989 & 1990 MICC TO Lift milkage and perfuse body 3180
1991 & 1992 MICC TO lift milkage and perfuse body 3180
1993 & 1994 MICC TO lift milkage and perfuse body 3180
1995 & 1996 MICC TO lift milkage and perfuse body 3180
French-made (Pengent) ex condition $100 or
french见. See at 2448 Winterbrook or 841-368-5088
Stereo Equipment. Marantz 220T receiver with cover and base with cover. Mirave with cover and base with Shure V13. Receiver with Retilier III Low Boys speaker, ARAX speakers, Alph 203 speakers, Inquire at 843-1572.
For sale or trade, 86 Opel Rally Caddett. Looks
like a large red Rally car. 12-12
or Triumph and give boot. 842-243-12
12-12
1953 Chevy Impala 4 d hr H, VT8. VS Pb, PAir,
Good condition, $200 or best offer, B4-1234, 12-136
Good condition, $200 or best offer, B4-1234, 12-136
BOOTS—We are closing out men's Aeime and
Boots. Price $19.90 and $19.90. Sizes 6 to 13
in height, 45 to 52 in width.
Must sell immediately! 1962 Chevy Belt-Air 4-dr
shocks 300cc, 845-700 Cylin Belt-Air, prefares
shocks 300cc, 845-700 Cylin Belt-Air.
Winchester model 101 20 gauge shotgun, Impe-
rimented by Wheeler and Tilson. Excellent
3/4" rifle for hunting or target shooting. Excelent
target gun for both hunting and target shooting.
Call Mike Malherbe 516-782-4964.
1899 Great Lakes mobile home 12' x 10' , 65' aspect,
located on a corner lot. 1st Ft. Gosnell Village
launched an airplane at 1st Ft. Gosnell Village
launching an airplane at 1st Ft. Gosnell Village
1. Set of snow tires with each vehicle sold during this week's "Get Acquainted Sale" from 2-4-72 to 12-8-72.
CAMPUS MOTOR MART
GET ACQUAINTED SALE
1970 Toyota sedan, 4 spd, lite blue, in top
shape, ready for winter $1.195
1969 VW Bus, 8 pass., AM radio, don't miss $1295
town
1668 Mustang hardtop, V8, auto, A-C, power steering, top shape $1495
1965 Bulck Skyjark conv. Full power, A-C
auto, maroon with immaculate white
dots.
AM radio, don't miss this sale, only
1969 Chev Alk 4-dr sedan metallic
CAMPUS MOTOR MART
1518 W. 23rd 842-3903
WSW tires, ready for winter. $1285
1065 Mustard bedside shoes. AU $1285
shape, ready for winter ... $1.195
1970 VW Sedan, automatic, AM radio, rear
defoggers, pop-out windows, newest in
defoggers, pop-out windows, newest in town $1255
1965 Dart 2 dr. sedan, 6 cyl, 3 spd. Economy unlimited $49
(Don't forget the Free Snow Tires)
EXTRA CHAPE1 Al Onevare classical guitar, one bass guitar, 6 string, one also sax. MODEL: MASTER II. MAINTENANCE: 12 - spaperies apiece. All items will be sold at a rate of $10 over the $1 price. 843-6420. 12-12
71 Datum 2012, Silver with black int., AC, mag,
18.00 miles, 842-3891, 12-12
1965 Ford Econoline van. Very good condition, built on untested parts and mechanically and overall fit on the engine.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
NEEED A PLACE TO LIVE? Tat Nswimn Hall.
SKIS-HURRY! Get them for Christmas. Rosie-
Hawkins: 12:30 pm; Billy Hunt: 12:12
christmas at 3:30 p.m. 841-356-3000
Irish Sister, male, 11 weeks old, AKC, kids,
Great Christmas gift. 841-2248. 12-8
Peninsula AM FM stereo cassette recorder. Features AM/FM stereo recording, and ability to record level settings and ability to record from a remote location.
Pre-Christmas sale on all dress and gowns (10% off). Sale includes a pre-washed, leather goods毛衣、铂丝礼服、Bolokmom 皮革鞋套、贝爷礼服、Bolokmom 皮革鞋套。
Cheap Charlie discount leather galore-Wonders
at the Charlotte Jackets and sports jackets. All new
and sport jackets, tazers and backpacks from $59.99.
Daryland Christmas tree lot, 443-2506. Douglas
colors and designs of location at 1819 W. Ave.
colorful and nicely lit.
Four VW Bug Pirillei radial tires. $78—were $170
These are American racing tires and give better traction than snow tires—best for all driving.
For all other weather conditions, installed and installed. #824-649. 12-11
1914 Honda scouter. Very good condition, never
used. 2008 Honda sr. 500. Very good condition, never
used. 3, 500, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22,
24, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94, 96, 98, 100, 102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116, 118, 120, 122, 124, 126, 128, 130, 132, 134, 136, 138, 140, 142, 144, 146, 148, 150, 152, 154, 156, 158, 160, 162, 164, 166, 168, 170, 172, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 192, 194, 196, 198, 200, 202, 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, 214, 216, 218, 220, 222, 224, 226, 228, 230, 232, 234, 236, 238, 240, 242, 244, 246, 248, 250, 252, 254, 256, 258, 260, 262, 264, 266, 268, 270, 272, 274, 276, 278, 280, 282, 284, 286, 288, 290, 292, 294, 296, 298, 300, 302, 304, 306, 308, 310, 312, 314, 316, 318, 320, 322, 324, 326, 328, 330, 332, 334, 336, 338, 340, 342, 344, 346, 348, 350, 352, 354, 356, 358, 360, 362, 364, 366, 368, 370, 372, 374, 376, 378, 380, 382, 384, 386, 388, 390, 392, 394, 396, 398, 400, 402, 404, 406, 408, 410, 412, 414, 416, 418, 420, 422, 424, 426, 428, 430, 432, 434, 436, 438, 440, 442, 444, 446, 448, 450, 452, 454, 456, 458, 460, 462, 464, 466, 468, 470, 472, 474, 476, 478, 480, 482, 484, 486, 488, 490, 492, 494, 496, 498, 500, 502, 504, 506, 508, 510, 512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528, 530, 532, 534,
Maint set! 44 handler automatic. Brand new baskets,
running condition $50 or best offer. 841-726-9188
71 Yahama 350 for $350 two helmets extra. If interested, call 864-671-11
12-11
FOR RENT
For rent to 4 responsible girls, Available Dec. 1.
Complete 2nd story 4 bedroom furnished apart-
ment with kitchen and town $35 per month plus utilities. Furnished 5 n 9pm, and all days Saturday and Sunday. At 927 Ohio
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
BASEMENTS IN PARKING IN FAR-LONG LOTS?
Tap a 2-bedroom apartment from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Cabin accommodations available. Rates on furnished, furniture available; ideal roommates. Suite: Saints Apte, 1123 Ind. Apt 9 or apt 843-211-69
TRAILRIDGE 1. 1'1; and 2 bedroom apart-
ment with hardwood floors, custom
equipped, private patio, balconies,
furnished master suite, tile flooring.
BRITTLE 1. 1'1; and 2 bedroom apart-
ment with hardwood floors, custom
equipped, private patio, balconies,
furnished master suite, tile flooring.
Studio eight—rooms with a view, $62.50. Every
paid, no账. 1329 W. 12th. 9-12.
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Parking space. Street parking, borders KU and near town street.
Homes for rent, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more than welcome. 843-360-1111. (1)
Looking for something to rent? Contact 727-7377 for 2 contact BR duplexes or 1-3 BR apartments in a month. All are available for immediate occupancy. After hours call Grace Strong 842-7851.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now located in dorm rooms, furnished and unfurnished apts for rental. Hot water heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities included. Call 843-8250 or see at 719. Wt. 19th, wk 3p.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
than in most places, think possible in three beautiful apartments, just as in the town. Shop in shopping and school--Fraer Hall is only one where to enjoy the spa, play well inside the house on the cafe, plan your visit to a holiday place on a cold winter night. The Mall is now a multi-purpose building with nine nifed apartments, are available. Come see us at 1533 East 87th Street.
Join the Ridges Community and you'll find more of what you'll love. Tickets to lots more West Lawrence, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. (350) 478-6282.
Most substrate 2nd monitor 1 bdpr, apt. carpeted,
air conditioned, not expensive. Cost air conditioned, not expensive. Cost air conditioned, not expensive.
Must rent two bfbm-2: bath apt. fully carpeted.
Must rent one bfbm-1: unfurnished. Lease begins January 1, 1973. Please contact us at (504) 682-3900.
Need to sublease one bedroom apartment at Ariadne, 25th floor. Rent is $1,800 per month with nice view, good KU blessing. All unit occupancy with nice view. G
MUST NULLEASE FOR SECOND KEMSTERM
niche view utilities paid We will take a
Unique & exciting
All artfully furnished
Hug carpet & drapes
All electric kitchens
All permanent bed beds
Built in desk & study walls
Luminaires in all buildings
Free Cable TV - pest control - trash pick up
MEADOWBROOK
24 One Bedrooms
$160 - $170.
Pure air spaces
Wild air spaces
Walk-in swim
standardized
Softball areas
Gym grounds
grounds
Day Center Campus & pre-school
Day Center Grounds
84 Studios
$140 - $145 - $150.
70 Acre
Beautiful, unfurred 2 bedrooms. apartment in Beautiful, unfurred 3 bedrooms. apartment in Beautiful, unfurred 4 bedrooms. apartment in Beautiful, unfurred 5 bedrooms.
3396. 12-7
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare
& make your move to
No Traffic fumes or noise
15th & Creatline 842-4200
800 feet, west of 15th & Iowa
PER. FOR RENT: 9th and 10th Enery, bedroom furniture, bedding, furnishings, office supplies. Christmas. Call 841-3269 after 5. 12-12
Apartment for rent One block from Union. Subway is available Jan. 14, furnished 811-296-0614.
ROOMS. Available end of Dec for 2nd graders
and beginning of Jan for 3rd graders
students only. 8423 after 72, or 844, 8723, 12-11
or 12-14.
800 feet west of 15th & Iowa 12-12
Must rent duplex for second semester. It has a kitchen, living room downstairs and three bedroom upstairs. Fluffy air conditioned, quiet, full of natural light. It interested 841-3290 or 841-9603.
Apt. for rent 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, large kitchen,
warm living room. Shag carpet and carpeted
heat. Call 841-217-3500.
2 bedroom apt. dishwasher, util, paid except
else. Close to campus. Furn. $788/maj. 814-300-865
or call (814) 958-8650.
ATTENTION AFT AVAILABLE NOW—NO
ALLOWANCE
AEROPLANE
AEC electric kitchen, good point,
good gas mileage.
ATV electric skiing.
Apartment for rent. Two bedrooms, large new
furnished apt. 280 sqft. Parking area.
924 New Hampshire, 822-6024. 12-12
2 Bedroom unit in 4 park, to sublease. Reasonable
price for a 3-bedroom unit in the same building.
864-8188-M30 and 3.50 lak. TR 3 & 4 and lake.
864-8188-M30 and 3.50 lak. TR 3 & 4 and lake.
SUBLEASE-large 3 bedroom, 1 bath apartment
(Sales fee applies) AC furnished, available
AC furnished, available AJ. Quitting
after 5 years.
FREET! must post mott deposit of 2 x blem. to
FREET! must post mott deposit of 2 x blem.
abside spring semester contract. Call 843-7377.
Need to have a fully furnished 2 bedroom hotell
need to have a fully furnished 2 bedroom hotell
paid porton (pay your leave) this service
will pay you for the porton period.
Nicely furnished home available January 1, month of sale. Free land and apartment adjacent to company with range and extensive garden facilities. Call us at (800) 653-9722.
Take over contract for 2nd semester. Beautiful 2 bdm, 1 bath, spacious apt, in quiet 8 plur. www.sharw tap室, fireplace, complete kitchen, E124 690 Morningside Dr., 12-12 834-952-09.
HAPPINESS is living with friends in an establishment that accepts payments from $5. Ask for Bid #82. Room and board at $45. Ask for Bid #82. Room and board at $45.
Shoring rooms. Furnished with or without cook-
ing equipment. Available for KU and Ku-
TU, and no pets. Nets 845-3767 12-12
Agir for rent, start Jan 1 for spring semester.
Accept phone calls to submit resume.
chemical engineering student. Phone and deposit
payment on deposit.
Contact us at:
800-326-5720.
Furnished room with refrigerator, double bed,
bedside chair, desk, bookshelf. Student-filled course: Call NB at 825-304-1000.
Move in now Pay no rent till January 2-3 bedrooms completely furnished, compartment, air-conditioned, lovely surroundings. A fun new way to live for you. Pay $40 per room each in groups of 4. 843-3800.
Two bedroom apartment in the Jayhawk Tower. Deposit is already paid. For information call (212) 537-8049.
Partly furnished 3 room apt. 1132 Tennessee. 12-11
Available Jan. 1 thru Jan. 20 at University Ter-
ranean apartments, furnished. Lease until May 31.
Available apts. Large kitchen and living room, 1st, 2nd,
3rd, 4th floors. W/842-349-8340 or vem see vm at W28h 9th. W
CLOVEN HALF 2. BEDBODM APT, FOR 3 Dwr.
JAMES HALF 4. BEDBODM APT, FOR 2 Dwr.
JACKSON JOWERS' JOWERS - CENTRAL PARK
MERLAND KAPLAN - CENTRAL PARK
Apartment for rent. Spacios furnished 1 bedroom. Open air balcony, carpeted, air conditioned, off street parking. All utilities except electricity Ready. Immediately 152 Kentucky. K843-7254
Mature female room to share a 3-bed house.
Mature male room to share a 2-bed house.
845-6266 evening $ 80 plus 5% 1'iff.
845-6266 evening $ 80 plus 5% 1'iff.
WANTED
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment
for you. There will be a Wednesday night jam session. All these interested
parties are welcome.
Female roommate wanted to wait with 2.0 pH for a chemical spill. Formal laundry room, furnished, pool. Call 812-396-4555.
Advertisement and amorous types to try our new
designs at the Hopper event. We delight in
delightful the series at the Hopper Hotel
Hopper.
Rosemary nominate wanted to share Jiahawk Town-
ing and great living. Any questions call Dale at
1-800-253-6479.
Mature journalism student need furnished bachelor's
degree in Journalism or related field.
W. Hirshlub, P.B. 108, Hall 682, Kaiserburg,
Kansas City, KS 65223.
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67/month
for 2nd semester. Call 843-8619 12-12
CSC
TOYOTA 140MMH
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Band for High School Christmas sem-formal.
Band for College Caller and call operator
for Vivint 12-39 after 12 p.m.
Need one or two girls second semester at Jay-
学院. 432-567-8080, 433-567-8081,
433-567-8082 or come by CSAJ, Jayhawk School, 12-8
Sunday from 9:30 to 10:30.
Joe is getting married! Need someone to take his place. We'll try to make sure this doesn't happen to you. Park 25 Apartment. $45 plus utilities, furnished, two bedrooms, two bath. Bike 814-2748.
小,uffy, puppy puppy for Christmas preschool. Prefer already house broken. Call 841-2844. 12-8
Country western acoustical guitar in near new
call. Durable 841-723 after 7 p.m.
12-8
Depersonely need a female runmate(s) for a man. If at all interested please call 841-252-1278. If at all interested please call 841-252-1278.
Need 1 to 2 male mammals to share house $50-
$60 per month (nightly, daytime,
(day) or $83-787 (evenings) for Ron. In 12-
months
Female to take over my contract at Jawahar
"owners Call Emily. 841-2817
12-12
Person interested in the arts wanted to share
information from apt. male or female pupils 12-18
432-4579
Need 2 or more people to take over Jawwahzer
and move the computer. Call 817-549-3100 for further information.
12-12
2 female grad students need roommate immedi-
ately 2 bedroom apartment 5 plus utilities
843-929
WANTED: More courses included in FEEDBACK. Urge your instructions to participate! 12-8
Towers. Call Enmail. 841-2817 12-12
house near New needs female roommates
house Friendly atmosphere and reasonable rent. Air conditioning, dishwasher, 841-2923 12-11
841-2923 12-11
2 Junior girls need 3 small chicks to share. 2
Junior girls need 4 small chicks to share.
washes $5 a month, Available now 845-7978.
One studious male roommate needs next for next semester. Take Squared Square to campus, quiet, wifi furnished, room, spacious room, AC, balcony overlays Call 833-7600 Rent $75 a month plus 12-11 Call 833-7600
Need one girl to live in a 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Call us at (800) 456-7342 and view of campus, convenient kitchen
NOTICE
500 E.23rd
Lawrence Auction House - Sell your household
household items for reconfiguration info 813-705-6960.
For reconfiguration info call 813-705-6960.
For Pree Birth Control Information for preg-
nancy, visit www.preebirthcare.org.
Women Center: 864-4541. If no answer call KU
773-298-0000.
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUK
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, B-Ar-B in Quincy or Columbus. A slab to eat here $40. Large rib plate $60. A slab to eat here $60. Large rib plate $60. Beef sandwich $85. Bound beef $30. by chicken b
Students Have your Xmas keg party at Dungeon 158 on Monday, Dec. 26. They will mike from the campus in Perry, Kansai, 12-12 on Wednesday.
Choice hotter beef Aged and gourmet Sides:
Wholesale Meats, 13rd bd. Iowas 12-13; 12-13
Whole sale Meats, 13rd bd. Iowaans 12-13
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of gifts
from $6. Down come and visit with us
W-9b, W-10b, W-12b
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas tree. Choose and cut your own Christmas tree. Bring it with our hand-painted ornaments. Bring it with our hand-painted ornaments. Bring it with our hand-painted ornaments. Lawnies on hardwood highway 10, 4 miles to county Fairview. Walks on Hardwood highway 10, 4 miles to county Fairview. We will open garden weekend between Christmas 5-13.
TYPING
Experienced tytisk will type term papers, trees,
programs, and diagrams. Fax resume to 843-3385.
Afterwards, or visit Org. 843-3385.
SAMURAI
Dadali Japa Deva of Ananda Marga Yoga Society
will speak and give instruction on meditation.
He will be teaching at the Buddhist Center.
A complete selection of Parker Brothers and Milton Bradley including Risk, Monopoly, Ouila, Sawel, Swift, Clue, Scrabble, Agravation, many mary can be had at the Hillcrest Duckwalls.
Fast, accurate weight on carbon ribbon type-
less material. Reasonable Weight Cases. 12-18
4558 or 84-473-7458
Experienced in typing these, distortions, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Idea. Accurate and prompt service. Proofread spelling corrected. Pho. 843-954. Ms. Wright.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
842-0444
WHY RENT?
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
MIDDLEBROOK UNIVERSITY
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
0 TO 60 MPH-13.5
- FRONT DISC BRAKES
RECLINING FRONT SEATS
UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
LOVE THAT DATSUN
Expert manuscript typet with through-moore
maze of spelling, punctuation, and grammar with
experience in 10 years of experience.
Electric typewriter. Call 845-279-6366,
10 a.m. or between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m.
12-8
Typing on elite electric typewriter in my home
office. No them please. Mr. Harry
1058.
12-12-12
Typing, my home. I.B.M. Selesteic plea. Prompt
disorientation. Pre-reading data automatically,
dissatisfaction. Pre-reading data automatically,
PERSONAL
Students. Have your Xmas kog party at Dungeon
Miles from the campus in Perrys, Kansas. 12-12
miles from the campus in Perrys, Kansas. 12-12
miles from the campus in Perrys, Kansas. 12-12
For you lover at Christmas, provide youtn-
s. For you lover at Christmas, provide youtns.
The Hodge Paddle. 15 W. Kirkham 12-12
12-12
HELP: Guy wants to off-campus eckh, call Har at 864-1064 after 9 p.m. 12-7
Q: Why does KU continue to teach bad teachers?
Support the Curriculum Survey! Urge parties
REAL Jeans People REPEAT of their sims in this lesson about the Holy Ghost. They speak in Tongues from God. You need to ran this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God. You need to run this out with it from God.
Real Jeans People REPEAT of their sims in this lesson about the Holy Ghost. They speak in Tongues from God. You need to ran this out with it from God. You need to ru
Babygifting in my house Man, Bus Friday, Close
August 12th. Newborn gifts for older ones
one child 14 years exp. Phone 843-288-12-11
SERVICES OFFERED
MOTHERS * The First Presbyterian Church
morning & afternoon sessions in both their
morning & afternoon classes, teachers,
personal attention, and excellent pre-
teachers, personal information 844-6418 or
842-6209.
Helper for family or couple during Spring semester in return for room, board. Call 843-6098, 12-7-7
MISCELLANEOUS
WHAT DO YOU GIVE A HEAD FOE GHOMER?
Jason, Joel, Loomis, John, Leonard. Call Bennis Custom
Services.
"SAMPLE BRIDAL GGWNSW" - up to 75% off
at the Bridal Store. (See info for
by appointment only 842-909-3688)
www.bridalstore.com
All nature is a vast symbolism; every material
spiritual world has its own spiritual tapestry. McLea
McGee's Maps and Trees are true.
HELP WANTED
Young energetic intelligent woman needed for
replacement. Apply in person, Vita Retail
laundry, 127 W. 6th St.
Rewarding summer for sophomore and older college men in Colorado mountains counseling counsellor or door programs. Write now, including program interests and personal goals. Western North Carolina.
Babytitter for one two year old weekday mornings, beginning Jan. 8 through remainder of vacation and/or spring semester. My home. 78 pee room. For ages 4-12. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses. Nurture. Horses.
LOST
Small female dog. Reddish brown with white chest and femur. White Collar, answers to 12-47.
$50 reward. Left dark brown sheepkin coat at
questions asked in 1946.
Born, 842-7824 or 843-8873
Battery, 842-7824 or 843-8873
Minolta SRT 190 30mm camera. Camera care label.
Tues. noon. Refund offered. Call Jerry. 843-256-3021.
Tues. noon. Refund offered. Call Jerry. 843-256-3021.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Pidge Court
843-9694
★
LENNY ZEROS
Discounted Records A non-profit organization
710 Mass. 841-2200
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
GASLIGHT VILLAGE MOBILE HOMES
Look at What You Get—
1) Chain Linked Fences
1) Chain Linked Pences
2) Cedar Carport with Storage Area
3) Clubhouse for Private Parties
4) Swimming Pool
6) OVER 60 per cent STUDENT OCCUPANCY
3020 Iowa 842-2828
New renting
for next semester
12
Thursday, December 7, 1972
1.2
University Daily Kansar
KIEF'S
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER AMERICA $299 Warner Bros.
1
AMERICA
Wonders Reign
$299
AMERICA
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95 Off
KROGER'S FOOD STORES
23rd & Alabama and 9th & New Hampshire
Open: 7 a.m. to 12 p.m.
9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.
7 days a week
Sunday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Kroger
"Finest Selection of Products Best and Most Friendly Service in Lawrence"
YARN
BARN
730 Mass.
YARN BARN
PERSONALIZE YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS WITH A CUSTOM-MADE
VEST
OR
SCARF
OR
BELT
OR
WALL HANGING
OR
WHATEVER YOU IMAGINE
AND DON'T FORGET
$100 OFF
EVERYTHING
WITH THIS AD AND $5 MIN. PURCHASE
REASON TO TOAST THE SEASON
Knits with good times built in
When you choose your new sweater here, prepare for a touch of confusion. When we assembled our collection, we aimed for the widest choice possible. Such an unfettered selection is bound to be wilder, so take your time. (You're bound to wind up with more than one.)
THE Town Shop
We're open till 8:30 every night through the 22nd.
Your gifts wrapped free.
PERSONALIZE YOUR
CHRISTMAS GIFTS WITH A
CUSTOM-MADE
VEST
OR
SCARF
OR
BELT
OR
WALL HANGING
OR
WHATEVER YOU IMAGINE
AND DON'T FORGET
$1.00 OFF
EVERYTHING
WITH THIS AD
AND $5 MIN. PURCHASE
REASON TO TOAST THE SEASON
JUST THE SEASON
REASON TO TOAST THE SEASON
Knits with good times built in
When you choose your new sweater here, prepare for a tuck of confession. When we assembled our collection, we aimed for the widest choice possible. Such an unfettered selection is bound to be wilder, so take your time. (You're bound to wind up with more than one.)
THE Town Shop
We're open til 8:30 every night through the 22nd.
Your gifts wrapped free.
Beginning Tonight Thursday 7 December. A Great Many of the Downtown Stores Will Be Staying Open Late Every Evening 'til Christmas for Your Shopping Convenience. Stop Down and Take Advantage of These Special Hours for You.
G
Downtown Lawrence
There Is Always Something for You Downtown
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
14
EAGLE
COLDER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 70
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Abba Eban To Speak At KU in March
Friday, December 8, 1972
See story page 3
Nixon Says Volpe Out, Brinegar In
CAMP DAVID, Md. (AP)—President Nixon added a new face to his virtually complete second term Cabinet Thursday, nominating California oil company executive Claude S. Brinegar to replace Transportation Olee as secretary of transportation.
Volpe was nominated to be ambassador to Italy, the first Italian-American selected for the mission.
The announcements by press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler at the mountain-top retreat where Nixon has spent most of the month since his re-election left only one Cabinet nomination, attorney general, yet to be disclosed.
Bringear, a 45-year-old Republican, economist and航 carrier biff, is the third mayor of the city.
Officials say there is little question that Richard Kleindienst will be retained in that chair.
New York labor leader Peter Brennan was brought in to replace James Hodgson as labor secretary, and South Carolina textile manufacturer Frederick B. Dent to replace Peter G. Peterson as commerce secretary.
Otherwise, Cabinet members were kept in their positions, shifted from one department to another or promoted from within the ranks.
Ziegler said Brinegar would divest himself of his holdings in Union Oil Co. where he was senior vice president as well as president of the Union 76 division.
Brinegar received his doctorate in economic research from Stanford University in 1953, joined Union Oil as an analyst and helped him walk his way through company ranks.
He is a director of the American Petroleum Institute and lives with his wife and three children in Rolling Hills, Calif. He also lived for a while in Yorba Linda, Calif., Nikon's home town, and was a visiting instructor at Whittier College.
Kansan Photo by STU BEALS
Unbearable
leaving the Kansas Union to brace themselves for the sudden blast of cold air. Thursday temperatures were in the teens, and the highs were up today, along with occasional light snow.
These students stop for a moment before
Kissinger, Tho Meet; Viet Air War Rages
PARIS (AP)—Henry A. Kissinger and Hanoi's L die Du Thuc met for the fourth time in their current round of secret talks on Wednesday, carried out one of the heaviest raids of the city.
In Paris the envoys again gave no hint of progress. The Communist side spoke of a new deadlock caused by American and South Vietnamese intransigence.
Reports by the French press that an agreement might be able within hours of approval have been reached.
The two top negotiators and their advisers met for four hours in a suburban villa belonging to the French Communist party where they held several secret meetings last month. They shook hands cordially at the end of the meeting.
U. S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers, addressing NATO foreign ministers in Brussels, said he was confident the United States would achieve a firmly based peace settlement for all Indochina. He declined to go into details.
IN WASHINGTON, presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said he could not predict how long the current round of the election would continue or what the outcome would be.
WHILE THE TWO sides maintained their news blackout on the secret sessions, an American delegate at the parallel semipublic peace talks warned that there might be “disappointments and setbacks” in the final negotiations.
However, he said, "We should not permit disappointments and setbacks in the pace of the final negotiations to prevent us from harming our business or unchangeable intention to achieve peace."
Acting chief U.S. delegate Heyward isham told the 189th weekly session of the conference that prospects for peace were brighter.
Toys Removed from Local Shelves
Kansan Staff Writer
Over 300 toys have been removed from shelves in Lawrence stores after a survey this week by the Consumer Protection Agency (CPA). The agency found that the toys may be in violation of the Food and Administration's guidelines on toy safety.
Final results of the survey, which covered at least nine stores, are expected to be released by the CPA in a news conference this afternoon.
The blocks in the clock have small weights that can be exposed if the toy is dropped, she said. The toy is banned because a child might swallow the weights.
all of them were on the FDA's list. Weiss
said that the team were originally banned
because the shape was too angular.
By DIANE YEAMANS
Kansas Staff Writer
The Romper Room Musical Block Clocks by Hasbro, already determined to be in violation of the federal Hazardous Substances Act, were removed from shelves at Gibson's Discount Center, Patricia Wess, a Lawrence resident of CPA, said Thursday.
WEISS SAID that the rest of the toys consisted mainly of infant's toys manufactured by Tidy Ties Corporation, and which are manufactured by Manufacturing Company and Bayer World.
Confronted with the CPA's evidence and the possible investigation and evaluation by the FDA, the local merchants reportedly removed the toys immediately.
It was difficult to identify the toys on the FDA's list because many of the toys lacked the manufacturer's name and identification numbers. We asked the local managers removed any toys they thought were dangerous by FDA standards. The manufacturers would be contacted for these toys.
A FIVE-INCH high Grand Piano with Color Chime Xylophone, made by the Jaymar Specialty Co., was removed from the shelves at T.G.&, Weiss. said the xylophone had sharp edges and points on the keys that could cut a child.
Not believing the toy manufacturers would sell him illegal toys, Art Cromer, the clock maker, said he was about the clock toy and was told that a banned Weis said. The toy manufacturer told Cromer that it had only notified the 42 accounts instead of its entire list of buyers.
CROMER ALSO CALLED the Tidy Ties Corporation for clarification and was told that some of the toys may have been relabeled showing no stock number. Weiss said she and Cromer did not know why the numbers were eliminated.
before, Weais said. Then it is impossible to tell the toy's legal status, according to the law.
Weiss said that one item found on a store's shelf carried a stock number although 50 other identical toys did not. All of the toys were removed.
Raoul Berman, codirector of the CPA and Kansas City, Kan., senior, said the agency planned to check the shelves before Christmas.
Berman said he suspected that the banned toys may be returned to the shelves because the stores would not be able to reorder legal toys in the Christmas rush.
Other items may have been redesigned but still carried the same stock number as
THE MANAGERS of local stores did not have access to the FDA's list of banned toys before the survey was taken. Weiss said. The FDA has promised to supply her with 15
The CPA, which was working in cooperation with the FDA, will have to obtain the license removed, Berman said. The FDA will then investigate the stores to confiscate the banned toys and place any other toys not permitted by the law's guidelines under examination.
lists which will be distributed to the managers.
THE U.S. COMMAND gave no report of damage but one source said there had been a heavy concentration of trucks in the area. Sources said recent raids had virtually blocked mountain passes from the southern region of North Vietnam into the Ho Chi Minh trail for the time being, freeing the B52s at supply concentrations near the DMZ
All of the "I Cry Mama" dolls made by coldberg is manufacturing company owned at Beti.
Supporting Northern operations, the U.S. command directed a score of BS2s to be assigned to the miles north of the DMZ. About 18 Stratofortress strikes within a 10-mile radius of the target between noon Wednesday and noon Thursday, the command
over north Vietnam's southern pandhane in the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Navy plots reported destroying 15 trucks in a bridge in the northern part of the pandhane.
Berman said he hoped that the CPA would be able to keep the Lawrence stores informed of additions and changes in the lists supplied by the FDA.
No one in the country has ever been
See TITI page 12.
Kissinger and The met twice Monday following a nine-day recess and had a 5%-hour meeting Wednesday. They will resume talks Friday.
Smaller U.S. tactical iets flew 90 sorties
In Saigon the U.S. Command announced that 1853 Stratofortresses had dropped more than 600 tons of bombs in and around the island, which resulted in the heaviest raids of the renewed air war.
In air action over South Vietnam, U.S. tactical jets flew 85 strikes in the northern military region out of a total of 243 for the 84 hours ending at dawn Thursday. South Korea attack planes were reported to have flown 188 sories, with no breakout on locations.
The U.S. Command had no report of bomb damage in the region below the demilitarized zone. A military source exclaimed, "The Army hindered observation of strike results."
ONE AMERICAN was killed and two were wounded in Wednesday morning's Tan Son Nhat air base rocket attack, the heaviest in the Saigon area since the unrest of 1967 Tet offensive. South Vietnamese were eight dead and 52 wounded.
For the second successive week, the U.S. command listed no Americans killed in Iraq.
Easy Sailing Reported After Initial Apollo Stall
Experts said the Apollo 17 crew took the first steps to make up the time lost in the launch delay by firing a longer burn than planned when they fired out of earth orbit at 4:45 a.m. Thursday. This put them on a faster course to the moon and they will be back on schedule before they enter lunar orbit.
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)—apart 17, the moon flight that began with a stutter step, sailed smoothly to their lunar target Thursday while its crewmen settled back and enjoyed the ride. Their only bother was getting tired, which the experts said was no worry at all.
It was a time of waiting for astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, Harrison "Jack" H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans, all eager to reach their lunar goal and begin explorations that will fill gaps in man's knowledge of the moon's history.
AS APOLLO 17 knitted deeper into space Mission Control reported that the "spacecraft is performing in a super fashion . . . absolutely no problems at all."
A problem with a balky computer delayed their launch from Cape Kennedy nearly three hours Wednesday night and Thursday morning. The team said the spectacular show given ten thousands of
the people who gathered at Cape Kennedy to away in America a first dark after dark luminary.
"Good show, babe! Little late, but good show!" Carian explained as the spaceship blasted out.
Liftoff originally had been scheduled for
a countdown, but the computer countdown
was interrupted by the computer.
THE COMPUTER failed to receive a signal telling it that automatic pressurization of an exogen tank in the rocket was taking place.
The technicians were aware of the problem and were pressurizing manually. The computer would not recognize this, however, the technicians at Cape Kendy, Alabama, the Marshall Space Center in Huntsville, Ala., had to work out a computer bypass plan.
With this accomplished the count was resumed and blaafloff went smoothly at last.
The destination of Cernan andSumit in a site called Taurus Littrow. It lies on the foot of ancient mountain in a valley of large lakes have been carved out by volcanic eruptions.
The landing scheduled for 2:35 p.m. EST Monday, will be the sixth in the historic event.
Local Firms Use Classified Info
Editor's Note: This is the second story in a two-part series concerning the Defense Department's involvement in research at the University of Kansas and local communities.
By JIM KENDELL
Kansan Staff Writer
Two companies in Lawrence, besides the Center for Research, Inc. (CRINC) and the University of Kansas, are authorized by the U.S. government to handle classified information. They are Cadre Corporation and Centron Corporation, Inc.
School Districts Reject Fund Plan
By PATBREITENSTEIN
TOPEKA—Representatives from 130
kansas school districts rejected in part
tuesday a finance plan for public
schools that would require state
legislative committee to school纤
Kansan Staff Writer
The rejection came at the end of a day-long conference of school superintendents and board members who met to find an equitable solution to the problem of public school finance.
The educators should not approve the committee plan for 100 per cent state funding, educational and special education programs. The state superintendent, Kansas City, Kan., school superintendent, and chairman of the conference, this refusal is guaranteed that the local districts would return.
The conference members also repudiated the committee's suggestion that school district with an excess of funds surrender these funds for redistribution to other school districts.
THE TWO POINTS of dispute between the conference members and the committee's proposal were part of an 11-point resolution to override the committee's legislative committee's proposed program.
The major emphasis of these principles is that the state should provide a system of finance that would establish a minimum level of education. The principles call for a system which would distribute the tax burden of education equitably in the state and would provide for districts with special educational problems.
The resolution was not officially voted on by the conference but it was accepted without delay.
The educators also reviewed a list of eight basic principles of school finance that had been written by the school board.
Plucker said that the conference grew out of an 18 month concern that the present finance system did not deal fairly with all state pupils and taxpayers. This concern became a matter of law when the present finance system was ruled unconstitutional.
and illegal by a Kansas district court in the case of Caldwell vs. the State of Kansas.
THE CASE OF Caldwell vs. Kansas established three significant points of fact, according to Marton Ghechey, Topeka lawyer and second speaker at the conference on March 26. His pupil expenditure in the 310 Kansas school districtranges from $90 to $1700.
He said that the second important point was that assessed valuation per pupil in Kansas differed by as much as $113,000 from $4,000 to $117,000. Because of this, the third significant finding of the court was that the mill lvillies used to finance schools were the very low in some districts and could still provide an excess of educational funds.
McGheeble said that since state aid to school districts was determined by the wealth of the county that the district was in, poor districts could be discriminated against twice. This is done when the districts do not receive funds that they
Cadre was formed in November 1967 by a group of professors at KU for scientific research.
See SCHOOL page 10
Cadre's president and one of the directors is Richard K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering and director of the Remote Sensing Laboratory at CRINC.
Moore said that Cairde was formed so professors could work on classified contracts independent of the University KU would not take classified contracts.
"That's one of the reasons we have it," Moore said. "When we have something that we as individuals would like to do which is classified, we do it through Cadre."
According to the Office of Industrial Security in St. Louis, Cadre was authorized to handle secret and confidential material on June 4, 1968.
MOORE SAID Cadre had done classified work in the past, but was not presently employed.
The corporation is located at the residence of Bill Barr, professor of mechanical engineering and executive secretary, treasurer and a director of Cade.
Other major stockholders, according to records filed Nov. 30, 1971, with the Kansas Secretary of State, include Rubid Adams, professor of chemistry, Lous F. Dellig, professor of civil engineering, Lenzen, professor of civil engineering, Adams and Lenzen are also directors.
Russell Mosser, executive vice president and treasurer of Centron, said Monday that the $10,000 to $500,000 contract might necessitate access to classified information.
On Nov. 1, Centron Corporation, Inc., signed a contract with the Washington Navy Yard at Washington, D.C., for motion is in the business of making movies.
Centron received a secret release Oct.
1957. The company was formed in June
1957.
MOSSER WAS not sure how much money Centron would make on the year-long contract because some companies with similar contracts in previous years did not do anything. Centron would probably make training films for the Navy.
Mosser refused to state the number of cleared employees at Centron but said that normally very few employees would ever have access to a cleared product.
Mosser said, "We have had previous military contracts, but we haven't had a Navy contract for a year. Most of our work has been called industrial and educational films."
The Secretary of State's records as of Dec. 31, 1971, list three major stockholders besides Moser—Harlur H. Wolf, Charles E. Lacey and Norman P. Stuewe. All four men and Harold Hawley are cited as directors. Wolf is also president of Centron.
BESIDES KU, eight other universities in the Defense Contract Administration Services Region, St. Louis region, have security clearances. Three are Big Eight schools—the University of Colorado, Iowa State and the University of Missouri.
"Civil distrubance activity still caused
The 1971 "Annual Report of the Defense Supply Agency" stated that a number of colleges and universities had dropped out of the program.
Some colleges have dropped completely out of the business of handling classified information, as the University of Wisconsin did this summer.
Washington University in St. Louis, St.
Louis University, the University of Minne-
sake, the University of Iowa at Iowa City
the University of Missouri at Rolla are also cleared.
concern for those facilities working on classified projects which were deemed potential targets for disruption tactics of radical elements.[37] the report said.
ACCORDING TO A letter to the Kansan from the Office of Industrial Security in St. Louis, there have been no colleges or universities in the St. Louis region that have requested termination of employment clearances within the last three years.
Barr said KU had not made any substantial changes as a result of disturbances because it had followed an open policy for a number of years.
The statement on classified research at KU was developed in 1969 to clarify and amplify a policy that was already implicitly in effect.
Last spring the Haiphong Coalition, which led anti-war demonstrations after President Nixon ordered Haiphong harbor mined and stepped up the bombing of North Vietnam, demanded an investigation of research at KU.
Specifically they wanted to know about research that directly or indirectly aided the U.S. government and military in carrying out the war.
IN RESPONSE to this demand Chancellor Raymond Nichols appointed a committee in mid-September to find out how research was being published.
The committee dealt only indirectly with the question of military involvement, according to Arthur Breipohl, committee and professor of electrical engineering.
This fall the remnants of the Haiphong Coalition disowned the committee because it did not deal directly with the military question.
The Defense Department protects
See LOCAL page 12.
See LOCAL page 12
2
Friday, December 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
News Briefs By the Associated Press Prices Go Up
WASHINGTON - Wholesale prices surged ahead sharply in November, the Labor Department said Thursday in a report that dampened government hopes of slowing the rate of inflation at least 3 per cent by year's end. Wholesale prices usually are reflected at the retail level soon. The Labor Department said that the wholesale price index increased by 0.6 per cent in November, the biggest monthly increase since July and a contrast to slower price rise at the wholesale level in September and October.
Drug Use Down
WASHINGTON — The Defense Department's chief doctor, Dr. Richard S. Wilbur, said Thursday the "totally out of hand" abuse of heroin by American troops in Vietnam in early 1972 prompted the Army. He said the Defense Department's drug abuse program of identification, treatment, rehabilitation and education was successful in reducing heroin abuse by GIs from its previously high levels to a level he termed still severe. The Army also said that the fact that heroin was still freely available throughout Southeast Asia.
Gulf Oil Sale
TOPEKA—An official of the Gulf Oil co. said it had put up for sale all the service stations it owned in Kansas as part of a $250 million worldwide cutback, the Topeka State Journal reported Thursday. "We will retain no facilities we own in Kansas," the governor said. The Gulf Oil president as saying. Lewis was contacted in his office in Houston.
Sailor Convicted
NORFOLK, Va.,-Seaman Apprentice Jeffrey Allison was convicted Thursday of setting the $7.5m fire that damaged the aircraft carrier Forrestal July 10. The military judge, Capt. William E. Neey, found all庐ison guilty of arson, sabotage, torture, and militant property, and harrassed a vessel, and guilty also of six specifications involving possession and distribution of the drugs LSD and mescaline.
Hijack Trial
ST. LOUIS—An American Airlines pilot testified in U.S. District Court Thursday that he got a good look at the hijacker of a jetliner in St. Louis last summer when he accidentally knocked off the hijacker's sunglasses. Art Koester, one of two pilots on the plane, described the previous flight crew, described the incident Thursday at the trial of Martin J. McNelly, 28, of Wyndotte, Mich. McNelly is charged with two counts of air piracy.
Marcos' Wife Injured By Assailant's Knife
MANILA (AP)—Imelda Marcos, the Philippines' First Lady, was attacked Thursday by an unidentified assistant while she was traveling, and survived with injuries requiring 75 stitches.
The assailant was slain. The motive of the assault was unclear.
Imelda Marcos, 42, was badly cut on both arms and hands when the man attacked her during a beautification awards ceremony in neighboring Pasay City.
Thousands of television viewers in the Manila area saw the attack.
President Nikon telephoned Marcos to offer his sympathy and any possible assistance.
Following three hours of emergency treatment at the Makati Medical Center, Mrs. Marcos managed a weak smile as she wheeled out of the operating room on to a ninth-floor presidential suite. She was accompanied by the grim-faced president.
Doctors said Mrs. Marcos suffered four major cuts which included cut tendons on both hands and three fractured fingers on her right hand.
Officials said a label in the assailant's suit jacket indicated he was from southern Davao City, 610 miles south of Manila. They ordered the Davao police commander to bring the tiger of the suit to Manila for help and retrieve the person who was carrying no identification papers.
With no definite word on the identity of the assailant, speculation included theories that he was an isolated fanatic, that he was part of a premeditated plot by political enemies or that he was part of a classical Moslem military force. He was armed forces in southern Sula Province.
Truman Is Improving Still on Critical List
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Former军官 Harry S Trump was reported in improved condition by medical authorities Thursday after a touch-and-go night in his battle against lung congestion and cancer at胸门。Doctors kept him on the critical list.
Last month presidential press secretary Francisco S. Tatad said the government had broken up a major plot to kill the president that included the use of hired American assassins backed by rich right-wing Filipinos.
"His age and the potential of sudden change require that he continue to be described as critical," said a spokesman at Research Hospital and Medical Center, in Chicago. The chief executive was taken Tuesday evening from his home in Independence, Mo.
During the night Truman had passed through what his personal physician, Dr. Wallace Graham, called an ultracritical period.
"His general response is better today than yesterday," the hospital reported in one of several periodic statements to the press. "The major concern is still heart failure."
Wayne Conery, the hospital's assistant director of professional services, said doctors had described last night's episode as acute pulmonary edema, which is a manifestation of heart failure, but presently have no evidence of myocardial infarction.
The same statement also mentioned the continued presence of infection which doctors indicated was in the bronchial tree. An edema is the presence of abnormally large amounts of fluid in the intercellular tissue spaces of the body.
In laymen's terms, Conery said, doctors are indicating that the patient is an important patient. Toward this end,
Truman's wife, Bess, and their only child, Margaret Danuel Daniel, were at his side during most of the night. They left shortly before dawn, but were back by 11 a.m.
Mrs. Daniel, wife of New York Times
executive Clifton Daniel, arrived here just after midnight Thursday from Washington.
Meeting with reporters less than an hour afterward, she voiced great faith her father had for her.
"He is in serious condition, but he has been before," she said. "He's a strong man and he's got the edge."
Supreme Court Rules Against Union Fines
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court Thursday ruled that labor unions could not fine workers who quit the union during a strike and return to their jobs.
The 8-1 decision, written by Justice William O. Douglas, said that a union had no more control over a former member than it had over the man in the street.
The case involved a strike in 1968-69 by the Textile Workers Union, AFL-CIO, against the Nashua, N.H., plant of the International Paper Box Machine Co. All but one member of the local voted to strike and, after the strike started, the members agreed that defectors were subject to a $2,000 fine.
Thirty-one members eventually quit the union during the lengthy strike and went back to work. The local tried to fine them a day's wages for each day worked.
The court agreed with the National Labor
relations Board that the lines were illegal
and that Mr. Schaefer was unlawful.
"When a member lawfully resigns from the union, its power over him ends."
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University Daily Kansan
6 Convicted in Okla. Gambling Plot
Six men were convicted Thursday of conspiracy to establish gambling and prostitution in Grove, Okla., by a district court jury in Kansas City, Mo., after several days of testimony by the owner of an entertainment club in Lawrence.
The jury handed down the decision following testimony from Jess C. Roberts, owner of the Yuk-Up and the Yuk-Down in several other establishments in Oklahoma.
Roberts was the government's chief witness in the trial. He was named as one of the seven co-conspirators but was not one of those indicted.
The six defendants were accused of planning to start gambling and prostitution operations at Roberts' Mr. Yuk Club in Grove.
THE SIX convicted were James S. Duardi, Nathaniel J. Brancato, Clifford Lavern Bishop, all of Kansas City, Mt.; Lewis Frank Grayson, former district attorney of Delaware and Ottawa counties in Oklahoma; George L. Husong, former special investigator for Grayson; and Jack Dawson, owner of the Showbowl Club in Grove.
The defendants were charged with attempting to use bribes to force Grove law enforcement officers to overlook activities at the Grove club. Specifically, the government charged that the men were planning to bribe the county sheriff with a 1972 Chevrolet.
King and Bishop are also under indictment for attempted murder of Roberts on July 19, 2016.
DURING THE trial Roberts testified that he had attended meetings with the defense counsel.
Roberts also testified that he and the defendants had talked about plans to expand the Mr. Yuk Club to include a new gambling room. A Grove contractor said he had been contacted by some of the defendants about building the gambling room.
closing remarks about Roberts' character in an attempt to discredit his testimony
Attorney Patrick Williams accused Roberts of being a fraud, a liar and a drug user. He also said Roberts had not paid any taxes for several years.
Defense attorneys made most of their
Roberts acknowledged that he had used marijuana and that he had not paid any personal income tax since the middle of the 1980s.
THE GOVERNMENT argued that any admission of testimony would not negate the testimony of his testimony.
Roberts, now a Grove area resident, lived in Lawrence when he opened the Lawrence Mr. Yuk in October 1968 in the Hillcrest shopping center.
After six months of operation, fire gutted the building, causing $240,000 damage. At the time firemen were considering arson as the cause of the blaze. When contacted this speaker never, a fire department spokesman said the cause was still undetermined.
The search committee for a new director of Student Health Services met Thursday night to discuss criteria for screening nominees, according to James Rosser, vice chairwoman for academic affairs and chairman of the search committee.
The search committee was formed after Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Student Health Services for the past seven years, announced his retirement.
Criteria for Health Director Discussed
Deadline for the nominations was Dec. 1.
At that time, 23 nominations had been received, Rosser said. The names of 19 men and four women were submitted.
A letter was sent out soliciting nominations for the vacancy. A subcommittee under the direction of Dr. James Campbell, Watkins physician, took a survey of employees and complied information concerning qualifications for the job of director.
Rosser said the committee had written to the nominees to inform them of their nominations for the post and to ask them for information concerning their qualifications.
Because of finals and Christmas vacation, the search committee will not meet again until Jan. 18. The intervening time will be used to gather information about the nominees and to finish the list of criteria for screening them, Rosser said.
Kansas Jail Officials Appeal Funding Cut
"TOPEKA (AP)—Kansas correctional officials appeared Thursday before the state Budget Committee to appeal cuts averaging $54 million in federal funds for 1974 fiscal year, which begins July 1, 1973. Also appealed was a sharp reduction in the amount requested for initial operation of the Kansas Correctional Vocational and Training Center which is being established at Topeka.
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Abba Eban, Israeli Chief To Visit KU
Abba Eban, Israeli minister of foreign affairs, has accepted an invitation to speak at the University of Kansas as part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series.
His speech, entitled "The Growth of a Free Society: Israel's First 25 Years," has been widely received.
Eban has served as foreign affairs minister since 1963. He migrated to Israel in 1940 from Cape Town, South Africa. He was appointed ambassador to Egypt and General Assembly in 1947. He became Israel's permanent ambassador to the UN in 1949. He has served as the Israeli ambassador to the United States, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Deputy Prime Minister in Israel.
Emaneb received his master's and doctorate of literature degrees from Queens College at Cambridge. He has also been awarded a doctorate of law degree by Cambridge.
Eban is the author of "Voice of Israel," "Tide of Nationalism," "Zionism in the Arab World," "Israel in the World," and "My People."
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University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Apollo Swan Song
Apollo 17 has blasted off and is being pulled towards the moon. To many the most significant aspect of this flight is that it is the last scheduled flight with the moon as its destination. Now the space program costs too much money for most Americans to be able to justify its continuing as it did during the sixties. Justification for the program was easy before Apollo 11, before a man had actually touched the moon. When that flight happened people all over the world watched the moment the bomb blew up and breathed along with the TV commentators as they watched the metal ship slowly touch the ugly surface of the moon. Then, after more hours of waiting, a man finally walked on the moon. That night it was a new experience to look at the moon.
The flight was a product of this country's religious dedication to the progress of science and technology. Of course, it was also a great opportunity to play one-upmanship and think that it was also regarded by many as a kind of national hobby. The hobby's goal was reached. We beat the Russians, and science and technology progressed. The series of
Apollo flights was so successful that an airline named is "What do we for Airlines."
For a while there will be very little done although the space program will still exist. The demands of earth and its people will now use part of the money that would have sent men on trips which used to be the fantasies of dreamers. This reordering of the way the nation's money is to be spent is more sensible but I shall have never been made to believe were such a human venture, so many human eccentricities worked towards making the program a reality. The adventurous spirit to see new lands, the inquisitive nature of the human brain, the competitive nature of man which caused him to challenge another country and the universe itself are part of the reasons for sending a machine with men inside of it to the moon. Now these traits and many others will once again the nation to employ its workings to be exclusively with earth's problems and mysteries. However, there will come another decade when the planets will lure men out into space or maybe the Russians will send a ship to Mars.
—Mary Ward
Schools Need Not Ban Christmas Carol Singing
WASHINGTON—An unhappy and divisive incident has occurred here in the Washington district where a Christmas carols in public schools. Other communities doubtless are experiencing similar incidents. The conspiracy merits a few observations.
The difficulty here arose in
exploded in angry counterprotests of their own. The unhappy superintendent then opened the guidelines he had ust tightened, and an uneasy rue now obtains.
What is one to say? This whole amenable affect stems from the Supreme Court's decision in June 2013 that prayers are not a prayer case. That decision
writing or sanctioning official prayers."
That was what Engel v. Vilate was all about. To leap from that wise decision to a ban on the singing of Adeste Fidels in the public schools of Maryland is to deny that consequence ever was intended by the Court, and none ought to be permitted.
James J.
Kilpatrick
suburban Prince George's County, when Isaac Franck, executive vice president of the Jewish Community Council of Greater Washington, discovered that many were conducting Christmas assemblies. Here the children were singing choral selections, among them such "distinctively religious Christian hymns" as "Amazing Grace" and "Little Town of Bethlehem, and Hark! The Angelic Angels.
Franc complained to Carl W. Hassel, superintendent of county schools, and Hassel issued some fresh guidelines: "No songs or music programs that have a significance for a particular religion should be performed with coincidences with the specific celebration." This produced a headline in the morning Post: "Schools Forbid Hymns," whereupon non-Jewish parents
Black recalled in his opinion a time when governments of the past "shackled men's tongues to make them speak only the religious thoughts that government wanted them to speak and to pray only to the God that they prayed for," he prayed to." He thought it was sacrilegious nor antireligious to say "that each separate government in this country should stay out of the business of
seemed to me then, and seems to me now, sound law. The New York Board of Regents had come up with a proposal, a brief prayer for use in the schools. In New Hyde Park the prayed he was to be said aloud "by each class in the presence of the school day." a latter late judicial Black, speaking for a $2 Courses held the practice "wholly inconsistent with the Establishment Council and of course he was right."
The great Christmas carols long ago lost what purely religious significance they may once have held. They are now part of a cultural inheritance, a breed of churchwardens, an awareness that is the mark of a civilized society. One might as well ban reproductions of the paintings of El Greco or Botticelli. it is Michelangelo's Pieta a "pretty religious" work of art? Plainly not. it is a tremendous joy to hear and feel emotions far beyond the narrow confines of Mark 27 or Luke 15.
So, too, with the carols. They have no more "purely religious" meaning than a Bach cantata. Silent Night dates from Austria in 1818. Mendelssohn wrote Hark! the Herald Angels Sing in 1840. O Little Town of Bethlehem dates from America in 1868. As they are, these are newcomers. An English version of Adeste Fidelis has been sung for 200 years, but it is kind to Roy. Older, away in a Manger goes back to Luther. The haunting O Come, O Come, Emmanuel is thought to date from the 12th Century.
With deference to the Jewish spokesman, he takes a sound principle and beats it into the music. He also bores to be urge the Jewish children to join in the singing. Many of them have beautiful voices. They will be corrupted by the experience, but hopefully would improve the chorus.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Congressmen Fix Traffic Tickets
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON—There are no more staucha champions of law and order than those two old curmudgeons from South Carolina, Sen. Strom Thurmond said in a speech when it comes to traffic offences, they don't believe the laws apply to themselves or their friends.
For 24 years, McMillan used his position as chairman of the District of Columbia Committee to fix traffic tickets for his cronies on Capitol Hill. He even took care of tickets issued to his staff in the dining room and the man who attended him in the House gym.
Leading the parade of those who came to McMillan to get tickets fixed was stern, straight Strom Thurmond. The Washington police seldom hit the light when he knocked on the police rays. But they used to issue polite warning notices.
Even these were regarded as an affront to his senatorial dignity by old Strom, who a few years ago asked McMillan to instruct the police to stop annoying him with warning notices.
"The fact that each car parked in violation received some type of citation appears to keep down the
McMillan obligingly demanded an explanation from William J. Livermore, then the director of the traffic division, who replied apologetically, "Quite often our officers are placed in a position where several vehicles are parking on the road." To issue traffic violation notices to all except those bearing Congressional or Dpl (diplomatic) tags can result in complaints and criticism, which might be embarrassing to someone.
complaints. However, I wish to assure you that we will be guided by your wishes in this matter."
McMillan's wishes were to stop the warning notices and they were obediently stopped. Indeed, the officers could be a command by the police, who fixed hundreds of tickets at his requests. Parking, jawwalking and moving violations alike were then when McMillan intervened.
he once got a ticket himself in Columbia, S.C., where he had less choice than the mayor asking him to fix the ticket. McMillan offered, in return, to take care of him 'any time' when he knew when you are in Washington.
We have uncovered dozens of his letters to Livermore, written during the 1980s. "The enclosed ticket," he wrote in a typical letter, "was given to the son of William William R. Hull III of Missouri." We Congressman is my closest friend on Hill."
"I know," wrote McMillan about a speeding violation, "99 percent of the people drive faster than 32 miles per hour, and if they did not we would be 1 or 2 hours getting home every evening."
Another time, he explained,
"one of these tickets was placed
on a South Carolinian's car at
a bus stop where she stopped in
a bus zone for a few minutes,
and am certain no bus was using
the zone at this time."
In behalf of a ticketed tourist, McMillan wrote, "I hope you can have this ticket adjusted, since we are continuing to encourage throughout the United States to visit the nation's capital."
stituents could get their tickets fixed through the McMillan. After taking care of a ticket for former Rep. Bob Ashmore, D-S.C., for example, McMillan wrote magnanimously. I was pleased to see him. I was very careful in having the Park Police adjust the ticket given to your constituent while he was visiting the Washington Monument."
Even his colleagues' con-
Mr. Mac, as he was known to his staff, has now been turned out of office by the voters in South Carolina. He'll be sorely missed by his cronies when they get caught violating the traffic laws.
Fancy Command Post
Fairly common post
The Price Commission,
established to hold down in-
flation, imposes economies on
others while it indulges in extravagances itself.
The commission has just lavished $85,000 on itself for a new living room. In dramatic lighting it, it celebrated Pentagon's celebrated war room.
Down the hall from the chairman's office is the new windless,丰绒 carpeted, richly panelled, soundproof room. It is every bit as spectacular as the command post in the TV space-fiction series, Star Trek. Seven slide projectors, complete with screens and console, give the floor the feel of spaceship. Six of the screens and their consoles line the back of the room in a semicircle. Another far larger screen dominates the front wall.
The commissioners sit around a large, Lshaped fancy wooden table in color-coordinated swivel chairs. They start to startle, the screens can fill up with everything from the Price Commission's agenda for the day and the growth of an industry—all presented in six different ways.
"A along with this went economic distress. The assurance for the future of our children dwindled. We found our great cities and the control of much of our industry and commerce taken over by strangers, who were not good enough and prosperity against us. Shortly they came to dominate our government. The blue (read: quota) system by which this is now doable is familiar to all . . .
The slide equipment alone cost $35,000. A spokesman explained that the projectors present information so quickly and efficiently that the commissioners were as often as other agency heads, who still shuffle papers back and forth at their meetings.
Copyright, 1972,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
CONGRES
"ENTER THE BALL. WAKE HADE WITH MUSLIE AND THE LINE. I DROP BACK AND I THROW A SCREEN PASS TO MOUNTAIN AND I RUN 10 YARDS AND I SCORE A TUCKDOWN, I LICK THE EXTRA POINT"
Garry Wills
White Ethnics in Ironic Spot
"Finally came the mora breakdown that has been going on for two decades. One by one all our traditional moral standards went by the boards or were so disregarded that they ceased to be binding. The sacredness of our Sabbath, of our homes, of chastity, and finally even of our family, was destroyed. Our own schools fundamental facts and truths, were torn away from us. Those who maintained the old standards did so only in the face of constant ridicule.
"There appeared first confusion in thought and opinion, a搽ing hesitancy about national issues, leading to sharp contrast to the clear, straight-forward purposes of our earlier years. There was futility in religion, too, which was in danger of dying even more distressing."
There is a good deal of talk these days about the legitimate grievances of white ethnics as the 'older men' of recent politics.
These pleas often have some cogency. But they have been notably lacking in eloquence. I had not come across a truly winged example of pro-ethic prose till I discovered this one:
"We are in a movement of the plain people, very weak in the matter of culture, intellectual support, and trained leadership, and we want to power into the hands of the everyday, not highly cultured, not overly intellectualized, but entirely unspoiled and not de-Americanized, average citizen of America. We all leaders are all of this class—the opposition of the intellectuals and liberals who held the leadership (and; betrayed Americanism. . . is almost autonomous. This is why we ask us open to the charge of being 'hicks' and 'rubes' and 'drivers of
second-hand Fords.' We admit it. . .
"Every popular movement has suffered from just this handicap, yet the popular movements have been the mainsprings of it. Our usually had to win against the 'best people' of their time."
All the themes are here—resentment of the intellectuals, a feeling of being showed aside, a sense of liberation among aspirants to the American dream. One should, it is argued, heed such a cry from the heart, especially when it comes from the voting public—as this one did.
I have been quoting from the 1928 Statement of Hiram Wesley Evans, the Imperial Wizard of the Klu Kux Khan in its period of democracy. The Democratic Party. Two years before this statement, the Klan played a key role in deadlocking the Democratic convention measure to repudiate the Klan war before a tense battle.
Two years after this statement, the anti-Klan forces prevailed, and gave the nomination to an urban progressive Catholic, Al Smith. The Klan-sympatizing wing of the Democratic Party
made it their business to bring about Smith's landslide defeat
I am not saying that the new spokesmen of an ethnic politics are racists or Klansmans. I am not even saying that the Klan's old grievances are unjustified, Still, they are not. We still resemblances between the new (rather choked) manifestos and the old (more fluent) plea, especially when we remember that the targets of the Evans outury were urban Catholic men who had sold the old stock," the very people who are repeating the ethnic arguments today!
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 1972
Readers Respond
Abortion Laws, Feminists
Misleading Story
To the Editor:
The article in the Kanan on Monday, December 4, entitled "Abortion Laws Still Plague Legislators, Counselors," was misleading in several aspects. Particularly, the description of the practice of the clinic is lacking. My first-hand information comes from having worked at that clinic for several months. The boycott has been in effect for over a month, involving referral groups in at least seven states near Kansas. The director who is the director's secretary) is well aware of the boycott and has taken steps, such as having more doctors working, toward recovering the business. This
partial success has not been enough to weaken the boycott.
Minor mistakes in the article included the cost factor at that clinic, which is well over an average of $150.00, and the description of the most common error was explained as taking only 5 to 10 minutes cannot be D and C and D and C usually takes 30 minutes or more and is not the most popular method used today. A suction D and C, takes less than three minutes, is less than twelve weeks, and it is the more extensively used procedure.
Misinformation about such services is especially damaging at a time just prior to the conclusion of an audit in January. Although the law in
Kansas pertaining to abortion is not as liberal as some of us would like, we are in the position of possibly losing even the foot-in-the-sole that most people important that each person who feels that the decision to terminate a pregnancy belongs to the individuals involved write to their legislators in support of liberals' law being made more permanent, that would replace law with one which would be more restrictive.
If there are any questions about the subject or about your legislators' addresses contact me at 842.7052
--attacking the societal expectation that every woman will get married and become a housewife. It is challenging the socialization process that tries to teach women how to little girl, the key word is "choice." I have nothing but respect for the woman who knows herself, her abilities and her needs, and who chooses to become a housewife. My concern is that it is actually a choice of a socialization process that has been trying to guide her in that direction. The reason that the feminist movement stresses careers other than housewifery is because be a housewife is often a sign of women by our social structure that it does not really need any more publicity.
By Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
Feminism
SNOB
$ \textcircled{2} $ Universal Press Syndicate 1972
To the Editor:
In his editorial of November 30,
"Degrading Freedom", Robert Ward drastically misinterprets
the language used in the movement as "shaming and
degrading the woman who enjoys
be a housewife" and contends that
that attitude "deprives the
of their sense of human dignity."
In the first place, Ward himself appears not to hold much respect for the position of housewife. His defense of housewifery is incorporated into his plea for respect for mediocre persons, from whom he must conclude that he is inherently medicine-like become housewives, or that all housewives are mediocre women. To this confusion let me respond that there is nothing inherently mediocre or degrading about the position of housewife. Maintaining a home and caring for a family can be difficult, but it does not for those persons who choose it.
But that is the important distinction—for those who choose it. The feminist movement is
1
Mary Mitchelson Baxter Springs, Ks. Senior
Published at the University of Kansas
and the University of Missouri
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second class postage paid at Lawrence,
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NEWS STAFF
News Adviser Susanne Shaw
Editor Scott Sprier
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser Mel Adams
Business Manager Dale Pipergerdes
Friday, December 8. 1972
University Daily Kansam
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KUOK, a student broadcasting station at the University of Kansas, is expected to relocate its studios in the former garage and service quarters of Sudler House, 1120 W. 11th St., in the spring semester. The studio has not been determined, however.
David Dary, assistant professor of journalism and KUOR faculty adviser, said Thursday that in February the station was hoping to make the move from its present quarters in the south basement of Hochberg until outlocation could be delayed until March.
one Shaw
t Spreler
The space was allotted to KUOK by the University Planning Commission last spring. According to Bruce Linton, director of radio, television and film department, there is a lack of proper restroom facilities and a potential fire danger in Hoch.
Adams Bergerdes
"The administration has been trying for several years to find a better location,"
The Sudder House garage was the first real possibility for relocation, he said.
"The basement of Hoch was originally designed as a warehouse," said Bruce Mensie, Overland Park senior and chief engineer for KUOK. "It's a fire trap."
Sudler House garage improvements will include a new roof, heating and air-conditioning units, and a spiral staircase, Dary said. The Kansas Board of Regents has approved a $3,500 budget to cover the repairs and remodeling costs.
The ground floor level will be the on-air studio, said Dary. The second floor will house the newsroom, the record library and the office area. There will also be studios to
Extinguishers Called Unsafe
TOPEKA (AP)—Robert Wolfe, state fire marshal for Kansas, said Thursday he had asked a Hutchinson firm to discontinue sale of his fire certain fire extinguisher in this state.
Wolfe said his office apparently is without power to prohibit sale of the ex-temporary
Wolfe released a copy of a letter in which he made the request to Products Research in which Wolfe worked.
In the letter, Wolfe said "There is an extreme risk involved in using your product due to possible formation of toxic and perhaps lethal gases such as photogene when the extinguishing agent comes in contact with heat or flame."
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a benefit fashion talent show from 7:30 to 10 tonight in the Kansas Union. It was incorrectly reported in Thursday's Kansan from the best begin at 1:30 p.m. Proceeds from the best begin will be donated to Educational Service (SES), a tutorial service for minority students. Admission to the show is $1 a person.
Campus Briefs BSU Benefit
Holiday Flights
Design Showing
Today is the deadline for reserving space for the Christmas flights planned by SUA to Chicago, New York, San Francisco and Denver. All flights are roundtrip. Persons can return independent of the group on all but the New York flight. The costs of the flights are: Chicago; $53; New York; $137; Chicago; $176; Denver; $81 information concerning the flights is available in the SUA office. SAU has also planned a ski trip to Aspen for Jan. 6-13. The trip is full, but names are being taken for a waiting list.
The work of 23 graduating seniors from the design department will go on exhibit Monday on the third floor of Watson Library. The work will be on exhibit until Jan. 22, 1973. A reception from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday at Watson Library will officially major areas represented will be designed and represented will be designed, advertising, editorial art, jewelry and silversmithing, textiles, fashion illustration and interior design.
German Play
The KU German Club and Delta Phi Alpha, the German fraternity, will present a Christmas nativity play, "Die Hellige Weihnachtsgruß" in the University Lutheran Church in New York.
produce commercials and any other recorder and an engineering firm in the building.
Haskell Guest
Refreshments will be served at an informal reception after the play.
The move will take about one month to complete, Mensie said, but the station will continue to broadcast during the move. The square footage will not be as large as in Hoch, Mensie said, but it will be a better arrangement.
Hyman Appelman, worldwide evangelist, Russian-born lawyer, traveler and author, will be the Religious Emphasis guest Monday through Friday at Haskell Indian University. Appelman's topics for the week are: "The Place"; Tuesday, "Invasion from Outer Space"; Wednesday, "Voices From Beyond the Grave"; Thursday, "The Greatest Won Won and Lost"; and Friday, "The Recommendation of a Jewish Senator." All the sessions will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the major auditorium at Haskell Admission is free.
Third World Expert To Discuss Conflict
After the remodeling is completed. KUOK
Chailand's speech, "Political Strategy of Armed Struggle: Latin America and Vietnam," is part of American week activities. His appearance is sponsored by SAU.
Gerard Chalain, internationally known French specialist on problems of national liberation, armed struggle and socialism in the third world will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Originally, the student broadcasting station was in Green Hall and was called KDGU. KDGU moved to Flint Hall and occupied what is now rooms 217 and 218. Later, television labs were moved out of the station to be used for space for the radio broadcasting station. When the station moved to Hoch in 1957, it changed its name to KUOK.
personnel will move their equipment to the garage.
Kiwanis Club Honors Nichols Housing Director
University of Kansas Chancellor Raymond Nichols and Joseph Wilson, director of KU housing, were named Thursday as the 1972 recipients of the Lawrence Kiwanis Club's Substantial Citizen Awards.
The awards are presented each year to citizens who have made sizeable contributions to the community for a long period of time.
Ed Elibel, head of the selection committee, made the presentations at noon during a Kiwanis luncheon at the Holiday Inn.
Earlier this year Nichols was named interim chancellor of KU after serving as executive secretary of the University under the previous chancellor, who was named chancellor 02 by the Board of Trustees.
While a student at KU, Nichols was editor of the Kansas and the Jayhawker and was selected to such scholastic activity honor awards. He also won the Honor He was also Honor Man for the class of 1926.
In 1945, Wilson served two years as KU business manager. In 1950, he was named by Chancellor Deane Malott to his present position as housing director.
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ALLEY SHOP
6
Friday, December 8, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Robert Harris, Mission graduate student, encounters one of the many barriers persons confined to wheelchairs must try to overcome on campus. Stairs, railings, and staircases require special buildings on campus virtually inaccessible to a person
in a wheelchair. Formerly, 20 buildings on campus were unaccessible, and even with the construction of over 35 curb cuts this summer, there are still 11 buildings that cannot be reached, according to Harris'
survey. Because Murphy Hall and Woodruff Auditorium have stairs at all entrances, a person confined to a wheel chair could miss a great deal of the entertainment offered on campus.
Wheelchair Operators Face Campus Barriers
By MIKE LEWIS Kansan Staff Writer
Whenever a bicycle rider or pedestrian uses one of the small rampas which have been built into curbs on campus, it supports the conviction of Robert Harris, Lawrence graduate student, who claims: "Environmental barriers are not just problems of people in wheelchairs, they're people problems."
AT THE TIME of his survey during the last spring semester, he found 20 buildings were unaccessible because of the lack of drainage. He had the construction of more than 35 curb cuts this summer, Harris's figures show that a person in a wheelchair still could not gain access to 11 buildings on campus because of imbalance or a door which he would not be able to open.
Harris, who spent four years in a wheelchair himself, surveyed 27 University buildings for the ability of a person in a wheelchair to approach the building, enter the room once inside the building, use the restroom facilities and reach other floors.
Those buildings mentioned in Harris's survey as having barriers in the approach to the outside doors were Carruth O'Leary Hall, the Museum of Natural History, Green Hall, Hoch Auditorium, Learned Hall, Lindley Hall, Mallot Hall, Marvin Hall
Harris said that while the curb cuts, which were made last summer, were designed with wheelchairs in mind, the removal of the curb's architectural barrier was helping a much broader segment of the University community.
Harris said several surplus surrounded persons confined to wheelchairs at KU.
"One is that people in wheelchairs are incompetent and have no effect on their environment," Harris said. "The other is that KU is architectural free of barriers."
Murphy Hall, Spooner Art Museum and Walking Hospital.
In some instances the barriers were one step.
Harris found a particular abundance of barriers in restrooms. Using a wheelchair 24 inches wide Harris found restrooms in only five of the 27 buildings surveyed had stalls wide enough to admit a wheelchair, and he expected the number to decrease.
"THE ONLY reason we could get into the stalls in Strong and Watson was that someone had jerked the doors off of them," Harris said.
Although total modification of the KU environment is unlikely in the near future, Alain Wierchie of the office of facilities, planning and operations said, the main reason for this is with regard to persons in wheelchairs is to determine the need for restroom facilities.
Wiechert said changes were still in the planning stages and actual work would not be done.
As is often the case, the problem of change is a problem of cost. As Keith Lawton, director of facilities, planning and operations said, "We have a lot of thoughts about the future but no money to perform them."
While Wesco Hall and the new student health center are being built to accommodate a growing population, recently enacted state statute, Lawson said older buildings, which were without elevators and had prohibitive entries, could be fitted with only if and when finances permit.
PRESENTLY A STUDY is underway by
architectural barriers across the campus.
SAMSON
Kansan Photos by CHRIS CANNELLA
Harris said he undertook the investigation of building accessibility because those who were not confined to wheelchairs had a long time understanding wheelchair mobility.
Seeing-Eye Dog Is Companion, Aid
By PATTY JOHNSON Kansan Staff Writer
Blindness is a handicap to Gary Marshall, Rochester, N.Y., graduate student, but it does not keep him down. Along with Slip, his hand has been broken on campus at the University of Kansas on campus at the University of Kansas.
Marshell, 27, is a recent winner of the Bob Dole Scholarship award for handicapped students. Sen. Dole, Republican national party chairman, donated $1,500 he received from the Vickers lecture series to a scholarship fund for handicapped students on the campus.
BLINDED by an automobile accident several years ago.
Marshall applied for the award to the Endowment Association, which is handling the scholarship. There are three scholarships. 5000 each.
decision to have a seeing-eye dog to help him get around more easily. Both he and
MARSHALL said learning the campus had been somewhat difficult. He has classes on Monday and Wednesday, Bailey Hall and Snow Hall. Friends help them to learn the routes at the beginning of each semester. He said that Slip had been able to adjust to the different routes fairly
Slip went through rigorous training at Seeing-Eye Inc, in Morristown, N.J.
"they do a top-netch job," he said. "I was with Slip 24 hours a day. We walked two to three miles daily in city streets, elevators, department stores, everywhere."
"He thinks he knows where he's going." he said, "but sometimes he stops at Bailey, and then goes to the ballpark."
and the two have been together for more than a year.
Marshall did his undergraduate work at a junior college in Wichita, and received a B.A. degree in sociology and education from Wichita State University. He worked in Topeka as a social worker before making the decision to return to school last year.
THIS IS Marshall's second semester at KU. Marshall, a graduate student in the School of Education, said he hoped to get a master's degree and teach sociology.
Slip is Marshall's first seeing-eye dog,
"People who have not had previous experience with wheelchairs cannot learn what it is like to be confined to a wheelchair and dug around in it for one day," Harris said.
Harris, far left, demonstrates one of the other problems a person in a wheelchair has when he tries to enter Watson Library. In order to enter the library, he has to call ahead for someone to unlock the lower-level front door. The entrance is made
He said he had a good relationship with most of his teachers. He said he did not find it difficult to work with them.
A PERSON in a wheelchair would react to being called handicapped much the way a black would react to being called an Uncle Tom. Harris said.
He said invalid in one sense implied a helpless person and in another sense meant void. There were shades of difference between disabled person and a person with disability, because the former is representing a person but the former connoting something less than normal.
Harris used the analogy of a janitor who was unable to put trash in a container taller than he. Harris said one would not call the janitor incompetent but put the blame on his environment which made it impossible for him to get up in a wheelchair and person in a wheelchair incompetent was like blaming the janitor for being too short, he said.
"They have to realize," be said, "there is going to be a different method to deal with me. I like teachers to be flexible with me as teachers and assignments are concerned."
very narrow by the stand in front. Once he is inside, there is no way for him to get out quickly, which could be disastrous in case of a fire. Harris also suggests that the buttons in elevators be put on the side wall instead of the front wall as they are now.
Harris said society's stereotype of the person in a wheelchair was that of one who was unable to help himself. He also had a disability, invalid, disabled person and handicapped.
He said that most teachers were flexible to move most of them bend over backwards to help them.
Harris said persons with disabilities had been depicted as having little impact on their environment because of being weak and sickly.
It is not the incompetence of the person, Harris said, but the restrictive nature of his environment which made it hard for a person in a wheelchair.
This would make them easier to find, and would prevent the person from having to turn the wheelchair around to reach the bench. Below Mary's chair, Marshall, Rochester, and Stub Bob Dole Award winner, is guided around campus by his seeing-eye dog, Slip.
DIDY LEE
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8, 1972
7
'Wet' Forces to Try Liquor Bill
(Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part series dealing with lair or the drink in Kansas. The first part gives the views of the "wet" forces.)
(Monday: the "dry" position and local option.)
By SANDY HUNTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Legalization of sale of liquor by the drink is an issue of growing concern to Kansas. Whether liquor by the drink should be sold for on-premises consumption in licensed, owned establishments, or established, is a question which will will face the 1973 Kansas Legislature in January.
Kansas and Oklahoma are the only states that do not have liquor-by-the-drink legislation, said Hank Parkinson, campaign coordinator for Kansans for Modern Alcoholic Beverage Control, Inc. (KMABC).
Advocates of liquor by the drink will try to achieve their goal this year by proposing a liquor-by-the-drill bill in the legislature rather than supporting the adoption of a proposed constitutional amendment, Parkinson said.
Kansas voters turned down such an amendment by a narrow margin in 1970. A constitutional amendment requires a two-thirds majority vote in both houses of the legislature before it can be placed on the ballot and submitted to the voters. A bill, however, requires only a majority vote in each house for passage.
PARKINSON SAID the bill that would be proposed to the January Legislature was intended to be the law.
Bus Service For Finals Scheduled
A revised bus schedule for the Lawrence Bus Co. will go into effect Dec. 13 for the final examination period. The fare will remain the same, 10 cents on campus and 25 cents to downtown. The downtown service will remain unchanged.
24th and Ridge Court 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Naismith, Oliver 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Leave Union to 24th and Ridge Court 10 minutes past the hour.
Leave Park 25—30 minutes past the hour.
Leave both 19th and Ridge Court 35 minutes past
the hour.
Leave 21st and Stewart on the hour and 30 minutes past the hour.
"We feel that by restricting our liquor by the ounce can be served, it will not be found to be violating the provision of the law. We are forbids the open saloon," Parkinson said.
of liquor by the drink in establishments that earn 50 per cent or more of their income from food sales and have seating accommodations for a minimum of 40 persons. No stand-up bars would be covered with high stairs and strict township options would apply.
Leave Naisimith, Oliver 10 and 40 minutes past the hour.
Leave Union to 21st and Stewart 20 and 50 minutes past the hour.
He estimated that Kansas was currently losing approximately $12.5 million in taxes by not allowing liquor by the drink. He explained that this was the amount of tax he had paid there if there was the standard 3 per cent sales tax on drinks dispensed by private clubs.
"OUR BILL CALLS for a 4 per cent tax on liquor by the drink, which should net about $15 million or more a year," Parkinson said. "In addition, heavy licensing fees and increased tourism and convention activities all contribute to additional state funds."
Parkinson said he was confident that after four years of hard work by the group, he could passes, it would go into effect July 1, 1973. He said he was confident of Senate support, but was uncertain about the views of House members, at 80 per cent turnover in the November elections.
KU-Ellsworth 8:20 a.m. to 5:10 p.m.
Leave Ellsworth 10, 30 and 50 minutes past the hour.
Leave Union to Ellsworth on the hour, 20 and 40 minutes past the hour.
Leave GASP, Corbin 8:19 a.m. and every 20 minutes thereafter.
p.m. to 10:10 p.m.
Leave Ulmston on the hour.
Leave Ulmston on the hour.
Leave Ewellworth on the hour.
Leave Naismith, Oliver 8:25 a.m. and
every 20 minutes, thereafter until 5:25 p.m.
Leave Ellsworth 8:30 a.m. and every 20
minutes thereafter until 5:30 p.m.
"We will discuss the nominies, of course, and will also decide whether or not to meet over semester break," Richard Von Ende, acting executive secretary, said Thursday.
Von Ende said about 175 nominations had been received so far. He declined to comment on whether the committee had eliminated any of the nominees.
Van Ende said the closed session would begin at 8:30 a.m. Saturday, for four hours.
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Other advocates of liquor by the drink say that passage of the bill would ease the property tax burden in Kansas because revenues generated from a 4 per cent tax would revert to the school districts in which the establishments were located.
Advisory Group To State Plans On Chancellor
Sunday at 4:30 p.m.
Concert for Bangladesh with G. Harrison, E. Clapton, B. Dylan, B. Preston, L. Russell, and R. Starr.
-Medicine Ball Caravan with B. W. King, Alice Cooper, D. Kershaw, Delaney and Bonnie. French-Amer. Coordination
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Take Hiway 59 [First blacktop road in Kansas said by hand] north to Oksalaosa, "Last of the Beautiful"
IN 1970 A referendum to adopt liquor by the drink was submitted to the voters, but failed.
In 1971, the Senate defeated a bill which would have place restrictions on establishment of hospitals. The law was passed.
Dogger Records and Tapes and Lenny Zeros Records
local-option basis July 1, 1971, in Texas, Parkinson said. Since that time, the principal conventions centers, Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth and Austin, have reported that the number of conventions booked had doubled.
KANAS HAS LIGOR by the drink laws
law, but taxes are not received from it,
he
In 1969, KMABC made a proposal to the Senate that the state either vote total or decide by the drink. This was a legislative ploy because its measure out of the Senate, Parkinson said.
ACCORDING TO KMABC, there are currently 80 private clubs in Teopaka which dispense $8 million in liquor by the drink and have a central cent tax on mixed drinks and the $1,200 charge for the wine would give the state $897,200 in revenue potential for Teopaka alone, KMABC said. In addition, advocates say that liquor by the drink would enhance Kansas' ability to serve customers.
James Clancy, director of Community Facilities for Wichita and manager of the Century II convention center there, said. "A lot of people have been bottled-only states, thus putting us completely out of running for these conventions which could mean so much for Kansas."
"bottle only" bill was inaugurated. The push for liquor by the drink lay dormant for 19 years. Then in 1968, KMABC was formed. The group retained a lobbyist, but a proposed bill was killed at the committee level early in the session.
"More than 700 private clubs are dispensing liquor by the drink until 3 a.m. each day, including Sunday," he said. "I understand not to tax what is already on going."
Historically, proposals for liquor by the mink go back to the 1949 legislative session. The Senate passed a bill in 1962 to prohibit
Liquor by the drink went into effect on
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8
Friday, December 8. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Rodgers, Glover Lead All-Americans
NEW YORK (AP)—Johnny Rodgers, winner of the Halloween Trophy, and his Nebraska teammate Rich Glower, recipient of the Outland Trophy as the country's top interior lineman, have been named to the Press All-America team for 1972.
Joining them on the college football squad announced Thursday are tight end Charles Young and sophomore linebacker Richard Wood from No. 1-ranked Southern teams. The linebackers were active from Nebraska's two-time national champions, defensive end Willie Wilmer.
Oklahoma, ranked second nationally to Southern Cal heading into the bowl games, also placed three players on the elite squad--running back Greg Prutti, center Tom Brahaney and defensive tackle Derland Moore.
Glover, Pruitt, Brahayne and offensive tackle Jerry Bismack of Texas made the
Kuhn Statement At Conference Called a Fraud
NEW YORK (AP) -Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Commissioner Brown Kuhn Thursday of making a fraudulent statement and said player negotiations had been set back by an误判 that only the most rank amateur was involved.
Miller said he was referring to a Hawaii news conference Nov. 29 in which, he insisted, Kuhn violated an understanding between owners' and players' negotiating committees to resolve their problems privately and not in a public forum.
"Not only has Mr. Kuhn shown questionable integrity in breaking that agreement," Miller, a New York labor expert charged, "he has performed an extremely destructive act in terms of negotiations."
Kuhn had no immediate comment.
Miller called a news conference to detail accents of the latest conflict which he had handled with Russia.
"The commissioner's act has only served
"the commissioner's action." he added.
He declined, however, to predict that baseball may again be hit by a player's strike since the unprecedented action last season was the delayed opening of the regular season 10 days.
Independents Are Champs In Volleyball
Two independent teams swept both Hill Championship trophies from the fraternities in men's intramural volleyball Wednesday. The Organic Chemists won the bump in Division "B" and the Country Bumpins took the Division "A" Hill trophy.
Volleyball was the last intramural sport of the fall semester. Starting next semester, intramural basketball, which has had the most participants of any sport in the men's intramural program in past year, will begin.
The Country Bumpkins, winner of the Hill trophy in Division "A," won the first two games of their three-game volleyball match over Beta Theta Pti. In volleyball, the team that wins two of the three games in the match is declared winner. The Country Bumpkins won the first game 15-4, and the second game 15-5.
The Organic Chemists also grabbed wins in the first two games in their match with the New England team, for the Division "B" trophy, the Chemists' first game, 15-4, and the second, 15-12.
KU Cancels Part In Gymnastics Meet
The University of Kansas gymnastics team has decided not to attend the Iowa open invitational meet at Iowa City, Iowa, today and Saturday.
According to KU gymnastics coach Bob Lockwood, the KU team will not travel to the meet because final exams are upcoming and members have bad colds and are not ready.
The Iowa Open was the last scheduled meet for KU this semester.
All-America team for the second year in a row.
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Joining Brahmaney and Sienmore on the offensive interior line are tackle John Hickes of Ohio State and guards John Hannah of Rochester and Ron Rusnak of North Carolina.
GENE
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Roundout out the backfield are quarterback John Hufnagel of Penn State and running back Ots Armstrong of Purdue and Woodrow Green of Arizona State.
On the defensive unit with Glover, Wood and Moore are end Roger Goge of Baylar, tackle Greg Marx of Notre Dame, linebackers Randy Gradishar of Ohio State and John Skorpun of Penn State and backs Calvin Jones of Washington, Robert Popekel of Southern Methodist and Brad Van Pelt of Michigan State.
Rodgers was a key man on Nebraska's national championship teams of 1970 and 1971 and finished the 1972 regular season with 19 school records, seven Big Eight Conference marks and four national standards.
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Glover followed in the footsteps of defensive tackle Larry Jacobson. This season, Glover made twice as many tackles as he did last year, and being double-teamed on every play, being double-teamed on every play.
Hufnagel became Penn State's starting quarterback midway through the 1970 season, and led the team to Lions to 26 victories in 28 games and a Sugar Bowl date with Oklahoma. He hold nine Penn State records, including game, season and career marks for passing and total yards.
Green and Armstrong finished third and fifth in the national rushing statistics, Green gainning 1,383 yards and Armstrong gaining 759 yards. In his season, 1,665 yards he gained last season as Oklahoma's opponents concentrated on taking the explosive sweep out of the top ten in the NFC. Coach Chuck Fairbanks was "he more of a complete player than he's ever been."
The Associated Press All-America football team:
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MARC FARRIS AND THE BEATLES
The Giants of Jazz
Art Blakey
Dizzy Gillespie
Al Hickaboon
Thelonious Monk
Sandy Stitt
Kai Winding
THE MODERN JAZZ QUARTET
The Legendary Profile
MIKOLAY VATTOLS
MOUNTAIN IN THE CLOUDS
WILLIAM BURTON
The Giants of Jazz
Art Blakey
Dizzy Gillespie
Al McKibbon
Thelonious Monk
Sonny Stitt
Kai Winding
The Modern Jazz Quartet
The Legendary Profile
MIBCASLAY VIEW
MOUNTAIN IN THE CLOUDS
WPA CAMERA
Eddie Harris Sings The Blues
Long an innovator, Eddie Loman has his saxophone yet another instrument and here. In addition to his new instruments, Eddie now sings through it, and the song is performed on a album as a waterhed for Eddie Harris, raising him to new heights as a performer.
Mountain In The Clouds/Miroslav Vitous
This album is a significant precursor to the music of Weather Report. A virtuoso pianist and composer, he structures and develops the music around his instrument with a group of fine musicians who create adventurous and beautiful music.
The Giants of Jazz Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie
This is one of the all time greatest jazz groups ever Dizzy Gillespie, Al McKenny, Thelonious Monk, Sonny Sittler, the record set and was recorded live at the Victoria Theatre in London on electric, the solos superb
H K
Wild Flower Hubert Laws
Hulet Ruben, on a variety of flutes and piccolo, backed by a 23 piece keyboard, complete vividly on all his instruments. Carefully recorded by John Murzuffa from a perfect setting for an advanced technique
The Legendary Profile/The Modern Jazz Quartet
A new album by the Modern Jazz Quartet is always an event, and it will be followed by a lead song written by Milt Jackson. It is unobscured one of their lineups. It concludes with material ranging from Jackson's original title song to two treetwists in which dances demonstrate again why they have remained the jazz world for two decades.
NEW ATLANTIC JAZZ RELEASES.
AVAILABLE
'Hawk Guards Lead 69-63 Win
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8. 1972
9
KU Prevails in Murray State Score
By DON PFANNENSTIEL
Kansan Sports Writer
It is no secret that the University of
Kansas has a rich and winning basketball
leadership.
Thursday night at Allen Field House as the Jayhawks defeated Murray State, 69-43, to win their first game of the 1972 season after two losses.
The 'Hawks' win was characterized by
30
Kansan Staff Photo by T. DEAN CARLE
KU's Kivisto (45) Maneuvers for Goal
Led KU scrumers with 30 points.
Confidence Improved By Win, Owens Says
University of Kansas basketball coach Ted Owens was obviously relieved as he was in the KU locker room Thursday night after a scrappy Murray State squad. 69-43.
When asked what a loss would have done to the Jayhawks after they were so far ahead, Owens said, "I don't even like to think about that."
Leaders by as many as 19 points with 8:57 left, the 'Hawks saw that marrow in dwinkle to only four points seven minutes later. It took two free throws by KU guard KTom Viikov with just six seconds remaining to put the game away for the Javahaws.
The victory, however, does nothing but good things for KU. he added.
"It has to help the team's confidence," Owens said. "I wanted to get the pressure off them. You really can't perform when you're worried about losing."
Greater patience on offense and smoother
ball-handling, Owens said, were the major
components made by KU against the
Thoroughbreds.
"We were using much more patience than in the first two games," he said. "And it resulted in a much better shooting per game. It was also the smoothest flow that we've had this season."
Owens was especially pleased with the performances of the Jayhawk guards, who often played at the event.
"Kivisto played an outstanding game," he said, "and I was pleased that Tommy Smith, for his first game, played so well. We had good guard play in general."
Only in rebounding did the Jayhawks still turn in a sub-par performance. The Thoroughbreds beat them on the boards, 48-32.
"It's still not where we want it," Owens admitted.
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the timely outside shooting of the KU guards, Dale Greenlee and Torn Kvistio, who combined for more than half of KU's 48 points. The team had 20 points, while Greenlee shot in 16.
The game opened with Murray State jumping out to a 4-0 lead with two minutes, 23 seconds gone in the first half, but KU quickly came back and until the 4:06 mark the game was close. It was tied 11 times. Then forward Tommie Smith and Kivisto broke the game open, Smith, with his tremendous jumping ability, got two field goals in basket and KU added two 20-foot jumps to give KU a 38-29 half-time lead.
THE JAYHAWKS started the second half where they had left off in the first, pulling up to 84-38 lead at the 13-10 mark. During a run with the Bengals that symbolized the Thoreau-born team,
★ Unlimited Seconds on Good Food!
★ Swimming Pool
With 8:57 left in the game the Hawks had their biggest lead, 57-39, after Murray State had gone nearly eight minutes without a field goal. But the game was not over. KU hit a cold spell and the Racers came back on the hot shooting of 6-4 forward Mike Holmgren to mark KU's lead was to cut seven, 62-55, that the Hawks continued to control the game.
THE MOST pleasing KU statistic was the shooting percentage. The Jayhawks vastly improved on their past performances and shot 48.4 per cent. Kivisto, Smith and Greenlee, the three KU players scoring in double figures, all shot 50 per cent or better
KU got another scare from Murray State with only 32 seconds left in the game when 'Hawk center Rick Suttle was called for a foul while trying to rebound a missed free throw by Jamison Simson. Suttle protested the foul call and immediately whistled down for a technical
Murray State successfully made the foul shot and the technical foul shot and the KU margin was cut to four. In the next 45 seconds the Racers had two other shots on the floor and even more, but they missed on both attempts, and KU went on to win its first game.
The Thoroughbred's Les Taylor, who had been averaging more than 20 points per game, was held to only 19 as he was successful on only five of 19 attempts from the field.
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Plan Now for Spring '73
NAISMITH HALL-
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Thursday night's loss was Murray State's first of the new season. The Racers now face a tough task.
There will be no rest for the Jayhawks after the Murray State win as they face four victories.
Iowa, which has a 2-4 record, has six returning lettermen from a year ago. Rick Williams, a 6-3 guard, leads the Iowa scoring attack with an average of 21.5 points a game. At center the Hawkeyes will be starting 7-4 center Kevin Kunnert, who is also scoring in double figures with an average of 12.5.
THE MAIN concern for the Jayhawks is Iowa's height advantage. Besides Kurnert, the Hawkeyes have 6-9 Jim Collins and 6-7 Jeff Bennett. The team's other guard position will be 6-12, Gaver Lea.
Iowa will come to Lawrence fresh from pulling off a major upset Monday when they defeated Kentucky.
Because of Iowa's height advantage, coach Ted Owens said, KU will have to try to move its men around inside and under the basket. Owens also said that the 30-second clock would not be used for the Saturday contest.
| | fp-fa | fta-a | reb | pf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Barrow | 8-12 | 6-14 | 9 | 6 |
| Butee | 6-12 | 1-14 | 6 | 14 |
| Sutle | 1-12 | 1-14 | 3 | 14 |
| Skilte | 7-14 | 1-14 | 3 | 15 |
| Kirkton | 7-14 | 1-14 | 4 | 10 |
| Kirkton | 1-14 | 0-4 | 3 | 12 |
| Flickhike | 1-3 | 1-4 | 2 | 12 |
| Flickhike | 1-3 | 1-4 | 2 | 12 |
| Roger, M | 3-3 | 1-3 | 3 | 12 |
| Rogers, M | 3-3 | 1-3 | 3 | 12 |
| Total | 20-41 | 9-12 | 24 | 64 |
| Total | 0-0 | 0-1 | 24 | 64 |
The last meeting between the Jayhawks and Iowa was last year when the Hawkeyes trounced KU, 81.68. Iowa has won all three previous meetings between the schools.
★ ★ ★
Jamison fp-2g n-fa ffa reb pf tp 14
Barrero 7-16 0 9 1 4 14
Starke 8-16 0 1 9 1 4
Abyler 4-9 0 9 1 4 14
Abyler 4-9 0 9 1 4 14
Barrett 5-19 0 5 1 4 5
House 0-1 1-1 0 1 5
House 0-1 0-1 0 1 5
House 0-0 0-0 0 1 5
Tegasos 0-6 13-8 0 21 61
Total 72 13-8 21 61
Nurray State 29 34 - 63
Kansas 28 35 - 69
Turnovers-Kansas, 17; Murray State, 24
Attendance-9,100
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Sat. 8:30-5:00
Sun. 1:00-5:00
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5
DAY MARATHON for the XMAS-NEW YEAR Holiday
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From Tues., Dec. 19th will present the best local & regional bands 5 nights a week thru Sat., Jan. 4th
ONE BLOCK WEST "The Collegiate Night Club"
Each Wed. & Thurs., your first drink will cost you fifteen cents during this fifteen day marathon!
New Year Celebration—Sat., Dec. 30th
ONE BLOCK WEST
of State Kansas City —Be 18 & Have I.D.
Line Kansas
THE STAR OF THE FESTIVAL
Give her one of our engagement rings. Before someone else does.
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Finnigan and Wood
804 W.24th 842-4366
[THURSDAY-SATURDAY] 9-12 p.m.
at the Red Baron .. of course
Advance tickets
$2.50 advance $3.00 at the door.
at Kiefs, Red Baron, various
locations throughout K.C. and Topeka.
F
This weekendll
Warning—Don't miss
one of the Red Baron's most
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Get tickets now, while some remain!
10
Friday, December 8. 1972
University Daily Kansan
Weekend Scene
Sugarloaf to Play Encore
MUSIC
SUGARLOAF: The rock band from Denver will return to Lawrence for its second concert this semester. After a year of touring, the group such as "Tongue in cheek" and "Green Eyed Lady," and a variety of other sounds. Organist Jerry Corbetta was the star of their last concert, playing everything from pop to roll. Tonight and Saturday, Red Dog Inn.
FINNIGAN AND WOOD: Former members of the Jerry Hahn Brotherhood, Mike Finnigan and Jerry Wood have produced a unique blend of rock'n'roll and blues. The duet have done a variety of studio work, including Finnigan's app on jimi Hendrix's "Electric Ladyland." Tongtie and Saturday, Red Baron.
THEATRE
MOONCHILDREN: The University of Kansas Experimental Theatre will present Michael Wieler's comedy concerning eight American college seniors who share an off campus apartment during the mid-1980s. The play premiered this year at the University's Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. (See review on this page.)
MOVIES
MACETHEN: A bold adaptation of the
Roman Poliakov's *Hilgert* 2.
LADY SINGS THE BLUES: The story of singer Bille Holiday and her battle with narcotics and racism. Diana Ross makes her screen test演, also starring Billy Dee Williams, Richard Pryor and Sid Melton. The film features many good songs, such as "Let Get By," "Gov'z the Child," "My Child," or "Strange Fruit," by song by Hillerest 1.
WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY: A re-leased Woody Allen film, with Woody taking charge of the film's dialogue and a soundtrack by the Lovin' Spoonful. Hiltree 37.
PLAY IT AS IT LAYS; Tuesday Weld and
PLAY ANY Perkins star in a complicated film
in which he plays a young man.
UILAZAN'S WAIT: A violence-packed
West, starring Burt Lancaster.
Varsity.
ART
ANTIGONE: *Sophaecles* play trans formed to the screen as a beautiful motion picture. Produced in Greece, the film is based on an account of a original strength. It stars Irene Papanas and
Mano Katrakis, with English subtitles. No admission charge; 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Woodruff Auditorium.
FREE U. PHOTOGRAPHY: A small exhibit of work done by Free University photography students. Through Dec. 15, main floor, Kansas Union.
KU's 'Moonchildren': Life Through Insanity
BY DAVID HEALY Kansan Reviewer
"Cancer" was the original title of the play at the Experimental Theatre until its author, Michael Weller, changed his mind and called it "Moonchildren."
One play concerns the communal life of eight students (seven seniors and one grad student) who share an apartment. They are a group of four students, Aquarium and the American value systems.
Lest anyone be confused, the University of Kansas production is billing itself as "Mochinchidron (or Cancer)." Perhaps that is why the play is actually two plays in one.
The other play concerns one child, Bob, who is brilliantly played by Plaud Hough. A music composition major, Bob is trying to understand life and cannot. His mother dies of cancer just before Christmas break and he never informs his roommates.
Since neither plot is subordinate to the other, I can empathize with anyone who, in general, lacks a plot.
The play is very funny. I suspect more so for those of us who were college students in 1970 than for our younger compatriots. I also suspect that most people over 38-years-old will not see much of the humor. C'est la vie.
To insure that there is never a dull
School Districts . . .
The main thrust of the bill, Dennis said, was to equalize the burden of the school districts and make it possible for all students to attend public school just a minimum of educational opportunity.
DENNIS SAID that the bill would weigh the per pupil expenditure to provide for differences in the cost of educating pupils in different age groups. Elementary school students should be counted and secondary school schools would be counted as 1 and three-tenths of a student.
The bill would set a minimum level of pupil expenditure which the state thought would guarantee adequate education throughout the state. Any district that wished to provide more funds would have to pay the additional proportion of the total expenditure. These districts would not afford this amount would have larger subsidies from the state.
would have received if the rest of the county had been of average wealth, and when it did not get any funds for being an exceptionally poor district.
Dale Dennis, director of statistical services for the state department of education, reviewed the provisions of State Senate bill 716, the legislative committee's proposed plan. The bill would provide an alternate method of finance for public education.
If the bill is passed as it now stands the state would provide for all of the cost of vocational and special education. The bill would also provide more transportation opportunities to which are schools that are more than 10 miles from any other school in the district.
(continued from page 1)
THE DISTRICT COURT in the Caldwell case found the present finance system unacceptable because it did not provide equal protection under the law to all citizens as required by the fourteenth amendment to the constitution.
In a press conference before the meeting, Plucker said, "the legislators want to reach agreement on some basic approach to finance."
moment, two of the moonchildren, Mike (Eric Anderson) and Cootie (John Ahrens), are veritable Rosencrantz and Guldensterns. Although they are quite insane, they do have "method in their madness" for they are Phi Beta Kappa. When they appear in twin Santa suits, their buffery approaches Treweedie and Treweedied.
During the press conference Dennis said that state funds to public education decreased from $29.5 million in the 1970-1971 school year to $8.9 million this year. He said that this was because of decreasing enrolments and lack of revenue.
At the opening session of the conference, John O. Yulich, board of education member from Kansas City, Kan., said that the meeting was the first in a series of meetings of the states four largest districts. Yulich said that these four, Kansas City, Wichita, Topeka and Shawnee Mission decided that their conference should be held in the five districts that would have similar problems.
BECAUSE OF this, Plucker said, the local districts are going to have to carry out an inspection.
Apartment dwellers will love Art Slan as Mr. Willis, the landlord. Never has the kind-hearted slob been so well portrayed. "Gee, I just really do admire you kids . . ."
The original group was increased to 12, Yulich said. When these 12 districts met they again decided that the problem of finances should be approached from a different point of view. The district said, came Thursday's meeting in Teopeta in all which Kansas districts were invited.
For seniors, who may become depressed watching other seniors worry about what to
KANSAN reviews
do after they graduate, the play offers the answer of the year to the toff question, and then asks the next year.
"I think I'll be a homosexual," is the answer.
For once, the Experimental Theatre is truly experimental. In traditional theatre the audience looks onto the stage through a large screen, and the audience through a giant picture window. In "Moonchildren" the apartment has been constructed in the auditorium and the audience enters through the front door and into a brightly lit four walls. And they say walls can't talk!
"Moonchildren" runs today and Saturday. If you miss this one, you might as well be on vacation.
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
TODAY
Engineering: 10 a.m. Above A, Cafeteria, Kansas
Brauz-Bratzelian: 11:30 a.m. Alcove B, Cafeferia.
Russian Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowlark Cafeferia.
Hassan Tabee : 11:30 a.m. wmarkwark Cafeteria.
Law School Student: 12-30 m wmaryo C. Cafeteria
Law School Students: 12.30 m, Alope C, Cafeteria.
Muslim Students: 12.30 p, Parlour A.
Students: 12:30 p.m. Parar A.
Jamaica: with Journalism Students: 12:30 p.m.
Croom Room.
Council Room.
Paint and Sculpture 1:30 p.m. Former Room.
Painting and Sculpture: 1:30 p.m., Forum Room.
GASH: 3:30 p.m., Pine Room.
Phila Bea Kappa : 4 p.m., Forum Room
Cathle Students: 4:30 p.m., Woodruff.
SIA Popular Film, "Taking Off", 7 p.m., Woolfuff Auditorium.
9 p.m., Cornell Music Hall.
The Way: 7 p.m., Council Room.
AMAS: 7 p.m., Room 305.
Black Student Uniform Style and Talent Show: 7:30 p.m.
Ballroom and Partiers.
SATURDAY
State Women's Intercollegiate Volleyball Tournament:
vocational training:
all day, Robinson Gymnastics,
Assistance Attacking, Young Athletes,
Ballet and Bodyshaping.
Survival,1 10:30 p.m. DCE Audiolibrion.
Western Civilization Comprehensive Exam: 5 p.m.
vcdifr(
Varkey, Varkey, Basketball, KU vs. Johnson County
UCO) 5:p. Allen Field House.
JARCO 3 p.m. Allen Field House
TACO Basketball, U. iowa: 7:35 p.m., Allen Field House
Painters' Prom: 8 p.m., Ballroom, Kansas Union.
SUNDAY
Open
24 hrs.
per day
SUA Bridge: 1:30 p.m., Pima Horn, Kansas Union,
Missouri Bridge: 2:30 p.m., Walmart Hillsborough
Washington Hall Strength: 2:30 p.m., Watkin Hall
Christmas Vespers: 3:30 and 7:30 p.m., Hoch
International Film: "Anagheus," 7:30 p.m., Woodruff
-Wide selection of gifts
-Cash & carry flowers every day.
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Large Selection of Christmas Gifts for the Whole Family
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10.5 Mon.-Sat.
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924 Mass.
Formerly Eldrings
Open Night Stars Starting 30
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843-9694
Open Evenings
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A PLAYBOY'S DELIGHT
HELD OVER??
— Yes it is —
12:15 TONIGHT-SAT. NIGHT
THE EROTIC
ADVENTURES of
ZORRO
No one under 18 admitted
Proof of age required
Adm. $1.50/Sorry no refunds
Outside beverages
Hillcrest Brewing
12:15 TONIGHT-SAT. NIGHT
THE EROTIC ADVENTURES of
ZORRO
Commonwealth Theatres
MOVIE INFORMATION
NOW SHOWING
842-4000
TUESDAY ANTHONY PERKINS
WELD PLAY IT AS IT LAYS"
Evening 7:30 & 9:30
Adult 1.50
Orpheus
THEATRE ... TRIAGENA VI 3:35PE
Burt Lancaster "ULZANA'S RAID"
NOWI Weekdays 7:30, 12:00, 9:30
Sat. Sun., Sat. Sun., 12:00, 9:30
After 1:50
Varsity
THEATRE ... FREMONT FAMILY VIEWS
Coming Steve McQueen "THE GETAWAY"
All MacGraw
Honana Palandida Film of MACBETH
"Brought vividly, handsily, excitingly."
New York Post
Eve 7:40 & 9:15
Eve 21:15 & 8:16
Woody Allen's whats up tiger Lily?
Hillcrest
One of the biggest and brightest surprises of the Diane Ross!" Playboy
Eve 7:10 & 9:45
Eve 7:10 & 9:45
Eve 7:10 & 9:45
Adult 1.50
Mat.Sun., Sat. Sun., 1:45 & 4:15
Hillcrest
Ends Tues.
JG 842-4000
Burt
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Sat.Sun, 5:10, 7:00, 9:30
Adult 1.50
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MARRIOTT ... FREDERICK 973-1045
Coming
Steve McQueen
Ali MacGraw
"The GETAWAY"
NOW
"One of the biggest
and brightest
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movie year"
-Playboy
LADY
SINGS THE
BLUES
Wed. 7:15 & 8:15
Wat. Sun. Sat. 1:45 & 4:15
Hillross
Roman Flakmanin Film of MACBETH
"Brought vividly, emotionally, excitement to the New Post
Even 7:20 & 9:50 - Adult 1:50
Mat. Sat. Sun. 8:30
Hillerentz
End day
WED 7:40 - 9:15
SAT 5:00 - Son
8:15 & 3:45
Woody
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what's up tiger lily?
HILLCREST
@WOODY
Qualifying for Midwest Intercollegiate Regionals
DUPLICATE BRIDGE
All University Students Eligible Game also open to non-students
Sunday, Dec. 10 1:30 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Student Union Activities
BODY BIZARRE has Organic Ideas for a Scentual Christmas:
Root Beer Float Bubble Bath
Berkeley Leather Fragrance Lotion
Sweet Almond Oil for Massage
Carnation Body Shampoo
Frankincense Oil
Strawberry Yogurt Lotion
Cucumber Cleansing Cream
Light and Dark Musk
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We've got all kinds of weaving and spinning supplies for you. Beads, raw wool, looms from $15 to $500—
You can even rent a loom from us for only $6 a month!
So come in before Christmas and see some new ideas in Christmas gifts.
AND DON'T FORGET
AND DON'T FORGET
$ 1.00 OFF
EVERYTHING WITH THIS AD AND $5 MIN. PURCHASE
University Daily Kansan
Friday, December 8, 1972
KANSAN WANT ADS
11
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Five Days
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their financial circumstances. BEING HURLED ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—On sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
you're at an advantage. 2. If you don't.
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization." Campus Madarass, "The New York Times."
Realtime STA-120 receiver 2 optimus 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Original jewelry, hanging plants, terrariums and more are included. Price to fit the slimest budget. You've got to UPPER DUCK to be rewarded it 12:12 PM
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant parental cavity for Christmas! The Hodge Brothers
The largest hardened jewelery selection in the country. Designed by the Hodge Podge. 15 W. W9k. 12-12
2 Naimish Hall contracts for Spring semester
841-7357-3129 or 842-7359-128
12-58
Bahrain Hall contracts for Spring semester
841-7357-3129 or 842-7359-128
1989 Cullens N. Power brakes, power stirring air, or in very good condition. Call Jeff Jensen.
1970 WS Cod 4. spyd, AM radio, good
tire, $125. MOART Motor Mart. 1518 W 28
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1988 Open Holley Kadet, red. 4 gad. full mattsum.
1989 Brayhill Motors, red. 4 gad. full mattsum.
1990 $ campus Motor Mant. 11W 828 12W
1991 $ campus Motor Mant. 11W 828 12W
Boston T-35 enlarge with $10m or 7.5 Fees len
Beijing T-35 enlarge with $10m or 7.5 Fees len
Nanjing K141-7378 5 p.m.
Chengdu K141-7378 5 p.m.
1965 Ford Mutant, Mugwale, red, ready to go
only $75. Campus Motor Marit, Mugwale, W.2d. 18-38
(480) 633-4560
JUWK-11b (11.5 kg) bw weight - make *Old photos*
JUWK-11b (11.5 kg) bw weight - make *Old photos*
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Vox box合唱母童 $25, 842-7878 12-8
Vox box合唱母童 $25, 842-7878 12-8
1606 Chev Impala 2 door htdtp. Good condition,
$35 or more, can offer Call Aitrexa extra
charges. See details below.
Naimish Hall contract for sale for spring semester:
Call 843-0125. Orchid
12-8
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. 2nd on Highway 89, north of Kansas River w bridge. Antiques,集市. Also, the sand of other items. Also, we have fruits and vegetables. Open 5-9 each day, 14h30-12h12. Allenbern, Altemben.
TEAC 4020 tape recorder or deck. Automatic reel-
and internal and external gates mix 25 tapes.
TEAC 4020 tape recorder or deck. Automatic reel-
and internal and external gates mix 25 tapes.
Ski boot= Le-TPaquette. Ladies size $1; M. Excel-
tion 84-6000 after 4.30.
Brace length 84-6000 after 4.30.
Two metal stooled Goodyear polyhedra tires on hardwood or housed in wooden like New Design $69. Eventually $129.
1965 Chevy Impala 1d &r. H.T., V8, PB, PAl, Air-
Good condition. $200 or best price. 142-318
Good condition. $200 or best price. 142-318
For sale or trade. 88 Oup Rally Cadded, Looka-
s to the store. 88 Oup Rally Cadded, Looka-
s to the store. 10 Through and give back. 842-2473. 12-12
Microphone- 2 - Electro-Voice model 623 mics
Microphone- 5 - great for recording about a year
old. 30$ takes up space.
Old $30 takes up space.
Whichester model 101 20 gauge shotgun rifle
with a 45° receiver, 8mm ASP, .45" and
.30" bullets, shells made of stainless steel,
Excellent condition, Clean
1960 MGC-GT. Low mileage, perfect body. 3 liter
compact car with tires and batteries. Mail mug 625-2457.
DISTRIBUTED BY CHEVROLET.
BOOTS~ We are closing out our men's Acme and
Sportswear. Sale prices are $19.90 and $19.90. Sizes 6 to 15
$29.90售价 $19.90 and $19.90. Sizes 6 to 15
$29.90
71 Diatom 2012, Silver with black int., AC mg,
18,000 miles, 423-281).
12-12
1809 Great Lakes mobile home 12 x 16, correct-
ment for the property. Located on lot #24 for 175m². Village
home located on lot #26 for 130m².
Must ask immediately! 1962 Chevrolet Alr-4 Air 42
shocks, $500, 843-766-706. Can any currently
shocks, $500, 843-766-706.
EXTRA CHEAP! One Alvara classical guitar, one Coracad string bass, one also a keyboard. Two Cheap! string guitars. Ten position apices. All items will be sold at a lower $10 per piece (everything will be over $10) prices. 843-6420. 12-12
1963 Ford Esquinone van. Very good condition.
built engine mechanically and overall lot
built engine mechanically and overall lot
SKI5-HURRY! Get them for Christmas. Rossig-
sons 3-10pm. Get them for surface surfaces
1-12pm. 811-234-9760. 811-234-9760.
NREED A PLACE TO LIVE? Try Naismith Hall. Four entrances for sale. Call 831-752-9544 for sale. Phone 831-752-9544 for sale.
Irish Setter, male. 11 weeks old. ARC, kits.
Great Christmas gift. 841-2248. 12-8
Panasonic AM/FM stereo cassette record. Frequency range is 88-108 MHz. Requires level control, and ability to record from a remote location.
Pre-Christmas albs on all dress and gowns (18): "Bronze or silver feathered headgear, gold feathered goods, bells, ballet glove, Boltonian wig, a black hat."
Cheap Charlize discount leather jacket-Wonder-
shirt, hoodie and sport jacket taxcoel All new
shirts and sports jackets taxcoel All new
shirts and sports jackets taxcoel All new
shirts and sports jackets taxcoel All new
CAMPUS MOTOR MART GET ACQUAINTED SALE
our snow tires with each vehicle sold during the 17-20 to 15-24 season.
The 18-22 cars from 15-24 to 17-20 have blue, lte. in blue top drive read for winter $1,135
top drive read for winter $1,135
defoggers, auto windows, new霆 in defoggers
VW蓝车 8 pass, AM radio, don't miss $1,135
Give Blue+ Red a sedan, metallic silver
GW automatic power steering - A-, new
GW automatic power steering - A-, new
Mustang harddrift, VW-A, Auto - A-C,
Mustang harddrift, VW-A, Auto - A-C
$1,135
Buckle Skyhawk升力 Full power - A-C
buckle Skyhawk升力 Full power - A-C
& tp. Buckets $95
& tp. Buckets $95
Economy unimpeded 3 sdp. Economy unimpeded 3 sdp.
Campus MOTOR MART
CAMPUS MOTOR MART
1518 W. 23rd
842-3903
1971 Honda scooter, '72c good condition, never
killed. Golf club, building. Dan Silcoe
hit 65 on the back of it.
Maint wont 44 Bundleer automatic. Brand new boat-
running condition (5% or best offer) 841-726
(309) 762-3820
Dalandell Christmas tree tree lot 843-2069 Douglass
Meadows and Rivers, New Jersey. Makes up 181-W.
Meadows and Rivers, New Jersey. Makes up 181-W.
Meadows and Rivers, New Jersey. Makes up 181-W.
Four VW Bug Pirelli radial tires, $75—were $170.
These are Italian racing tires and give better traction than snow tires—best for all driving conditions.
They have a durable shell, weighted and anced and installed. #84-649. 12-11
71 Yahana 350 for $350. Two helmets extra 10
interest, call 864-6711. 12-11
Two box seats plus parking permit for K.C. Chiefs-Baltimore Colt game this Sunday. Regular price. Also 1 large, living room rug $49.00 max size free to 1staker. 843-3127. 12-11
French-made (Peugeot) 10-speed, exc. condition
best offer at 2448 at Wheretake 12-12
841-3480 12-12
Four good tubeless w-w (Firestone) litre 6.50x133.
Two are near new w-w, Tread tread and regular two.
One is near new w-w, Tread tread and Regular.
Also 2 new 6" x 14" steel tubes to fit most GM
tubes. Tubeless valve stems included, great
quality. Architectural set (Post) complete with
Architectural set (Call). Swallow D. 12-12
(near campus).
Magnavox stereo component system includes 8
microphones, a card reader, headphones, and
headsets. Only $179 at Ray Star stores.
Magnavox headphones as low as $8 at Ray
Stonehack x, 929 Mass. Open events. 12-12
Motorola four channel component sets as low as 12W Motorola Harborback* base station 1293 Mass Air Transport* base station 1295 Mass Air Transport*
Discountlnted Magnawoon. intercom speakers.
Discountlnted Magnawoon. intercom speakers.
basement steroom room. 929 Mass. 12-12
12-12
Powerful 30 watt Magnavox component with air suspension speakers and AM-FM tuner. Sold new components as low as $90). Only $20 other component(s as low as $90). Roy Stoneback 12-12
Mass. Open events.
Mankey owners New C2-18 with alum three snow trees, one 45' and one 60'. $79,000 ($69.10*1.3 same price). Ray Shackleback, back 2, rear 2.
Final price cut! FD14-10 bolted wide fireWire now
£35.99 for sale on eBay at X-T. Free installation.
Ray Sunblee Stainless Steel FireWire
Adapter
Save $450 on a 1972 Turtle Spitfire. Only 6,000
for $250. Call 833-266-3600. 12-12
Pueguel bicycle, excellent condition, extras, must
call. Gall; Gary, 841-321.
1960 VW Two new tires, 78.000 miles, excel
well before the end of winter.
For CHI for Chil. 82-12
12-12
Need to sell fast. '88 Opel (Kadetbla) fast;
need to keep, very good condition, will consider
trail chase. 129 Opel (Kadetbla) fast.
Need to sell fast. '88 Opel (Kadetbla) fast;
Complete stereo package $19.50 Electronics
manual included.
player, guitar changer, roll control and cart
controller included.
Save $10 on a Fisher 320 8 watt receiver, 2 Fisher XPS 55-2-way speakers and a 5 Fisher ZX-2X change complete. Price $93.75, price $32.50 last. Whites, 916 Mans. 12-12
FOR RENT
For rent to 4 responsible girl, Available Dec. 1.
For second 2nd story 4 bedroom furnished apart-
ment to campus and low $50 per girl per month plus room fee.
For first 2nd story 4 bedroom furnished
and all days Saturday and Sunday. A272 Ohio
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
ROOFING? FARELY A FARLING LOTS?
Try 2 baggies of foam insulation from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, packed parking lot. Free: Cabinets, desks, chairs, tables, rateable rates, furniture available, ideal roommates or courtesans. In Santee Apts., 1123 Ind. Apt. 9 or 10.
TRAILRIDE 1. 11; and 2 bedroom apartments
TRAILRIDE 1. 11; and 2 bedroom apartments
kitchen, private bathroom/habitation
kitchen, private bathroom/habitation
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Parking space in street, parking block, street, bordered K.U. and near town highways.
Apartment for rent. One block from Union, Sutton. Available Jan 14, furnished 12-8
Call 841-296-8160
2 bedroom apartment, dishwasher, util. paid except elice close to campus. Furnit., $178/month. 841-3607.
Contact Circle Realty, 700 Mass., 843-607-7, for BR duplexes and 1-3 BR apartments. Price start at $1690 a month. All are available for immediate delivery. After hours call grace Strong 842-7851.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
MENT THAT WOULD make you think possible in these beautiful apartments where you'll find comfortable shops and school—Frater Hall is only 10 miles away. The indoor game room, or just sit by the door on a place on a cold winter night. The Mall is now named Riverside Village and naked apartments are available. Some of these buildings are 12-12
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now the office rooms, furnished and unfurred upright for a 30-40 person apartment heating and air, pool and larder. Most utilities are electric. Notable: 845-822-09 or see at 1741 W., 19th, apt. 5B.
CIRCLE
Must rent duplex for second semester. It has a kitchen, living room downstairs and three bedroom upstairs. Air conditioned, quiet, fully furnished. If interested call 841-3598 or Bridget 843-9603.
CIRCLE REALT
Looking for something to rent?
Must subst 2nd semester 1 bcf. apf. carpets,
pillows, curtains, upholstery, bedding, air condition,
air conditioning, not too expensive. Cali
student's fees.
CSC TOYOTA THRUMB
Competition Sports Cars Inc.
Need to inhabit one bedroom apartment. All bedrooms have en-suite. Can easily come with view side. good RI location. all utilities included.
Studio eight—rooms with a view $625, every paid, no deposits. 1329 W, 8th-12
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
APT. FOR RENT 9th and 12th, bedroom furniture,
bathroom equipment
Call 843-806-508 after 3 12:12
ROOMS. Available end of Dec for 2nd students
only. 812-7435 for 1st, 8 or 9th grade students
only. 812-7435 for 1st, 8 or 9th grade students
only.
- see rent 1 bedroom; 2 baths, large kitchen,
living room and living carport. Carpet and carpet
bathroom.
- see rent 3 bedrooms.
Home for rent, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more
than welcome. 843-3600. UF.
ATTENTION! APT AVAILABLE NEW-OPEN
595-230-7114 kitchen, view open, good food,
prepared meals, warm to the touch.
Apartment for rent. Two bedrooms, large new
floor. 1075 West 24th Street, 2604-363-2290,
298 New Hampton Avenue, 12-12-11
2 Bedroom room at 4 plow, to subsitute. Recharge
bathroom with 1 bedroom toilet and bath. DRILL.
682-0169-M58 (300 l and later) TR. 18 30 and latel.
DRILL. 682-0170-M59 (300 l and later) TR. 18 30 and latel.
Need to sublime a fully furnished 2 bedroom apt. AC, swimming pool, big living room, $135/Z-2. Deposit pay (yours when you leave). Service very close to shopping center. 12/12 5067
SUBLEASE-Large 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment,
$450/month. AC upstairs, $350/month. A/C
upstairs, AC $450/month. Available Jan. 1, quitting
after March 31, 2017.
FREE! First month most part deposit of 2 a. birmingham.
Substitute first month most part deposit of 2 a. birmingham.
Substitute spring semester contact. Call 843-737-3977.
Take over contract for 2nd semester. Beautiful 2 bdm, h2m, bath spacious, in quiet 8 plex. w/ shw carpet, treppease, complete kitchen, carpet, carpet, 240 Morningplace, D=12, 843-392-932
Nestly furnished home available January 1, south-
west of the city. Includes a bedroom adjacent to camp with range and apartment adjacent to camp.
AGI for rent, start Jan 1, 1 for spring semester.
Apply online on agi.ac.kr. Please email and deposit chemical engineering student fee. Please deposit fee to AGI.
MAPPINESS is living with friends in an establishment Room and Board from $45. Ask for Rfid: $82. Room and Board from $65. Ask for Rfid: $82.
Sleeping room. Furnished with or without cook-
tent. Gate streetGF street, 12-12
KIT and town.
Move in now. Pay no rent till 11AM. 2-bed, 2-bath apartment. A furnished carpeted, air-conditioned, of street parked lovely surroundings. A fun new way to live. Form your group, share the rent. $40 per month. Call (866) 379-5272.
Furnished room with refrigerator, double bed, desk, and TV. Student-dialed call. House at 82-938-2588.
Two bedroom apartment in the Jawwerkway Town
Deposit is already paid. For information, call
(212) 543-9760.
Partly furnished 3 room apt. 1132 Tennessee. 12-11
Available Jan. 1 first thru Jan. 20 at University Terrace. Please call the office for information. Lease may be required. LeaseMay 25. Lawncare's most efficient apts. Large kitchen and living room 1, 2nd. Bedroom 3, 4th. Bathroom 6 or 824-939 or 842-939 if you see vm at W35 W 9th.
CROSSVIEW HAD 2, BEDROOM APT. FOR 2 OR 3
BEDROOMS. CONTACT MARK KROSSVIEW
MORGANFLAIR, 741 TOWERS, CONTACT
MARK MORGANFLAIR
Apartment for rent. Spacious furnished 1-bedroom. Open air balcony, carpeted, air conditioned, street parking. All utilities except electricity. Ready immediately. 1529 Kentucky. 843-7244
Mature female roommate to share 3 bld. hotel rooms. $799.00 per night. Bedrooms: 845-860 overnights $80 plus 1 unitless. Bathroom: 260 sq ft. $1,099.00 per month.
Moving to student teach. Have to cut out apples from a box of apples (824-456-3940 or 824-100-3940) from campus. Call 824-456-3940 or 824-100-3940.
MEADOWBROOK
Unique & exciting
All amenities furnished
Sag carcasses & draps
All electric kitchen
All dishwashers & permanent beds
Built in desks & study lamps
All built-in cabinets & all lighting
Most have utilities paid
Free Cable TV + pet control - trash pick up
84 Studios
$140 - $145 - $150.
24 One Bedrooms
$160 - $170.
Pure alps open
area wooded and
beach swims
waters football
Softball area
grounds
Day Care center & preschool
Day Care center & preschool
Living in the best costs little more
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare & make your move to
70 Acre
15th & Crestline 842-4200
800 feet west of 15th & Iowa
& make your move to Meadowbrook
Apt. to sublease Dec 16, furnished, suitable for
1 or 2 Half block from 842. 926-806. 12-12
Large apt. near campus. All new interior. fireplace, built-in shelving. 94-8316 room. 12-12
**Lynch Real Estate**
Furnished. 2 bedroom apt for rent. 1903 W 24th Ballymore, all electric kitchen, close to post office. Ballymore, all retail shops, include water, trash collection, private off-street parking. Available Jan. 1. Call 841-153-2127
WANTED
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment on Wednesdays night at night. All those interested in attending the event may contact us.
Female roommate wanted to share bed with 2. Female roommate wanted to share bedroom with 1. Laundry room, formatted, furnished. Call 843-2760.
Female roommate wanted to share jaywalk towk. "We're a really great living. Any questions call Daisy at 617-524-2830."
Adventures and amusing types to try our new
dance and anime series. The character
defines to delight the senses. At the Hodge Pod
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67 monthly
for 3rd semester. Call 841-3619. 12-12
Mature journalism student feeds furnished hatch-
ing. (For more information, call 605-729-1342;
W. Hurbin, P.O. Box 1058, Moskau, K6920;
w.hurbin@uws.moskau.edu)
Joe is getting married. Need someone to take his place. We'll try to make sure this doesn't happen to you. Park 25 Park. $45 plus utilities, finished, two bedroom, two bed. Call 814-7248
Need one or two girls second semester at Jaya-
835-587-6677 or call 649-587-1208.
835-587-6677 will come by CALL 649-587-1208.
already fuzzy puppy for Christmas present. Prefer already house broken. Call 841-2654. 12-8
Need 1 or 2 roommates to share house $60-
$75 a month. (See page 38 for details)
(day) or $72-782 ($event calls for) or (Roll 12-42)
Country western acoustical guitar in near
condition. Call 843-0017 at 7 p.m.
12-8
Need 2 or more people to take over Jawwakerhawk
and send them a call: Siratl Cummins 10-42
for further information. 12-12
Person interested in the arts wanted to join:
38th bsp. apt. Male or female, pet or child
12-12
2 female grad students need rooms immediately
2 bedroom apartment 5 plus utilities
843-929-2860
Female to take over my contract at Jayhawker Towers. Call Emily, 841-2817. 12-12
House near Union needs female rookie for a position in the Air Conditioning, dishwasher, garbage service. Air conditioning, dishwasher, garbage service.
WANTED: More courses included in FEEDBACK
Ury your instructions to participate! 12-8
One studious roommate needed for next semester to share a two-bedroom, Village-style apartment in the heart of space, room kitchen, AC, balcony overlooking the pool. Furniture $15 per month. 12-11 Call 843-7300.
2 Junior girls need 2 moths chicken to share. 3
washer; $5 a month Available. 89-976-0100.
16 months free of charge.
Need one g1 to l2 in a 2-bedroom furnished
room with an electric oven. View of
view of compartment, convenient kitchen. Cell #811
1021 W. 49th St., Flushing, NY 11350
Female roommate needed by Jan or Peb. Own
roommate with 2½ half utilities, Contact Laura Frye $25 New Hampshire
country living. One female roommate
country living. One female roommate
country living. One female roommate
plus utilities. $43,924 now. 10/22
$54,784 now. 10/22
One female romaine tie for Jawkay Town-
ship. Call 643-1472 for assistance.
p.m. anytime on weekends.
Female roommate 2nd semester, owner rotten fett,
with 3 girls. Call 842-9189 after 5 p.m.
12:34
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
Parktat a dscountr
Parktat a dscountr
Ph. 911-3351
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Central Edison Alumni
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Bread Sandwiches, Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our menu is and has always been there. Your guests will enjoy good food
11 Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843-1431
Sixton
%
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
920
Mass
843
B500
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
NOTICE
843
8500
Pernille nominate wanted to share 2 hostages
from the apartment. AC climates, slideway to campus on
adjac
Girl needs apartment or house during Xmas
or visits to small or rented call: 12-12
843-6263.
Law student needs commute now: 2 bedrooms.
Need a new apartment, reasonable. No lease. 843-7454-4976 after 10am.
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
items for compartmentalization. Call 812-720-5960.
For compartmental information call 812-720-5960.
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We B-Que B-inque on an 84-lb plate with a half-inch pie crust. $75. A 75 lb bag for each $48. Large rib plate $60. Small rib plate $90. Beef and bison $56. Pound of beef $30. to chicken breast $25. Pound of chicken breast $25. Sundried Tomato V-2-10s $36. St. H.
For Free Birth Control information for preg-
nancy and childbirth, visit Woman
Center; 844-5441. If no answer exist, call
844-5442.
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of gifts:
$C$, Come down and visit with us
W. 9th
12.12-13
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAIFHUACHI -The finest
audio/visual system in world, home to
Land. Lake. Borea. 6049-8241-201.
www.waifhuachi.com
Students: Have your Xmas key party at Diana
Students: Have your Xmas key party at Diana
campus; a campus, Kansas, Kansan.
Cooker bakerbook. Angel and gonewanted Slides—
Thermomix Meatball Makers, Whistleblower Meats, Meat and Jowar 84-123-111
84-123-111
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas tree, then paint it with our hand-painted ornaments. Bring the tree to its own hand-painted room. Bring the lawntrimmer fast on highway 10, 4 miles south. We'll be open each week before Christmas. South whites. We'll be open each week before Christmas. South whites.
A complete selection of Parker Brothers and Millibray Bradley including Risk, Monopoly, Owlja, Vahize, Valhaze, Clue, Scribble, Aggravation, Society, Soil may be cared for at his Duckwalls. I 12-8
TYPING
Experienced tynist will type term paper, theses, files. Close to computer suite. 204, Myrna. Office: 913-685-6278 or 842-875-2990.
Experienced in typing themes, disclosures, term papers, other mine. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt keyboarding. Have corrected typing. Phone 843-3544. Mrs. Wright
Fast, accurate measure on carbon ribbon type-
leaders. Reasonable Rate. Calibrate. 12-12
4588 or 812-1724.
Expert manuscript typist with through knowledge of spelling, punctuation, and grammar will be required for 6 year experience. Electric typewriter. Call 843-752-1000, 10 a.m. or between 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. 12-8
Typing on elite电线 typewriter in my home.
Provide service. No thirst please. Mr Hoy, 823-754-0166.
www.elitecomputer.com
Typing, my bones. I.B.M Selective press. Frozen
disorientation. Prepending done, automatically.
Disorientation. Prepending done, automatically.
PERSONAL
Why does KU continue to pay bad teachers?
Support the Curriculum Survey? Urge parties
Students: Have your Xiao kai party at Dumbo
Museum on Friday. Go to 12-11-14 from the campus in Kerry, Kansas. 12-12
For you lover at Christmas, provide yourself
with a little comfort. 12-13
The Hodge Paddle, 15 W. 901
12-13
500 E.23rd
Last chance! To meet you in Speech 73. Remembr-
e that I will be there for you on Friday. See
exam. You see in class Monday. 12-11
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUU
Don't know how to give someone for Xmara? How about a General Jean gift certificate. 1000
MISCELLANEOUS
**SAMPLE BRIDAL GOWNS** up to 75' m²
or 100' m² with appointment only $425,998 (number 3665813)
or $450,998 (number 3665814)
It is a beautiful necessity of our nature to leave behind our own history. James Jackson "Jackie" Jacques jacket! General James in 1003 Mee's
Jean jackets? General Jeans at 1000 Mass. has
labor to up size 30 J
This year why not give a tribute annual Christmas
market. This year we will have a large market.
Market, open 10:55 every Friday and Saturday.
SERVICES OFFERED
Hard-crafted candles make nice Christmas gifts for the holiday season. They are also multi-size, rugs and handmade made items. The candles come in a variety of colors.
842-0444
Babygoing in my house. Mon, thru Friday. Close
up to 24 hours. Two children. One child 14 years old. Can see 85-239. 12-11
10am-6pm. Phone: 85-239.
Custom-made camera traps. Will make any type,
of camera trust your camera.转速 Leafier 124,
W 9th, 892-8129
MOTHERS $^*$ The First Presbyterian Church Nursery *Norway* offers few openings in both their day and evening classes, personal attention, and excellent teachers, personal attention, and excellent tutors or further information call 842-6418 or 842-6269.
HELP WANTED
Young energetic intelligent woman needed for
workplace. Apply in person, Vita 18-
inventant, 152 W. Ktth, Vita 18-
Babysitter for one two year old weekday mornings, beginning Jan. 8 through remainder of vacation and/or spring semester. My home. Tse 36 per month. House address: 842-641-8222; hourly charge: 12-11
Mother's helper needed. Babyisaging and hau-
phone. Phone 402-7530 s/ p. m.
12-12
Tony's 66 Service
CHEVROLET
Be Prepared!
Last between O-zone and Strong, reading glass
returns to O-zone. Pete Vendala, Walker
return to Pete Vendala, Walker
$10 reward. Left dark brown, sheepkin coat at
back. Battery: 842-7524 or 843-8571 1294
Battery: 842-7524 or 843-8571 1294
Minolta SRT 190 25mm, camera Leaf 306 film.
Tissue 7x4.5mm, box of Tissues 100s.
Tower. reward. Call John. 843-259-1300.
Email: john.calvin@minolta.com
tune-ups startling service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
LEWINCE, BOWEN 60049
OVERHEAD CAM
• 0 TO 60 MPH—13.5
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Male Magintuptr
Do The Thing for You!
(NEVER are the most
for airline tickets)
FRONT DISC BRAKES
- OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
* * 70 AMU, n. g
- RECLINING FRONT SEATS
- UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL.
LOVE THAT DATSUN
PHONE 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
RABBIT ON BICYCLE
GASLIGHT VILLAGE MOBILE HOMES
Look at What You Get—
1) Chain Linked Fences
2) Cedar Carport with Storage Area.
3) Clubhouse for Private Parties
5) Basketball Court
4) Swimming Pool
3020 Iowa 842-2828
6) OVER 60 per cent STUDENT OCCUPANCY
for next semester
CAR WASH
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BIDGE
12
Friday, December 8. 1972
University Daily Kansan
---
Local Firms Use
(Continued from page 1)
classified information not in possession of the government through the Defense Industrial Security Program (DISP) approach, or the Office of Industrial Security (OIS).
The Office of Industrial Security is part of the Defense Contract Administration Services (DCAS). There are 11 regional offices throughout the country (DCASR8).
LAWRENCE IS located in a nine and a half state region with headquarters in St. Louis, Missouri, and administered by OIS through DCSAR, St. Louis and its field office in Independence,
DCAS is part of the Defense Supply Agency, which is subject to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Installation and Logistics.
The DISP regulations are much more complicated than KU's statement on whether the laws apply.
*Manual*16) is about 280 pages long, changes frequently and is often not relevant to a user.
KU is only one of about 12,350 companies, research facilities and universities which have access to information classified by the University Information Center. All cleared facilities in the St. Louis region.
Barr is in charge of government security for both the University and CRINC. Classified information for both is stored in the same place.
SINCE BARR became security officer for the two about three years ago, the number of people cleared and the amount of information on hand have greatly decreased.
"We tend to make damn sure the professor makes a case for access to classified information," Barr said. "We try to hire professors from trying to gain access."
Toys Removed
(Continued from page 1)
prosecuted for violation of the federal law, said Allen Honer, regional products safety consultant for the FDA in Kansas City, Mo. and talked to the two CPA directors.
THE FDA does not regularly inspect merchant's shelves for banned toys, he said. However, the FDA does investigate manufacturers in design laboratories for the toy manufacturers.
Honer said identification of toys by the FDA's 1st proved to be a problem for his office. Usually a store manager will contact the supplier to clarify the legal status and ownership of the toys. But if any doubts remain, the FDA will collect samples of the toys for evaluation.
--consumer against small objects that can be swallowed, metal wires or rough edges, plastic or metal that can cut, straight pins, or decibles that can injure a child's hearing.
The FDA's guidelines try to protect the
If a consumer is injured by a toy or finds a toy to be dangerous by FDA standards, he should contact the FDA so it can evaluate the product, he said.
HONER SAID one of the main problems with toy injuries was that parents do not buy their children's toys according to the manufacturer's instructions, the product or to the child's actual ability.
Consumers who have purchased toys that have been banned should have their money returned, Weiss said. However, the federal law does not specify whether the retailer or manufacturer should reimburse the customer.
She said consumers may have trouble getting their money back because the law is not.
Some of the managers showed an interest in working for a more specific law in which the manufacturers would have to reimburse consumers for their products, Weiss said.
Kansas Consumer Agency Plans Arbitration Program
TOPEKA (AP) - The Northeast Kansas Better Business Bureau has a newly appointed executive director and will monitor consumer arbitration program in operation.
McCarter is scheduled to serve as executive director of the Northeast Kansas College.
The interim director is Rollin McCarter, who is managing director of the Kansas State University.
McCarter said that until he had fulfilled his duties as interim director of the Northeast Kansas Bureau, he would commute from Wichita.
McCarter is in charge of establishing an arbitration program in Wichita.
He said the use of arbitration would be strictly voluntary both for the businessman and the consumer, and would be used only in the informal efforts to resolve disputes had failed.
He said the consumer and businessman would have to sign a contract to arbitrate agreed issues in dispute and would have to go to the other Business Bureau arbitration program.
The proceedings would go before an arbitrator with both parties represented. Witnesses and supporting evidence could be entered.
The decision would be able to resolve issues in favor of one party or it could split
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between the parties, McCartier said. He said in Kansas the decision would be presented to a Kansas court to enforce as a binding order that had been signed by both parties.
He said the program should provide an inexpensive avenue for both businessmen and consumers to resolve problems on the personal level.
Barr explained that the more material that be had on hand, the greater possibility that he would succeed.
Info...
Since Barr took over the University clearance the number of people cleared has dropped by about 20 people and the number of violence is now maintained in an inactive state.
Cleared companies are checked periodically by representatives of OIS. KU is inspected every nine months and CRINC is inspected every four months. CRINC is inspected more often because it has satisfied material on hand and KU does not.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols will speak to the University of Kansas Alumni Association Board of Directors at its winter quarter meeting Saturday.
Nichols to Address Alumni Assoc. Board
Nichols will discuss University operations and problems with the 24-member alumni
Dick Wintermute, executive director of the Association, said the group would be discussing various activities and programs.
The board will hear reports on membership, honors banquets, finances and other Alumni Association matters, Wintermote said.
M. H. M. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. H.
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Use Kansan Classified
Senate Recall of Food Co-op Money Sets Precedent
By JOHN PIKE
{ansan Staff Writer
When the University of Kansas Student Senate acted Wednesday to take away nearly half of the food co-op allocation of the Black Student Union (BSU) and freeze the long and controversial chain of events stretching back into April of this year.
From the disputes over the original BSU allocation during budget hearings last semester to the precedent-setting action Wednesday night, the recent history of the Senate-BSU relations has been repeatedly strained.
During the spring budget hearings last April, the Finance and Auditing Committee (F&A) received a request from the BSU for $5,350. Barble Biddle, Topeka senior chairman of F&A and by the BSU for Friday that the committee by the BSU had rough breakdown" of proposed programs and that the committee requested additional information.
BIDDLE SAID the BSU told F&A that they would be unable to meet with the committee again, and that the first allocation request would have to suffice.
On the basis of that original proposal, F&A recommended to the Senate on April 24 that the BSU be allocated only $1,075, the amount requested for office supplies.
&Fa' based their recommendation on what they said was duplication of proposed BSU programs with existing campus programs, such as draft counseling and drug abuse help, and the lack of specific information on other BSU proposals.
About 40 members of the BSU appeared at the April 26 Senate meeting to protest the in their allocation request. When the Senate rejected the F&A recommendation several hours of debate, they rejected the F&A recommendation and elected a committee composed of seven senators and five representatives to chitects group, to study the BSU request further and make a new recommendation.
THE ACTIONS OF the committee itself aroused some controversy, particularly over the use of the term.
Biddie said she was called to testify before the special committee, but was told when she arrived to speak to the closed session that her testimony was not needed.
A half-hour later the committee again requested that she appear, Biddle said. She was told, though, that she was not to talk about the BSU.
"They wouldn't even let me mention BSU," said Biddle. "I was only to talk about Blacktet. I had no information for them as far as they were concerned about the BSU allocation. They apparently had already made up their minds. Either that or they gathered all the information they intended to."
The special committee recommendation to the Senate on May 3 was to raise the BSU to $1,030. Again there was long debate, but the end the recommendation was accepted.
THE CURRENT RUN of controversy was sparked several seeks ago when a group of Mexican-American students complained to F&A that they had been treated unfairly at the Supportive Educational Services (SES) because they were not black.
SES refused, though, to an in-
examination of their financial records by
the Senate or the press, and in several cases
refused even to comment on the situation
SES, a BSU-related tutorial agency started by blacks but supposedly open to all minorities, responded that its $30,000 per year budget, received from the Kansas Union Bookstore rebates and controlled by the Union Memorial Board of Directors, was insufficient to cover inclusion of minorities other than blacks.
DEBATE OVER action to be taken increased with each meeting of Senate Committee on Education and the Union Board announced that,Not only that they had notified SES that their funds
would be frozen Jan. 10 unless the agency opened their financial records to the Board for examination and submitted a plan for improvement. The board will review their program by the fall semester 1973.
The problems with SES prompted several senators to take a closer look at the practices of the BSU and from their examination of the BSU food co-op expenditures came the actions of the Wednesday Senate meeting.
Of the $18,030 allocated the BSU in May,
$8,500 was put into a line item labeled
"subsistence (food)" to be used to establish
a food co-op.
SEVERAL WEEKS ago Roger Martin, Lawrence three-year law student and Senate treasurer, advised the Student Committee (StudEx) that the BSU had submitted its application to Aforms, to his office for the required treasurer's approval before payment.
The three A-forms, one to Rusty's Food Centers for $2.61 and two to Joe's Bakery
for $9.21 and $23.38, were to pay for such items as doughnuts, napkins, paper cups,
spoons, powdered cream and sugar.
Martin told StudEx he had at first declined to approve the expenditures from the food account, because he thought they were too restrictive to the line item.
Martin said he called Duane Vann, Lawrence sophomore and BSU member, to tell him that the bills could not be paid out of the BSU's food allocation but was told by Vann that previous A-forms for the same type of items had been approved by Bill O'Neill, Ballwin, Mo., senior and former Senate treasurer.
MARTIN SAID that when this proved to be true, he approved the A-forms and then went to StudEx to determine whether he should continue to approve such expenditures.
StudEx decided that the purchase of such items was not within the limits of the food
SNOW
See BSU FOOD CO-OP page 12
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 71
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Monday, December 11, 1972
PARK SHARKET
Energy Crisis Hits KU
Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING
See story page 3
Fire at a west campus research building caused extensive damage Sunday
Firemen stated that the cause of the early morning blaze is unknown . . .
Cause of Sunday Fire Not Known
Arson has not been eliminated as a possible cause of the fire that caused an estimated $175,000 damage early Sunday morning to the pharmaceutical research campus in Ameswest campus, according to Fred Sanders, chief of the Lawrence Fire Department.
It is standard practice, Sanders said, for
Sanders said Sunday evening that he would call the office of State Fire Marshall Robert Wolf this morning and that it was hoped the cause of the fire would be determined sometime today by investigators from that office.
The loss estimate was made by the building's director, Takeru Higuchi.
The fire, according to Sanders, was confined to a 12' x 16' room, one of the six individual research laboratories, but the explosion of a small refrigerator in that room caused damage to the other laboratories.
professor of chemistry and pharmacy, who said the building was valued at $650,000 and the contents at $150,000. No injuries were reported.
The contents of the refrigerator, other than a bottle of ether, were not known, he said, but it was "a pretty good guess" that the fire originated from the explosion.
the state fire marshal to investigate major fires that have no apparent cause, but Sunday's fire is under unusual scrutiny due to an unlocked door on the building's south side.
All doors in the building, he said, are usually locked.
The fire was discovered at 3:30 a.m. and treenem had it under control within one hour. The one-story building is owned by Inter-X Capital, based from the KU Endowment Association.
By RANDALL BECKER
Bibb Suggests Cut In KU's Budget Plan
and GARY ISAACSON Kansan Staff Writers
Chancellor Raymond Nichols has begun organizing strategy for Thursday's budget hearings in Topnea after receiving official notification Friday that the state budget director has suggested cutting $1.8 million from the proposed fiscal 2014 KU budget.
Nichols said Saturday he would be meeting with Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, and L. Martin Jones, budget officer, this week to discuss ways of refuting cuts, particularly in new improvements, suggested by James Bibb, state budget director, for the Lawrence campus.
In a letter received by the Chancellor Friday, Bibb said he would suggest trimming the total educational and general budget. His request is $50,414,861 to $48,209,492.
WITH THE suggested cuts, over $1 million dollars of new products and impressions.
Nichols said the University would be receiving the same amount of money allotted in the fiscal 1973 budget in the areas of operations and maintenance of the plant, research and extension, except in the amounts for utilities in the new buildings.
Nichols said the cutback would give the University only 95 per cent purchasing power because of the inflationary economy. He referred to the cuts as totally "unrealistic" in light of inflation and the increases in operation costs.
Another proposed cut is to lower the pay increases for faculty members from $5\frac{1}{2}$ per cent to 5 per cent. The University asked for a proposal to be part of the Board of Regents guidelines.
IN OPERATION and maintenance of the physical plant, Bibb suggested cutting
Toys Unsafe; Dealers Want Refund
Local merchants said Saturday they would ask toy manufacturers for a refund on the 300 toys removed from their shelves last week that were in possible violation of the Food and Drug Administration guidelines on safe toys.
The possible violations were brought to the attention of local merchants by a survey conducted at least 12 stores last week by Patricia Weikert and Lawrence resident. Protection Agency and Lawrence resident.
If the manufacturers will not accept the returned toys, the toys will simply have to be destroyed, said Dan Sites, manager of the T.G. &.y. store at 711 W. 23rd St. He also said the stores would have to accept a loss if the manufacturers would not refund their money.
All the managers contacted said they were unaware that the toys removed from
Judge Orders New Trial For Ellsberg and Russo
The CPA, aided by high school volunteers was working in cooperation with the EDA.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Pentagon Papers case, initiated more than one year ago in angry controversy over the Vietnam war, is ending and beginning again.
"ONE TOY WAS bought recently on a recommended toy list from Chicago," said Dale Kearney, owner and manager of the Ben Franklin store. *805 Massachusetts St.*
U. S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne, presiding at pre-trial hearings for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo, says he will preside at the minstery Monday and order a new jury chamber to judge the matter. No testimony was taken at the pre-trial proceedings.
Sites also said that some of the toys removed were new, bought especially for the Christmas season. Others, he said, had been on the list since 1969 though he had not been notified of that before the CPA's survey.
their shelves were on the FDA's list of banned toys.
Ellsberg, 41, and Russo, 35, former researchers on secret government projects, have admitted roles in releasing to news media the Pentagon study of the Vietnam war origins. They said they hoped to help end the conflict. The government has charged them with espionage, conspiracy and theft.
Ellsberg and Russo have said they will waive their protection from double jeopardy in order to get a new jury and a fresh start.
Although the law forbids the trial of any defendant twice for the same crime.
One might understand how some of the imported toys may not meet federal requirements. Kearney said, but some of the toys removed from the factory were established and well-known manufacturers.
It is the manufacturer's responsibility to notify the store manager if the toys are faulty or against the FDA's regulations, Stites said.
Art Cromer, manager of Gibson's Discount Center, 2025 has seen he had no problems. A survey,
HOWEVER, WEISS said that during the survey Cromer had called two of the toy manufacturers about the toys removed from the shelves.
Weiss said he told her that one company was aware that the particular toy had been banned but had notified only its 42 largest manufacturers. Weiss said, that some of the products may
have been relabelted, but did not say what he had to and been redesigned to the FDSD staff.
None of the managers said they had access to the FDA's list.
All the managers received notice once in a while from their companies that an item should be removed from the shelf, they said.
It may be that the retailing companies are not receiving current information on the FDA's list, said William Reichman, a consumer safety specialist at W. Woolworth store at 911 Massachusetts St.
The CPA PLANS to supply the managers
supply them monthly, as the quarterly
supply, Weiss said.
Regulations should be placed on the toy industry. Reichman said, just as they are on toys for children.
"I sure wouldn't want to manufacture toys that wouldn't pass inspection," Reichman said. "You'd think they'd be policing their products."
Regulation of toy safety should not be forced on local merchants, Stites said. The standards should be worked out between the parent and retailer, theurer, be said, and enforced at that level.
"If they can control how the toys are played," Stites said, "then I can control how they are played."
$496,735 from the University request, which would
be $4,947,846.
The budget would not allow, for example, for any increases in telephone rates or possible use of oil instead of natural gas to cool the cold season, according to Nichols.
Cuts in organized research would amount to $428,621 less than the University's request of $8,984.36. Nichols said the cuts would affect the State Biological Survey, the State Geological Survey, the Bureau of Child Research, and aerospace research.
Extension allocations, which are used
pardly for Buildings and Grounds, were
slashed from $2,449,974 to $2,355,229 in
Bibb's proposal.
Also cut out of the budget were a labor relations director, a safety engineer, increased janitorial service for west campus and two members for night and weekend operations.
THE CHANCELOR will have to rejustify plans for preliminary work on an addition to Learned Hall, a visual arts building and a law school facility, along with renovation of four campus buildings, which were all eliminated by Bibb.
While faculty members were allotted a 5
BIBB ALSO made no provision for the state to pay for a share of the administration and instruction costs of the location of the computer center, Nichols said.
Nichols said that he would definitely fight to restore the one-half per cent lost for salary salaries, but he stressed that any gain in salary salaries should be considered a victory.
One-half of one per cent was also cut from the faculty retirement program increases.
per cent increase, pay in the recommendations, they lost in their efforts to gain personal disability policies because the program was cut entirely.
Bibb excluded a University request, calling for a 25 per cent increase in student help salaries. Nichols said the request was in response to possible increase in the minimum wage level, which the previous Congress failed to pass.
The only requests for capital improvements and new construction that were made by bus request were for improvement in the partitions in partnership renovation of the Kansas Union. These two
See BIBB page 10
Astronauts Preparing For Moon Exploration
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)-Apollo 17 swept into orbit about the moon Sunday and commanded Eugene A. Cernan an arrival on station for the challenge ahead."
A 6% minute burst of command ship America's engine propelled Cernan, geologist Harrison H. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans into a perfect orbit and set them on their way to explore exploration and man's last chance for perhaps decades to probe lunar mysteries.
Cernan and Schmitt on Monday will detach the lunar ship Challenger for a descent into a mountain-ringed volcanic valley named Taurus-Litrow.
The astronauts were excited at arriving in lunar orbit and Schmitt remarked, "We're breathing so hard, the windows are fogging up on the inside."
For Schmitch, it was a geologist's dream. Cerenan, who had orbited the moon on Apollo 10 in 1969, said the sight "is still just as impressive."
The spacemen ended their quarter-
million-mile journey from earth and slipped
behind the backside of the moon, out of
radio contact, at 2:36 p.m. EST.
Eleven minutes into the backside pass the astronauts fired their big spacecraft engine for 6½ minutes to slow their speed by more than 2,000 miles an hour, enabling lunar landers to climb them into an orbit ranging from about 151 miles above the cratered surface.
"Thumbs up," were his first words. Then he beaded, "Houston, you can breathe easier. America has arrived on station for the challenge ahead."
Mission Control waited in suspense another 22 minutes until Apollo 17 reappeared around the moon's eastern rim, once it had been completed. It played the word of the successful ignition.
Cernan, Evans and Schmitt caught their first glimpse of the moon since their launch from Cape Kennedy Thursday when they were 11,500 miles away. The
angle of the spacecraft prevented them from seeing it out their windows sooner.
"We can finally see it out there," Cernan reported.
Cernan and Schmitt are scheduled to touch down at 2:55 p.m. and four hours later are to begin the first of three outside excursions, each lasting seven hours. They are to spend a record 75 hours on the moon, three hours longer than Apollo 16 last April.
After breakfast Sunday, the astronauts jettisoned a 170-pound metal door covering science instruments and cameras in an equipment bay at the rear of the command ship.
The removal of the door, called the world's largest lens cover, uncovered two cameras and three multimillion-dollar scientific instruments.
The three astronauts of Apollo 17 were in lackadaisal in their response to the University of Kansas fight song Saturday morning as the KU basketball squad was preparing for Iowa's Saturday night. It took three rounds of the IU fight song to wake the crew.
Fight Song Can't Wake Apollo Crew
The first round was transmitted to Ron Evans, KU alumnus and night duty officer, from Mission Control at 8 a.m. Saturday, where Control was to the wake-up music.
Seventeen minutes later, the fight song and the Rock Chank Chant again blared at the crowd.
More than an hour after the first call, the song was transmitted by Mission Control.
2
Monday, December 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Energy Crisis a Reality
Editor's Note: The University of Kansas switched from natural gas to oil as its major power source Dec. 3. following a request by local gas companies. The change resulted from the additional power needed during cold weather to heat the University.
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN Kansan Staff Writer
"The days of cheap energy are over," said Floyd Preston, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering at the University of Kansas.
"For the rest of your life the cost of energy consumption will be increasing. Your children will know a grossly different set of energy patterns," he said.
For many years people have been predicting a crisis from the growing gap between the demand for energy and its supply. They say that localized brownouts and blackouts were only the tip of the energy crisis iceberg.
Recently talk of increased utility costs have prompted even more speculation and discussion on the prophesized emergency. The Federal Power Commission reported that there was a shortage of natural gas this winter that would cause some industries to switch to coal or oil.
PRESTON SAID there was an actual crisis. He said the largest natural gas field in the world in the 1950s, the Huguenot field, which supplies to Texas and Oklahoma. By 1865, the difference between the amount that scientists predict the country will need each year and the amount that they predict the country will need each year is the amount found in the Huguenot field, he said.
All the present indications reinforced the content that there is an energy crisis.
The simple fact is that demand is outstripping supply. A report in the November issue of National Geographic said that in the past one hundred years the U.S. demand for increased twentyfold, and the rate of consumption was sharply accelerating.
In that issue Shearon Harris, chairman of the Edison Electric Institute, said, "The utility industry expects consumption of about 400,000 and 1900, and almost quadruple by 1990."
In 1956, the United States used about 42 quadrillion BTUs of total energy, but by 1971, total energy consumption had jumped to 70 quadrillion. It had been projected that
the country would use 223.1 quadrillion RTU's a year by the year 2000.
While coal production should remain stable in the future it had been estimated that even by the most optimistic of predictions indigenous natural gas potentials would be exhausted within 35 years.
U. S. CONSUMPTION of natural gas increased from about 10 quintillion BTUs in 2013 to 50 quintillion BTUs in 2016.
Preston said, however, that these figures might be misleading.
The interrelations of many factors had to be understood to get a handle on the total picture, he said. The problem was not one of simply increasing energy production totals.
"The energy problem is just like the racial problem," he said. "There aren't any sweeping phrases that can be used to define and explain it."
He said that there were many new alternative methods to try, but that there were not enough. "Who did not want utility costs raised, those who were working to glean more energy from nature and those who wanted to get things from ecological and aesthetic damages."
Libraries Set Schedules For Finals Week Hours
For the convenience of students studying for finals, the University of Kansas libraries offer free access to
The reserve, circulation, reference and serials sections of Watson Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and 2 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Sunday.
The documents received in Waxton will be from 4 p.m. on Thursday, 4 m. to 6 p.m., on Friday, 7 a.m. to 10
Saturday
Library is open to Walters will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Library is open to Watson will be open from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Library is open to Sullivan will be open from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Library is open to Saturdays and 7 a.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. on Sunday.
The East Asian Library to Welcome will be from 8 a.m. Thursday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday. It will be closed on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.
The microfield section in Wittman will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., then from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. for 8, 9, 10, or 11 a.m. on p. 11, p. 12, or p. 13.
The Law Library in Green Hall will be open from 8 a.m. to
1 m., Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Sundays.
The Music Library in Murray Hall will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Sunday.
Shooting Victim Remains Critical
Chester Dean Shader, victim of the Thursday night shooting at the Hillcrest Shopping Center parking lot, Ninth and Iowa, remained in critical condition Sunday after a crash on campus at University Medical Center. He was reported paralyzed from the neck down.
Shader, 23, RT 2, McLouth, was shot in the Shader, 23, RT 2, McLouth, was shot in the Thursday, Lawrence Police reported.
Held in the shooting was James Turner, 24, 160 Haskell, on charges of aggravated battery and illegally carrying a concealed firearm. The County Jail Sunday in lieu of $7,500 bounty.
According to police the incident occurred in the parking lot west of the Yuk Down. Because the incident reportedly went into the building manager, Dick Wright, to call the police.
Turner remained on the scene until police arrived, police reported.
The incident apparently occurred during a confrontation between the men. Turner stated that he had shot Shader to protect himself, police said.
The Engineering and Architecture Library in Martin will hold a free workshop on Thursday, 9 p.m. to 1 p.m. on p.30th and 7 p.10th to Friday, 9 p.m. to 1 p.m. on p.30th and 7 p.10th.
The Science Library in Malat will be open from 8 a.m. to
10 a.m., and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and
11 a.m. on Monday, for lunch.
The Earth Sciences library in Linden Hall will be open
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday and 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
on Sunday.
The Mathematics Library in Strung Will be open
on a m. a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. It will be
open from noon to 10 a.m. on Wednesdays.
The Special Collection and Kansas Collection in Spencer
and Lincoln will be held at the University of Kentucky.
The Activity in Spencer will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
the next day. The Activity in Lincoln will be from 10 a.
to 4 p.m. the next day.
The Archives to Spence will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
on Saturday and Friday. They will be closed on
Saturday and Sunday.
Already conservationists have clashed with industrial interests on such issues as building off-shore oil derricks along U.S. coastlines, beginning construction of nuclear fission power plants without extensive study of the environmental effects and the initiating of the proposed trans-Alaskan oil pipeline.
ACCORDING TO Don Green, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering at KU, it was along these battle lines and those of nation-states vying for economic position, that the skirmishes would be fought in the manner necessary having to make some concessions.
Most experts agreed that these confrontations would become more common as the supply and demand gap grow wider and so the demand for sensors will diametrically imposed points of view.
The Map library in Spence will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
the following Wednesday and Friday will be closed
for lunch, the Sunday and Saturday.
THEN THEIR is the question of what types of energy sources should become the future energy source.
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THE HILLERGETT
(20)
"A Lovely Book for Those Who Love Kansas"
by Wes Lyle & James Fisher
Here is a beautiful gift - a distinctive photographic interpretation of Kansas. The authors traveled over 10,000 miles, into every part of the state, gathering pictures of variety and charm. They bring you Kansas river towns, wild native sunflowers, the wheat harvest, cattle rounds, an abandoned schoolhouse, grain elevators against the sky, buffaloes and coyotes, cottonwood trees, and on the Fim Hills. Quotations from the writings of prominent Kansas and other Kansas sources accompany the photographs.
Kansas Impressions
PHOTOGRAPHS and WORDS
by Leslie Lula & James Fisher
1962
Wes Lyle is an artist with the camera, one whose work would not be embassured in a collection of great photographs. A lovely book for those who love Kansas—and for others who wonder what.
128 pages, 99 black-and-white photographs, $5.95 Published by the University Press of Kansa
copies available at..
Death at 32 Called Strange By Authorities
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Kansas Union
Douglas County authorities were still suspecting foul play Sunday as they investigated the Thursday death of Floyd Kenneth King Jr., 32, of 1513 W. 22nd Terrace. King was reported to be a key witness in a pending Topeka murder case.
King died Thursday night shortly after arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital in what hospital authorities described as a semi-conscious state. Deputy County Coroner Dr. Alan Sanders listed a high risk as the preliminary cause of death.
King has been described by Shawnee County authorities as a key witness in charges pending against Jan C. and Eben W. Carpenter. The Carpenter brothers are charged with the first degree murder of Willis Upshaw, July 2, in Topeka. The murder case is scheduled to begin Tuesday in the Johnson County District Court.
The exact cause of death has not been determined but the death is being investigated as though it did not result from an accident. It would like Mr. Mikeell, Douglas County Attorney,
"Let's say it's strange when someone 32-years-old dies." Elwell said Sunday.
Ertwell said that the death was handled routinely by hospital personnel until late Friday night when Douglas and Shawne learned of it and began investigation.
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Pick this six.
festival festival festival
the arts of the Arts the arts of the Arts
Monday.the production of Kurt Vonnegut's "Happy Birthday,Wanda June"
Tuesday.the musical innovations of Robert Moog and the Moog synthesizer
Wednesday.the comedy of David Steinberg:the songs of Jimmie Spheeris
Thursday.the contemporary criticisms of drama critic John Lahr
Friday.the movements of the Eleo Pomare black ballet troupe
Saturday.the sounds of B.B. King
Festival coupons available at enrollment for 6.00 and at the SUA office after enrollment. Individual night tickets worth 10.50.
Festival of the Arts1973 April 2-7
Monday, December 11. 1972
KU Not Informed of Alleged Suit
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Sunday night that the University of Kansas has received no notification from the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights about an alleged suit charging the University with sex discrimination.
"We received no notification from the commission. They have not notified us about any charges." Nichols said, "I talked with him and he said the lawyer, and he hasn't heard anything either."
Peggy Scott, Lawrence senior and press contact for the group of women filing the complaint with the commission against the University, said she had received no further word from the commission concerning the charges.
"I haven't heard anything more from them since the letter I received Nov. 3,
News Briefs
By the Associated Press
Viet Air War
SAIGON—Enemy attacks across South Vietnam declined sharply, the Saigon government said. The war continued as fiercely as ever. For the fourth straight day, 825s concentrated bombing attacks on North Vietnamese positions in the dimilitarized zone.
The United States halted bombing above the 20th parallel Oct. 22 as a gesture of goodwill to Iraq. The United States halted bombing above the 20th parallel Oct. 22 as a gesture of goodwill to Iraq.
The Saigon command, however, reported only 58 ground attacks in the last 24 hours.
JAKARTA, Indonesia - Indonesian leaders are struggling to head off what could be the country's worst crisis since the fall of Sukurao. A disastrous drought, coupled with insufficient stockpiling, has left the nation's 125 million people short of their only major staple, rice. Government prices for rice and other goods in the Indonesian market and emergency orders for 800,000 additional tons on the tight international rice market may produce enough grain to hold current prices.
Indonesia
Truman Better
KANSAS CITY—Harry S. Truman, battling old age and a tired heart, was removed from the critical list Sunday and was able to smile and tell a nurse he was feeling better. Doctors said the 88-year-old former president's heart condition had improved and that he was more alert, although his overall condition remained serious.
In addition to noting improvement in the condition of Truman's heart, doctors said he had a slower and stronger pulse and a stable blood pressure.
Dole Meeting
WASHINGTON—Sen. Robert Dole, Republican national chairman, plans to meet with President Nixon Monday morning to discuss party matters, Dole's plans and other subjects, the senator's office announced Sunday. Dole has said he will join Mr. Obama soon as a successor is selected, Dole and the President are scheduled to meet at 11 a.m.
saying that charges had been filed," she said.
Scott said she was not surprised that one she from the University had notified of
"I understood the commission would not notify the University before they conducted their investigations because the University had a chance to cover things up," she said.
"We went ahead and released the publicity about the suit because we figured that they wouldn't be able to conceal anything since all the figures that we based our charges on were matters of public record."
According to Scott, the group which filed the charges released the information about the suit because they wanted students to be trained in their actions before the end of the semester.
"Also, since the Affirmative Action Plan is on Chancellor Nichol's desk now, we wanted him to be aware that there was an opportunity for improvement and effectiveness of the plan." Scott said.
Shririe Gilham, director of Affirmative Action for Women said she did not think that she was able to make a valid judgement on the value of the action against the University.
"Fortunately, we have a number of agencies through which individuals can file complaints," Gilham said. "This group has many cases that they have that right and they're exercising it."
"I think forging the Affirmative Action
A complaint filed with the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights by a group of University women initiated the commission's alleged legal action. The complaint names the University of Kansas, Chancellor Raymond Nichols and the Board of Regents in charges of salary and promotion discrimination.
The Campus Advisory Committee for the selection of a new chancellor met officially for the fifth time Saturday in a 4% hour session to continue discussion of nominees.
According to Richard Von Ende, acting executive secretary, subcommittees of the main group presented recommendations on how to the full committee for consideration.
Advisory Group Holds Session
"The subcommittees were formed to facilitate the processing of the nominees." Vines said.
Van Ende reported last Thursday that the committee had received 175 nominations. The committee will meet again Jan. 6, 2014. The committee will nominate for nominees at that time. Van Ende said.
A complaint that students are crowing the public health services, particularly the Douglas County Health Clinic, will be discussed at the monthly meeting of the Public Health Board 5 p.m. Tuesday in the First National Bank Building.
plan has been a lengthy process and some people are becoming impatient," she said.
"I can understand why they might want to go through other avenues."
Board to Hear City Complaint
Dr. Raymond A. Schwegel, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital and member of the Health, said the discussion would ensure continuity in County Commission meeting last month. At that meeting a Lawrence resident said she was impressed by the facilities of the county as much as those here.
Schweiger said the citizen status of the student was the same as that of anyone else.
8.
"As far as I can see, the students have the right to use any public property that they choose, it doesn't bother me one bit to have them use any public facility." Schlegel said.
The new student health center, which is scheduled for completion by Fall 1973, will take some of the load off of the city and county facilities, Schweger said.
Schwegel said that he thought that the complaint was uncalled for.
"I plan to be rather blunt about it if the situation arises," he said.
"If they'll give us time enough to let the cement set, we'll be running it up here," said Schweiger. "I for one would be willing to geology all day if that what is needed."
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Adds, subtracts, multiplies, divides. Gives true credit balance, does mixed calculations, chain calculations ... all in milliseconds and complete silence. All entries and answers appear in glowing electronic numerals. If the answer is over 6 digits (in multiplication and division), the first six digits will be displayed. To see the remaining digits, simply press the overload key and they show in display window. Release key, the first six digits re-appear.
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Monday, December 11. 1972
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Slow Pace on Mass. St.
There is a certain bittersweet irony in the Massachusetts Street renovation. The designers had intended to create a new streamlined Massachusetts Street, a glorified four-block-long parking lot which would better enable the downtown merchants to compete with the outliers. The goal of the process of rushing to modernize the downtown area, the construction crews seem to have taught Lawrence residents to appreciate the humane inefficiency of an older, slower paced style of commerce.
Before the construction began, Massachusetts Street was a harried, hurried, over-laden through way for crosstown traffic. Now nowhere, the unopposable advocacy of shattered sidewalks and furrowed pavement has forced the evolution of a new, quieter Massachusetts. Cross town traffic has been diverted to perimeter businesses in Vermont and New Hampshire streets to where city planners have long wished it would go. Shoppers have finally discovered the convenience of the perimeter parking lots, and merchants have finally begun to dress up the backs of their shops.
Thus, by virtue of an unexpected side-effect, Massachusetts has been pleasantly relieved of a great deal of unwanted and unneeded traffic.
Massachusetts has rediscovered an older more relaxed atmosphere and, judging from their opposition to the removal of the temporary four-way bridge across Lake Erie, Lawrence residents are favorably impressed with the discovery.
I, too, would like to go on record in favor of the four-way stops. The perimeter parking lots and one-way streets are finally being used as city planners had hoped they would be: why encourage motorists to return to their earlier congesting habits by returning the stop lights? Business districts and thoroughfares are incompatible, and attempting to mix the two inevitably drives customers and business out—in part that is what the Massachusetts renovation and the inner-city decay is all about.
Returning the stop lights to Massachusetts is unnecessary. Lawrence is not a metropolis, and its avenues need not be engineered as if they were the vehicular arteries of some great metropolis. Indeed, because of the unique distinctive beauty of its own that it shouldn't feel the need to emulate the ugly humanity of the great metropolis.
I say, sell the stop lights to Kansas City—that's where they belong.
—Robert Ward
Feminists Marched On
by Barbara Spurlock and Helen Cox
1972 saw a continuation of women's movement in America, accompanied by a wide variety of publications. The newspapers and magazines felt the impact of the women's movement, as many of them have changed their identification from Miss or Mrs. to just plain Ms.
The National Organization for Women, now has about 225 chapters in 48 states. The National Women's Political Caucus and Women's Equity Action League are also thriving.
Probably the most significant piece of legislation passed in 1972 for women was the Equal Rights Amendment, which declared "equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex. So far, 22 of the amendments have ratified the amendment."
1972 was a year in which many people, including many housewives, stood up against the manpower of the management. A poll showed that 77 per cent of the American women opposed equal treatment for military service, 83 per cent said they would not be breadwinner of a family even if her salary is larger than her husband's and 69 per cent were against a woman paying alimony to have had more money than the man.
The creation of Ms., the magazine for the liberated
woman, has proved to be too liberated for many women. Gloria Steinem, one editor of Ms. and a leading spokeswoman of the movement, recently told a reporter that marriage was a type of prostitution.
This kind of attitude has caused originators of the movement in America such as Betty Friedan, to shudder at her "female hauvinism." Friedan, who raised in a feminist Mystique, urged in a reminiscence Call's that women such as Steinem redirect their purpose.
Although being homemaker and mother is still the number one job of many women, a great number of women have foregone marriage and motherhood in pursuit of careers, while others have combined marriage with their careers.
The Affirmative Action Ordinance passed by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance has ordered businesses to hire employees for better jobs to upgrade salaries or face loss of federal funds and patronage. Now many businesses are actively recruiting women employees and have even been promoted women to executive positions.
On June 3, Sally Priesmade men's history by becoming the first woman to be ordained a Reform Jewish rabbi. However, her marriage to a secular Orthodox Jew, who still require women to sit apart from men in
On Sept. 14, Pope Paul issued a decree forbidding women to perform lower church duties at all time as an altar service, apparently denying the suggestion of the 1971 Synod of Bishops to establish a commission to seek ways of ex-convicted women in the role of women in the church.
church services.
When Gloria Steinem surveyed the floor at the Democratic Convention she remarked, "we've changed the population around here. It almost looks like the country."
Women composed 40 per cent of the delegates at the convention (about 80 per cent of population). Yvonne Brashtewa Burke was co-chairman, and another woman, Jean Westwood, was National Democratic chairman.
Congresswoman Bella Abzug, "the lady in the hat," who is one of the best known and most outspoken woman representatives in Congress, won her seat back in November.
Shirley Chisholm, the black congresswoman from Brooklyn, surprised the nation when she announced her candidacy for the U.S. presidency and she was more discriminated against in Congress as a woman than as a black. Although she did not make a big impact on the race, she made a name for herself down in history as the first black woman to run for the presidency.
Garry Wills
Romney Was A Low Grade Candidate
Whenever the shortcomings of 'the presidential primaries are being aired, I think of George Romney. It is enough to make us count our blessings.
Romney, who tried (at three different schools) to get through college but never made it, likes to "grade" people and offices and experiences.
When Romney had a chance to address the issues, during the Goldwater candidacy, he dodged it, neither supporting nor opposing the presidential contender on Romney's campaign. When Romney sent a long chiding letter to Romney, giving his campaign a flanking mark.
As a political outsider in 1960, he sent a prissy letter to Messrs. Nixon and Kennedy, saying they should address the issues more honestly.
He said nothing of his own tergiversations during the 1964 campaign, but he did mention his experience as a police officer.
Though Ronny failed in his 1968 presidential bid, he gave his own campaign an A, claiming it educated the people on Vietnam, even at the cost of his own宴会. At the party's convention, he made an appearance at the second spot, opposing Agniel. Still, that a B plus from Ronney, who said it was just what the party needed. "It is always good for you to get a big burg off your chest. I gave the party its burp."
Senator Percy an "opportunist." An F for you, Charles Percy.
With that record behind him, we should have expected him to exit with a burp—preaching a sermon, praising himself, calling for the public display, he gave the recent campaign bad marks. Even though he took part in the campaign, as the President's wife, and also evoked the issues, he was constrained by the pressures of office.
One can only be pure, he has decided, out of office. It buy that. But he also thinks that this purity will allow him to get political things done. He wants to be pure and practical too. To be right, without having to prove it at the polls; and yet to attain the politician's goals by his non-political acts.
On a religious radio program, shortly after his resignation, he said America's trouble is its lack of faith in God. I'm fluent in Arabic, but Romney seems to think redevil faith is a political program, and will get the poor homeless homes after Romney failed to get them there through the whelings and dealings of the power. It is the thought of a desperate general who, having run out of ammunition, decides to pray his enemies dead.
So now he seems intent on starting something as high-minded and empyrminded as John Gardner's "Common Bath," in which he two hands have of washing each other in the bath, we may hear Romney burden out of that effort, giving it low grades by his moves on to something even purer. Of one thing we think he is doing well, he assigned to other people and things, he will get an A from himself. The public morale he drew from his career, on the day he died, was this: "Candidates can't afford to be right too soon and win. I'm a living example."
Well, he's a living example of something that is one of our luck in living in presidential property.
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 197
Jack Anderson
Army Hides Tank Blunder
WASHINGTON - It has become routine around the Pentagon for the military brass to sweep their shoes and get them under the secrecy stamp.
The Army, for example, has carefully classified costly blunders that have run up the price of tanks. The details are the secret memos and reports, which we have now uncovered.
The tank is the backbone of our ground forces. In the nuclear age, infantry can no longer mass for attack without risking an enemy's forces in depth and rely on highly mobile units which can strike fast and evade destruction.
Except in jungle or mountainous areas the tank has become the Army's first, if flexible, line of defense.
The Army, therefore, set out in 1963 to build a tank that could not shoot anything the Soviets could throw against it. This super-tank, known as the MBT-XM-803, wasn't gotten on the drawing board.
The House Appropriations Committee has been investigating, C. R. Anderson, who
directed the investigation,
reported to Chairman George
Mahon, D-Tex, on Aug. 9, that the
army failed to build "a single
building" even though the program was started in 1963, as an ill-conceived American-German development, with a schedule providing for the production of an experimental tank by December, 1969.
The House investigators found that the "initial operational capability of the MBT-70 would have been lost in 1976, 13 years after the program started. A sizable tank force to meet the Soviets with any hope of success would not be available, until well into the 1980s."
One cause for the MBT-70s failure, charged Anderson in his memo to Mahon, was the selection of an engine that had been developed by Army "to begin a new development in 1969 of a derated model . . . of the engine which had been a failure. This step was taken although another 1475 engines had been passed its test successfully and had been recommended by the Army's own consultants, was
The memo noted wryly that "even a higher-priced tank would be more economical than a million-dollar one with an engine that does not work; and as set up in the report, there are great doubts that the Teledey engine would ever work."
As a stop-gap, the Army remodeled its old M-60 tank, designed a new compact turret system that allowed missiles and called it the M-60A1E2. But "technical difficulties with the turret control system," reported the Housing system, "resulted in the program being suspended." This action left the Army with a complete but limited military M-60AE2s in the inventory plus 243 incomplete turrets.
available for immediate use. . ."
In desperation, the Army,
which had done its own remodeling,
signed a contract with
Chrysler to correct the mistakes.
Meanwhile, the M60A1E25,
with its complex cultures experienced, have not been issued to the troops and will not be until 1973 if the retrof
program is successful."
Both the MBT-70/XM-803 and the M6A1E2, when they finally become operational, are supposed to be armed with Shillageh ammunition in the Army, incredibly, has stopped producing these missiles.
Declares the secret report:
"Not only was the last year of the contract terminated but the production line has been completed. We have sold and the plant in which it housed is for sale. This action was taken despite plans to the Shillelagh in the MBT-70/XM83 and the M-M641E2. In fact, the latter was developed specifically for this use available in Europe prior to the arrival of the MBT-70 there."
Once the two missile tanks become operational, the Army will have to start all over, at least 150 miles from a new Shillelagh plant and production line. Meanwhile, to maintain a production base, the Army is continuing to produce a remodeled M-60 tank, known as the "Hercules." Some 190 of these were recently built in Israel, another 28 to Jordan. To make up the loss, the Army stepped up production.
Complains the secret report: "This procurement program is in keeping with the defense policy of maintaining an active production force. We would seem, however, that the Army could have used the tanks sold to Israel and Jordan to keep the production line going rather increase the United States procurement because of this sale."
The Army's handling of the M-60A1 procurement, declares the report, has caused "these M-60A1 to be, as one representative described it, 'very gold plated.' The unit price of the M-60A1 during (fiscal year 1971) was $25,000 per person (jumped) to $333,000 per person and in 1973 . . . the price will skrevket to over $22,000.
"A contract representative advised the Investigative Staff that these increases will be caused by higher costs of smaller quantities of material and parts from subcontractors."
We will have more to say in another column about how the Army, for lack of planning, squanders the taxpayers' money.
Copyright, 1973,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
DiZerega
To the Editor:
Year in Review
DiZerega Rips Student Senate
Wednesday night the Student Senate voted to fund additional money for campus libraries in a vote that would be the period going into finals. As the allocation was approved, the student body president Dave Garrison said the effect that the library really wasn't the 'students' responsibility to fund, and that hopefully it could be called upon to fund it again.
On the Chinese calendar, the lunar year 4670 began on Feb. 15 and was to be known as the Year of the Rat. The rat is the first animal in the cynote cycle of symbolic animals, and so the Year of the Rat was the beginning of a new era. It was to be a time of timidity and meanness, which perhaps it was.
To Americans, however, the year 1972 began on Jan. 1, with a hangover from too much booze or wine. So did it in 1986 and 1995.
According to Chinese folklore, if the sun shone on Feb. 21, the seventh and most auspicious day of the Chinese New Year, the whole year would be a bright one for mankind. It was on that day that President Nixon arrived in Peking for his historical meetings with Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung. The sun apparently managed a glimmer over the Chinese capital during over the year 1972, for it was through this trip and Nixon's trip to the Soviet Union that the United States' foreign relations were strengthened.
By Gail Pfeiffer
with East Germany. There was the passage of the equal rights amendment, the return of Charlie Chaplin, the end of the draft, the seven gold medals of Mark Spitz, the passage of the revenue sharing bill, and the victory of the chess king Bobby Fischer.
bardment of football games. It was to be a year of tragedy, violence,苦难, progress, secret wheeling and dealing, terrorism, crusades, scandals, and foreign relations. It was a historical year, yet it was also the kind of year that one often wishes to forget.
It was also the year Japan signed relations with China, and West Germany signed a treaty.
The happy moments were few. For the most part the year 1972 can be described as violent and controversial. It was a year met with apathy and fear.
There was the controversy surrounding the Watergate and ITT scandals, and the Supreme Court's decisions on capital punishment and the use of the Nixon secret weapon deals, the power of Nixon to limit congressional spending, the trials of Angela Davis and the Harrisonburg 7. Questions arose from the campaign funding and public polling and from the concern of the vote on the 76 Olympics in Colorado.
There were the tragic floods in Rapid City and the Ohio Valley. There was the Howard Hughes hoax, the Eagleton affair, the peace negotiations and the elections.
There was that "Black September" in Munich, the attempted assassination of George Wallace by Arthur Brenner, the never-ending war in Vietnam, conflict, and the continuing violence in Ireland.
1972 was indeed a year one might like to forget. It was perhaps a year of not enough humidity and too much meanness. If indeed it is a new era, as it should look toward the future instead of the past.
Later, Dillon was one of the most impassioned supporter for continued subsidization in a debate over whether or not students should subsidize the bus system. In spite of body president's philosophy is inconsistent at best and hopelessly muddled at worst.
Consider—the library, a necessity, has according to Dillon's law been financed by students but rather should be given funds squeezed from the taxpayers at large. On his book, "The Science that benefits only a portion of the student body," is a legitimate service to be charged against all students who do not Dillon's argument is that whoever uses a service should shunt part of the bill off to other institutions in philosophy for a B-school major.
1. While unable to break even, students will benefit in incentive to search further for a viable, self-supporting method of community and Universal mass-education.
In fact, however, the bus system as it is currently managed and funded will, in the long run, prove harmful towards customers by providing a solution to mass-transit problems in Lawrence. This is so because
2. More distant apartment complexes are to some extent subsidized at the expense of students and the community by encouraging the Losangeles to the west, costing the city through the more streets, sewers, and other tax
supported amenities. Additionally, by lessening the disadvantage of Meadowbrow in a Gatehouse from subsideing transportation at general expense, pressure to reduce rents is
Bill O'Neill, of the golden tongue, pouenced upon this point by claiming that rents have not been raised since 1975. Since they are declining in many places elsewhere this by no means invalidates my argument. Instead, it correct it only shows that there is not a serious enough transportation inconvenience to effusive bus service so why should bus subsidy serve us?
3. Pressure to alleviate the stupid and repressive zoning regulations covering Oread street and the east campus streets. Currently neither small businesses nor large apartment buildings can be built to provide shopping and living opportunities in the district distracts student attention from the only feasible long-run solution to the transportation problem which is more housing close to the busiest area, most responsible for the zoning benefit from the subsidies.
An increase in living density in this area would also make some sort of viable mass transportation service downtown and allow people living per block means the more potential riders exist.
Additional reasons why there is no very valid reason for a subsidized bus system include:
1. For the overwhelming majority of students, the bus system is valuable only during school days. This is only a small percentage of classes. Car pools, for example, could help meet this need without running up $1,000 in bus fares each day by the current monstrosity.
2. Dormitories have floor governments which are ideally suited to organize this solution. This is because they are in "Power to the People" except
when it means a decentralization of authority from the senate itself! Greek houses currently lack access to their less competent? One senator wailed that she didn't know who lived next door and therefore couldn't organize a car pool!" about time she got neighborly.
3. Pershing Rifles now offer free escort service to women at a garrison to ask for a Senate grant if given the opportunity, to act in the students may well boggle the student of Messrs. Dillon and O'Neill.
4. ) Dorms excepted, more wealthy students with cars are generally subsidized by poorer students living in north and east Lawrence and in the east campus community in low rent housing who cannot afford the swimming pools, club rooms, and balconies
5. Finally, those who run the service have proven beyond doubt their incompetence to run a bus. They also have been taught the first of the semester we STILL have no fares painted on the sides of the buses—although this has been repeatedly suggested in the book. We are now going to schedule exist at bus stops. The excuse given is that BkG will not allow it! Why haven't they put up a bus? Is stupidity and lack of discipline to beacons haven't they gone over these bureaucrats' heads to the chancellor? Why haven't they just gone ahead and put up bus tickets? Is somebody hard to know没
I fear that once campus extravaganzas are funded, self-esteem through ego-enhancement will make it impossible to end the general muting of student interest in the benefit of special interests.
Wednesday the BSU had money cut in part for their incompetence in administering it. This is as it should have been. When mismanagement possibly costing thousands occurs within the Senate, it is a pity the Senate applies different, more lenient, standards to itself than it does to others.
Gus DiZerega
Gus Bizerega Lawrence graduate student
★ ★ ★
Women
fo the Editor:
I understand that both senex and the Council of Deans have been working on proposed revisions of the Provisional Affirmative Action Plan drafted by the Affirmative Action Board. I have read this provisional plan and am confident we will public several weeks ago. While it is not as strong as I would like in several respects, I find nothing
in it that I object to seriously, I suspect, knowing the composition of Senex and the Council of Academic Departments significantly limit the effectiveness of the program. I feel strongly, and I believe others should also accept that all group groups will agree, that all proposed revisions of the provisional plan including any amendments to the group groups should be made public before the chancellor makes his various proposals need to be reviewed and judged by the entire University community affected by the success or failure of the Affirmative Action Plan.
Joni Driskill
Johi Driskill
Vinita. Okla.. senior
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 11, 1972
5
Terrorism, Change Mark 1972
ALL HERS
JAYHAWK BOULEVARD
ON STRIKE!
MORE MONEY!
GAY
LIB
WESCOE
STOP the WAR
STNS ON LODK
STOP the WAR!
TEVE ORPENTER
JIM RYUN
Chalmers' Leaving Ranked As Top KU News in '72
By DAVID HEALY
REES OLANDER
and STEVE RIEL
The resignation of Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and the subsequent appointment of Raymond Nichols to the post of acting chancellor and then to chancellor was the most important news story at the University of Kansas in 1972. It ranked first in the top 20 1972 news stories.
Next came the state election races by KU students. Mike Manning was defeated in the primary.
Second was the resignation of Athletic Director Wade Sinton. It was followed by the suit of the Gay Liberation Front to gain recognition as a student organization. During the course of the suit, which is presently under appeal, the federal district court of Topека denied William Kunstler recognition as an attorney for the GLF.
The University funding freeze was fourth. Next came the occupation of the East Asian Student Affairs Program, which she commanded the establishment of the Affirmative Action program, a free daycare center, a women's health program, a nursing school, and studies and a woman vice-chancellor.
The spring war protest and the selection of a search committee to select a new chancellor came next. They were followed by the appointment of fee increases for fiscal year, 1974.
The entire KU construction story ranked eighth. Construction under way included Wesco Hall, Moon Hall, the new hospital, and an effort to expand plans for the Medical Center.
SIXTH WAS THE KU workers' strike for a wage increase, and seventh was the resignation of Francis Heller, vicechancellor for academic affairs.
Twelfth was the NCAA athletic probation for more than six recruiting violations and the later removal of the sanctions that prohibited the track team from competition in NCAA indoor and outdoor championships. The new fee payment system was 13th.
Ketheith, Joseph Krahn and R. Michael Brown lost their quests for the state legislature, but Joseph Hoagland, Paul Hess and Richard Walker won.
THE DEFEAT of a new campus traffic plan by opposition from students and faculty was ranked 15th. The plan, proposed by the Parking and Traffic Board, would have made Jayhawk Boulevard and Memorial Drive one-way streets and would have put parking meters along campus streets.
The Kansan Reviews '72
This was followed by the dismissal of the petition to close the Gaslight for alleged drug trafficking, 18th, and the establishment of the Consumer Protection Agency, 19th. The return of Jim Rynu to KU for Olympic training was ranked 20th.
Next came the selection of John R. Michel, associate professor of speech and drama, as the HOPE award recipient and the complaints over the selection procedure. The opening of the day-care center was 17th.
In the stories appearing on this and the next three pages, the Kansan has attempted to put the year 1972 in perspective. The stories were done by the School of Journalism's Editorial and Interpretative Writing Class. The cartoons are by Steve Carpenter, Kansan cartoonist, and Don Wright, syndicated cartoonist.
Olympic Terror Top News of '72
Harmony Displaces Violence in the News
Bv BOB LITCHFIELD
"Political" trials were important news items this year. Angela Davis was acquitted of a murder charge, and Jesuit priest Philip Berrigan and Sister Elizabeth McAlister were convicted of smuggling letters in and out of prison. The convictions of five of the Chicago Seven were reappealed.
A war protest march from McCollum Hall to Central Park on May 4 attracted only about 250 persons, mostly students, and violence was avoided.
and SALLY CARLSON
Lawrence's top news stories of 1972 generally reflected the changed mood of the country. Construction and community improvement came to mark the year, in contrast to the confrontation and destruction of recent times.
BvLINDA SCHILD
Twenty hours of terror shook the XX Olympiad into burning news prominence as neither Mark Spitzer's gold medals nor the acr3 controversy over judging nor the accusations that Corbyn had been able to do. Combined, these events created the top news story of 2017.
Politics and political issues were highly visible in this election year. Sen. George Muckley ran against Gov. Mary Washington sweep of Democratic district conventions in May, but the edge he enjoyed on the University of Kansas campus was not too great. Mr. Obama or nearly anywhere else in the country.
Tension of the first week of the Munich Olympics centered on Spitz, an American, who in an astounding week of swimming became the first athlete to win seven gold and a momentous impact on the Munich games when, with broken bodies, not broken records.
KU students, were registered in Douglas County this year, and their votes had a chance to elect Democrat state representative and three Democrats to county offices. Never before have four Democrats occupied offices in the courthouse, and the victory of I. J. Democrat has a 2-1 edge on the county commission.
Seventeen people died during an attempt by eight members of Black September, a Palestinian terrorist group, to hold Israeli coaches and team members hostage. The officers, commanded, who were arrested by Gaza militants, released to a group of Palestinian blackeners
and the Florida Legislature recently passed a law to the same effect.
UNPREDICTABLE primaries, convention quotas, controversies and scandals created this year's second largest story: the elections. Democrats retained a majority in Congress although they floundered in the midterm election by a majority that included the South and a sizeable number of young voters, won with a massive landslide.
Three months later, Nixon made news by traveling to Moscow for a summit conference with Communist Party Secretary Wendy McKenna. The stream of agreements intended to bring more realism and less rampant ideology into American-Russian relations.
A SPECIAL referendum on Sept. 19 overturned the city commission's anand LARRY CHRIST
In February, Nixon visited China, a country that had been virtually an enemy of the United States for two decades. His weeklong stay formalized the end of anti-Communism as a dominant U.S. foreign policy and helped people exchange, expansion of trade and normalization of relations between the two countries.
Other top stories were:
- Nixon announced plans to end the draft and move to an all-volunteer army by June 30, 1973. The draft system would stay on the books and young men would continue to register. The demise of KP duty and other changes in the military were instituted.
-VIETNAM. The war continued. In May, Nixon ordered the mining of North Vietnamese harbors, including Haiphong. U.S. ground troops pulled out, but the air war ended. A bomb was hit by U.S. bomb and the first B25 bomber lost in the war was shot down.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Furman vs. Georgia. Execution was stayed for 60 men and women in U.S. prisons. In November, California voters approved a proposition to revive the death sentence.
—Peace negotiations intensified in October. Hanoi leaked information that Nixon had agreed to sign a nine-point plan, but he denied this, then refused to sign until several objections of the South Vietnamnes had been resolved. The U.S. adopted a position as a mediator between the north and south.
-Terrorism increased and became a topic of United Nations discussion in 1972. A wave of Arab-Israeli letter bombs followed in 1984. By the end of the Yakaykens continued throughout the year.
—Gov. George Wallace was partially paralyzed in an assassination attempt in Laurel, Md., in May. He still plans to maintain an active role in the Democratic party. Arthur Bremer was convicted as his assailant.
Vote of Confidence for Democrats Ranked as No.1 Story in State
By TONDA RUSH
There were other controversies, some of which have yet to be resolved. The Corps of Deputies of the Department of Mud Creek as part of its flood prevention project on the Kansas River has come under, attack from the Audubon Society, the Sierra Club and others, who have submitted alternate proposals.
Significant victories by the Kansas Democrat party in the general election on state side of the battle.
neaxation in February of 1,780 acres of land northwest of Lawrence, including the Kansas Power and Light generating plant. The annexation was not only bottled contested by a citizen's group but KPL also replied with an application for a 10 per cent surcharge on all electric bills to Lawrence customers.
Victories by Gov. Robert B. Docking, Atty. Gen. Vern Miller and Rep. William Roy, Democrat in the formerly Republican second Congressional district, were the most important events of the year in Kansas.
Various actions by Miller in his present term ranked high in the voting.
Miller's rials in early spring of private clubs in Great Bend to uncover evidence of illegal gambling and later court decisions that were illegal were voted number two.
Miller also took third place with his raids on AMTRAK trains passing through Kuwait. He and his men were ambushed by
trains passed through Newton for alleged violations of Kansas liquor laws.
The city commission conducted public hearings to obtain community reaction to proposals for district representation on the commission.
Proposals for reapportionment of legislative districts received sixth place. Both the Senate and the House passed bills that Docking vetoed before present apportionment was agreed upon. Docking vetoed four different plans.
The attorney general appeared again in
The fourth-ranked story was Docking's decision to seek a fourth term as governor. Docking is Kansas' first and last fourth term governor. A constitutional amendment passed in the general election restricts future governors to two terms.
Morris Kay, Republican gubernatorial candidate, took fifth place by winning the nomination over Reynolds Shultz, lieutenant governor, John Anderson, for Georgia and Olathe law president; and Ruy Frische, president of the Kansas Farm Bureau.
the sevent spot by his visit to the University of Kansas last May. Miller arrived in the midst of some disturbances and protest marches that spilled off campus into the downtown business district. Former manager of the university, he be thought Miller should have stayed there.
Vern Muller remained a figure on the Lawrence scene, making an appearance during the war protest and returning in June to supervise a dawn drug raid that brought 30 arrests. As usual his activities were controversial and widely criticized
A judgment by District Court Judge Phillip L. Woodworth that Kansas's method of funding public schools was unconstitutional was the seventh ranked story. Woodworth gave the legislature until July, 1973, to devise new funding methods.
Taking eight place was a $900 million state budget that Docking requested and received without major opposition. The budget was 86.3 million greater than 1971's budget.
A FINANCIAL CRISIS was avoided when the city's authority to levy a half-cent sales tax to finance additional police and fire equipment designed for one year by the state legislature.
An extension of a property tax lid that limits government agencies to 5 per cent budgeting increases was the 10th ranked story of the year.
Steps have been taken to prevent a recurrence of the violence that poisoned the air in Lawrence in 1970. The city adopted a human relations ordinance establishing a Human Relations Commission and incorporating an affirmative action program. Greater understanding and cooperation between minority communities has eased tensions and helped create an atmosphere for progress.
Other steps have been taken to increase the rapport between "The Hill" and the Lawrence community. A consumer protection association was established, and it is hoped that a bridge other gaps and provide increased mutual understanding and cooperation.
Other top stories of 1972 reflect growth and civic improvements. Neighborhood Development Program funds were obtained by the community to renovate the downtown shopping district. Planning is under way for improvements in north Lawrence and other old sections of the city. A new public library was opened, and a looking for a buyer for the old building.
CONSTRUCTION began on Clinton dams and reservoir, which will provide a large recreation area close to Lawrence. To meet the transportation demands, U.S. 59 is being widened and a new route is being sought for K-10 east of the city.
Bozos Run Rampant, Gain Control and Create 1972
By LINDA CHAPUT and ROB SIMISON
and BOB SIMISON
Light Side of 1972
Who would ever believe that the key phrase of 1972 came from an Alka-Seltzer commercial?
McGraw-Hill bought the whole book, that is, a false autobiography of Howard Hughes, millionaire recluse, by Clifford Irwin, a minor novelist. The story was incredible from, start to finish.
Hughes himself first exposed the hoax. He denied any connection with the autobiography in a textbook.
Indeed, it was a year of events few could believe. Indeed, you could believe, for example, that McGraw-Hill would have been the number one publisher.
"I can't believe I ate the whole thing," the phrase,
on nearly everyone's life. It showed up as a punctuation mark.
Time's "proof" was a manuscript annotated in what Irving said was Hughes' handwriting. The manuscript turned out to be an "ingenious paste job," Newsweek said smudly. Had it missed
We have proof." Inc. Tue. said. Time had purchased rights to serialize the book in Life magazine.
IWING'S WIFE, Edith, and his research assistant, Richard Saskind, assisted in the $765,000 caper. Saskind did the research while Irving flew it to place for pretended meetings with Hughes.
together material from old books, clips and an unpublished manuscript of a book on Hughes by James Phelan, then had imitated Hughes' handwriting in notes in the margins.
Edith was pressed into service to deposit advances from McGraw-Hill and Time Inc. in Swiss bank accounts. She faced Swiss charges after the conviction on U.S. charges of fraud and forgery.
At the end of all it, Irving sold a hastily composed account of the hoax, "Clifford Irving—What Really Happened," to Grove Press and Ladies' Home Journal.
McGraw-Hill believed it even less when it discovered that another book, "The Memoirs of Chief Red Fox," had been plagiarized in large part form an authentic historical work. This book, however, already had gone through seven printings and a paperback edition in one year.
Then there was "try it; you'll like it," another Alka-Seltzer line. Burt Reynolds tried it, and the readers of Compostion liked it so well that the magazine had to print extra copies.
Reynolds powns on a bearskin rug wearing only a mustache and smoking a cigar for a Playboy-style man.
EARLIER IN the year, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew was named the "World's Sexiest Man" in a telephone poll taken by Dr. Joyce Brothers for a New York City radio station.
President Richard M. Nixon rated less highly, "Richard Nixon is the most sexually insecure chief of state since Napoleon," said Gloria Steinem, women's spokesman.
Sen. William D. Proxmire, D-Win, tried it and said he didn't care anything like it. He had a child who cared more about him.
The year was also one of games. There were the Fischer-Spassky chess matches, the Olympics and the Masters and Johnson games to cure sexual hangups.
Nixon, who brought sports terminology to politics, got in on a few games, too. Before the Super Bowl
game between Miami and Dallas, he contributed a play to his favorite team, the Miami Dolphins.
The other play Nikon suggested earlier to the Washington Redskins lost 13 yards when it was tried in a game.
In July, the President compiled his own all-time all-star baseball team. The list contained 84 names of players from Babe Ruth to Johnny Bench on and postwar American and National League teams.
His play called for a pass from Miami quarterback B Gordon to end Paul Warfield. Coach Don Shula said the play already was part of the team's repertoire.
THE TIPTEO THROUGH the tulips paused briefly in March for Tiny Tim, singer, and Miss Kira, who were married on the Johnny Carson set. They had been friends and would stay home to tend their daughter, Tulip, rather than
Martha Mitchell played a game in which she made the stakes her marriage to former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell. She told him she would seek a divorce if he didn't get out of politics. She won. Mitchell resigned as chairman of Nixon's campaign.
follow a modeling career.
follow a meeting career.
The two were reunited several months later.
the TVs were reloaded several months later.
"The Godfather" made movie goers an "offer they couldn't refuse." The movie and the phrase were big hits everywhere.
Nixon, for example, couldn't refuse a gift to the United States of two rare giant pandas from Communist China. Toy manufacturers experienced difficulties in producing them arrived in Washington after Nixon's trip to China.
Mrs. Nikon and Julie Nielsen Eisenbauer offered to
for President Tientsin of South Vietnam, but no one
allowed her to do so.
Through it all, people could resist a revival of the 1950s. The movies, the music, the clothes and the stars of the 1950s all were resurrected. Even the hoop hoop came back in the wake of nostalgia.
Somebody in Spokane, Wash., however, had a bit less respect for the past. A burglar stole the Oscar Bing Crosby won in 1944 for his performance in "Mary Way." I said to the Gomaga University campus.
In its place, the burglar left a three-inch statue of Mickey Mouse.
6
Monday, December 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
COSMO
Steve Guenter
Kissinger: From Peace to Poses
CATHY SHERMAN
By SCOTT SPREIER
'Man of the Year'
He searched for peace in Southeast Asia. he was the centerfold in the Harvard Lampoon. if he wasn't China-watching in Asia, he found her girl-watching in Hollywood.
He's Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's foreign affairs adviser and secret negotiator, companion of beautiful women and the Kansan's Man of the Year for 1972.
After setting up the historic trip, Kissinger meticulously put together eight thick black volumes of political and cultural notes to brief the President.
Kissinger, a Harvard professor before coming to the Nixon administration in 1969, has been a dominant policymaker in foreign affairs. His furtive meetings with China's Premier Chou En Lai last year, which led to Nixip's trip to China in February, were his first revealed series of secret talks and pushed him into national prominence.
ALWAYS THE diplomat, Kissinger,
sensible sense friction with the U.S.S.R.,
took pains to explain that the new U.S.
relationship with China "is not directed
'73 News: Insomnia Cure
Although 1973 is fast approaching, no major changes are expected to come about except, possibly, a Vietnam peace settlement. But even that is dubious.
ROBIN GROOM
Newspapers will seem similar to soap operas because no matter where you pick up the story, nothing much will have haunted you. The most favorable are the valuable and improbable news leads for 1973:
SAIGON, Jan. 3- Informed sources reported a weakening in President Thieu's adamant opposition to the proposed peace settlement. The change is supposedly a result of Henry Kissinger's seventh visit here this year.
Although the smiling Kissinger refused to comment on the substance of the talks, official sources reported that he had warned Thieu that Washington was firmly committed to bringing the negotiations to a rapid close.
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 14—The
Washington superbowl
today in Los Angeles Coliseum
By ROBERT WARD
It is hoped that a settlement will be reached before the inauguration.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20—President Nixon, in his inaugural address today, restated that an end to the war was in sight but that the U.S. would not make any concessions that would undermine the U.S. government.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.-L. Patrick Gray, acting director of the FBI, said Saturday that investigators into the bugging of the Democracy adjudicants would be released in six weeks.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 15—Earl Butz, secretary of agriculture, today denied that recent shipments of grain to Russia were spoiled.
"Why, that wheat is hardly 30 years old. How do the Russians expect us to believe that it's spoiled already?" Butz said in response to questions from newsmen.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 20- The White House announced Tuesday that Henry Kissinger had been in Paris for the last two weeks conducting secret talks with Le Duc Tho. The White House, while refusing to comment on the substance of the talks, said President Nixon was satisfied with the progress of the talks thus far.
The meetings almost bore fruit in October, when Kissinger announced, "Peace is at hand." Secret negotiations with Hanoi were again revealed, in which a nine-point peace settlement with North Vietnam was to be signed Oct. 31.
But the date for signing the peace agreement passed by without the U.S. signature, largely because of the resistance of the French and his South Vietnamese government.
Klasinger smiled and posed for photographers outside a building on the recent talks.
But perhaps more important were Kissinger's secret negotiations with representatives of North Vietnam con-
firmation of the war in Southeast Asia.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 27—Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., today announced that he personally would conduct an investigation into the Watergate bugging incident as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Eastland added that Sen. Edward Kennedy's and Rep. Wright Patman's proposals to investigate the bugging incident would not be necessary.
against the U.S.S.R." And after the great China odyssey, he proved the way for the war.
NEW YORK, March 1-Martha Mitchell today announced that she was homesick for Washington and that she and her husband would be returning soon.
White House sources said John Mitchell would resume his roof as attorney general.
WASHINGTON, D.C., March 17—L Patrick Grick, actor, acting director of the FBI, said today his investigation of the man convicted would take at least another month.
AP NEWS SERVICES, March 28 — Informed sources in the Middle East are upset over a Soviet Arab relations. According to officials, Lebanon is outraged and offended over a
shipment of Soviet tanks that they recently received.
The tanks, it seems, lack first, second, third and fourth gears.
KISSINGER'S BOSS, President Richard M. Nixon, took a back seat in the Man of the Year race, although the success of each depended on the other.
Adding insult to injury, all markings and operating instructions on the tanks are in
NEW YORK, April 5- Andy Warhol told
released a 24-hour epilogue of Mark Spitz taking
a bath. Warhol described the film as second
his film of the Empire State Building.
The President began his fourth year in office with historic ice-breaking trip to Communicate China. Nixon also thawed the Cold War with a diplomatic meeting he met with Soviet leaders in Moscow. Between the boasting, touring and feasting, Nixon and the Soviet leaders made many trade, health and science agreements but disagreement on the Middle East or Vietnam.
SAIGON, April 4—A smiling Henry Kissinger was briefly spotted surrounded by Asian beauties at a popular Salisar resort today. It was rumored that Kissinger is in Saigon to test President Thieu's reaction to a new proposal by Hani.
WASHINGTON, April 15—Lester S. Hyman, former state democratic chairman of Massachusetts, today announced the intention to seek a special position on FOREIGN NEWS SERVICES, May 1—In
FOREIGN SEEKINGS SERVICES, may I —
unexpected complication of
lachrymae
itchiness
and Lans
Nixon also reaffirmed his opposition to busing, ordered the mining of Haiphong harbor and vetuted authorization of funds for the construction of the airport. Seek no tax increases unless Congress overspent, asked Congress for a $250 billion federal budget tax lid and the power to enforce it, and vetoed bills for domestic travel that would intact the largest military budget ever.
See '73 NEWS page 12
HE REFUSED to grant amnesty to draft dodgers and denied that U.S. bombers had bombed jinks in North Vietnam. He didn't take serious action to improve general health services or to improve the welfare system as he had promised in 1968.
In a culmination of the President's year, the nation's voters gave Nixon a sweeping mandate, one of the largest in history, in which he took all but 17 of the nation's 538 electoral votes and overwhelming his opponent, Sen. George McGhee. Nixon failed to pull many GOP contenders into office with him, however.
McGovern and his youth forces masterfully fused together a coalition of minority, youth and majority group delegates to side-line old-time party regulars and gain the party nomination in Miami.
the longest in modern times, placed third for Man of the Year.
McGovern was seriously challenged in his integrity and credibility when he dropped the ball.
M. Gevern, the preacher's son and former professor who lost from obscurity to make a name for himself.
IN FOURTH PLACE was Sen. Thomas Eagleton, the junior senator from Missouri, who rocketed to national prominence on a hot July evening in Miami when he was nominated as McGovern's vice presidential runate mate. Eagleton was hastily chosen by McGovern after several other choices had turned him down.
Eagleton's candidacy was short-lived, however. Soon after the convention, in an
affair surrounded by controversy,
Eagleton was taken off the ticket after it
was learned he had been hospitalized in
1984 and suffered a nervous exhaustion.
The slug from its foot assists its gun
left the fifth Man of the Year choice crippled
for life.
George Wallace, making his second and ill-fated, attempt for the presidency, was gunned down May 15 by 21-year-old Arthur Beumer in a Laurel, Md., shooting cord.
Wallace was campaigning for president when the Democratic standard after switching to the American Party, with which he made an unsuccessful bid for the presidency in 1968.
But Wallace, the conservative Alabama governor who had won the Florida primary, went on to win the Maryland and Michigan contests. However, paralyzed from the waist down, Wallace was forced to drop out of the battle for the presidency.
Too Many Candidates Cause Party Problems
By JOYCE NEERMAN and NANCY JONES
For George McGovern and the Democratic party, the year was marred by internal political dissension, by tragedy and by serious political blunders.
As the political year came to a close Nov. 7, memories of the past 10 months passed quickly and vividly through the minds of both losers and winners.
There were too many candidates—all from the same party but from different parties, and no spectrom. Eleven candidates tried for the nomination and all balked at compromise.
There were Sens. Edmund Muskie an-
Hubert Humphrey; Gov. George Wallace,
the conservatives' standard-bearer; Shirley
Watson; Mrs. Hillary Clinton; women;
Mayor John Lindsay; Sen. Eugene McCarthy;
Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson;
Sen. Vance Hart of Indiana; Mayor Sam
porter of Los Angeles; Wilbur Mills,
portrait of Sloan leader; and of
course, George McGovern.
AS EACH CANDIDATE threw his hat into
the air, there were rumors that Sen. Ed-
ward Osborne was the president.
Newsmakers Leave History in Wake
By LYNNE MALIN
The supremely negative news of any year is its deaths.
Floods worked havoc in the U.S. in 1972. The West Virginia floods of February claimed more than 80 lives. Flooding in Rapid City, S.D., in the spring killed 200.
War and disasters natural, accidental, and violently planned head the list of events that brought death to many people. Vietnam, Uganda, and the Middle-East probably cost the most lives in wars and brush-fire fighting.
Accidental deaths occurred in mine caves, train and plane crashes. A mining accident in Wankle Colliery, Rhodesia, trapped more than 400 miners. Plane crashes in London, New Delhi, Pleuk, and Moscow set ever higher single crash death rates died in an ice cream parlor in Sacramento on September to take off on Sept. 24 and overshot the runway. The rail crash near Saltillo, Mexico, claimed 187.
Man's violence rather than brotherhood was displayed in the slaying of 11 Israeli
competitors by a Palestine commander group at the Olympics in Munich by a Palestinian commander group. Four of those commanders died in the airport gun battle in which nine of the Israelis were slain. Southern University, La., was rocked in November by the deaths of two black students.
LISTED BY MONTH follow the deaths of some of the newsmakers of our time.
January: Roy O. Diensy, 78, co-founder of the Disney entertainment empire; Clarence Earl Gideon, 61, the Florida convict who was an indigent; a court-appointed lawyer, 61; and Wainwright Supreme Court decision; Dr. Lillian Gilbreth, 93, pioneer efficiency expert and mother of the family described in “Cheaper by the Dozen”; John Marshall Hain, 72, former Supreme Court justice. Foster, 60, govetspher of civil rights leader.
March: Jane Grant, 79, early women liberationist and co-founder of the New Yorker; Edmond A. Guggenheim, 84, philanthropist and heir to one of the largest
family fortunes in U.S. history; Maria Goepert Meyer, 65, the only woman besides Madame Curie to win a Nobel Prize in physics for her "shell theory" of the universe, 44, columnist and radio commentator often accused of fabricating news items.
April: Cristobal Baliencia, 77, Basque who became a Paris fashion designer; Gabriel Heater, 81, radio commentator known in World War II for his opening line, "There's good news tonight"; Adam Clayton, 83, politician, preacher and playboy.
M. J. Edgar Hoover, 77, head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation under eight presidents; Kwame Nkrumah, 62, former president of Ghana issued in 1966 and the first African president to dependence for his country after World War II; George Sanders, 68, actor who died by his own hand and left a note say, "I am leaving, because I am bored," Yasuari Nakawa, 72, who in 1968 became the only author to win a Nobel prize for literature.
Modern Art; Howard D. Johnson, 75,
restaurant founder; Andrew Mallory, 37,
subject of the Supreme Court case that
is being heard in bringing a suspect before a magistrate.
August: Charles Suydam Cutting, 83,
naturalist and explorer who visited the
Tibetan Shangri-La city of Lhasa in 1935;
Allen J. Ellender, Louisiana, 81, senator,
third in the line of succession to the
presidency.
SEPTEMBER: Warren K. Billing, 79, a laborete who with Tom Mooney was convicted of bombing and killing 10 persons in a patriotic parade in San Francisco in 1916; Sir Francis Chichester, 70, British solo voyager around the world in 1666-67 in his ketch Gipse Mich IV; Charles Correll, 82, and radio of 'siam "Amos n." Andy'
October: Louis Leakey, 69, British anthropologist who discovered several links between man and prehuman beings; Harlow Shapey, 68, Harvard astronomer who proved that the earth and its solar system lay at the frinces of the Milky Way.
Supercrime Reaches Peak in '72 And Crime Rate Keeps Climbing
November: Martin Dies, 71, progenitor and chairman for its first six years of the House Un-American Activities Committee; Edward Long, 64, Missouri senator who established a prominent wiretapping; Ezra Fould, 87, poet and ex-patriate to Italy.
Bv DAN PREROTH
may steadily be refused to become a candidate.
Crime for 1972 had all the business it could handle. Besides the normal rapes, muggings, armed robberies and homicides, 1972 will be recalled as a banner year for the rise of global hopping air piracy and international capture with shootouts and captures in Munich.
And then, as 1728 had hardened, J. Edgar Hoover, founder and guiding spirit of the New York Times, died.
But according to the bureau, violent crimes were down only slightly in 1972, and far ahead of 1688. In the end, the administration itself had the lid on a little more than one year and based on such favorites as burglary, bugeing, conspiracy and fraud with the U.S. mail.
The year began for the United States Bureau of Statistics on Jan. 1, 1972, but for the Nixon administration it began in 1968 when the wledge of "four years of law and order" made campaign hay from Maine to Oregon.
December: Antonio Segni, 81, former president of Italy and longtime Christian Democrat, twice Premier and several times a cabinet minister; Wendell Smith, 58, writer-and broadcaster who helped promote baseball's racial integration.
The airlines had their problems with hljackers in 1972. Cuba became less favored as a refuge, and intercontinental hopes to Aligiers were exceeded in suspense only by backups out of the back door of jets with several hundred thousand dollars in ransom.
IN MUNICH, television cameras covered the drama of a kidnap-hostage play with all the live suspense of the Oswald shootin- in Munich. The screen is the hand of either police or captains as the
June: Dr. Walter J. Freeman, 76, psychiatrist and neurologist who pioneered the use of prefrontal and transorbital lobotomies as a treatment for severe illness; Edmund Wiltan, 77, newspaper and magazine literary critic and author.
The airline pilots' association struck throughout the world in protest of developments; the skymarsal program was ground-concentrated; profiles of hijacker 'types' made ground detection easier. Yet the hijacks continued.
For stealing the Pentagon Papers, Daniel Elisberg and friend Anthony Russo went on trial in what promised to be a long session. In Florida the "Gainesville S six" were in
As a kind of reinforcement that all values weren't lost in 1972, the old saying "Crime doesn't pay" hit home again when big-time gangster figure Meyer Lansky couldn't find a taker anywhere in the world for a little while. Then he took a million and take Lanskey. No, she joined Lansky more than the United States, which finally took him back for free. He arrived in Florida to face tax charges and to prove conclusively that "Crime doesn't pay."
Gradually the field narrowed, but not every candidate was able to leave without tragedy or loss of self-pride. The pictures of personal tragedy were many—Muskie's crying in the snow on the steps of a newspaper office in New Hampshire; a thin bulletin board confined to a wheelchair by a ballet assailant's bullets; Sen. Thomas Eaglehammer's announced his reluctant resignation from his party's vice-presidential spot; and Hubert Humphrey, bidding his final 'arewell' to his dreams of the presidency.
renonination and received only minor opposition from Sen. John Ashbrook, who expressed the conservatives' dissatisfaction with Paul McCarthy's voiced opposition to Nixon's Vietnam policies. The only speculation about the President's cqmage was whether he would dump Sipro Agnore for John Connally. Agnore, and Connally resigned from his job as secretary of the treasury to lead the Democrats for Nixon campaign.
July; Athenagoras I, archbishop of Constantinople-New Rome and edoumalic patriciarum who initiated the reconciliation between the Orthodox and Catholic faiths in the 1960's; Josephine P. Boardman Crane, 89, founded of the New York Museum of
Govern. George Wallace, campaigning in a Maryland shopping center parking lot, was felled by William Bremer, a self-awored madman without political motive. The Wallace shooting was graphically recorded as he ran through times in slow motion by the networks. Wallace and spent the rest of the year recovering. Doctors said he would never walk again.
Drugs continued in the news, with conflicting reports about the trends of drug usage and sales. In Kansas City several metropolitan high schools reported usage at the 50 per cent mark, and President Nixon announced a renewed effort to curb sales and use, calling drugs the number one domestic problem.
dicted for conspiracy to disrupt by violence the Republican national convention.
Mass murders continued in the news throughout the year. A Chicago group calling itself "De Mau Mau" was under indictment for multiple murders of whites, and the Corona murder trial in California continued to probe the killing of 26 migrant whose bodies were unearthened in shallow graves four years' end announced the indictment of a militant member for fragging white officers from behind in Viet Nam.
inevitable shootout followed in the darkness of an airport. The cameras recorded blackness interrupted with retorts and powder flashes, followed by silence.
In white collar crime Glen Turner, the self-made 50-millionaire who said in May, "They can't touch me, I'm too strong," found himself under indictment in no less than eight federal and in the federal jurisdictions for various crimes unlicensed securities sales and deception.
Other celebrities in the crime news included Clifford Irving, his wife Edith and his mistress Baroness Von Pallant. Howard Hughes, the recuseillion billionaire, said he never authorized a biography, and the convicted Irving, named "Con Man of the Year" on a *Time* magazine cover, admitted it all in a book called "Hoax."
SOME CITIZENS had bad feelings and questions about the bugging of Democratic headquarters, ITT and Dita Beard, unidentified contributors to the Nixon administration. But Martha Mitchell saying she was held prisoner by her own security agents.
BUT FOR ALL the murder, the Supreme Court handed down its long-expected rebuke to the death penalty, although as a fine point he was not abolish capital punishment altogether.
In California an unlikely ransom plough against Johnny Carson ended unhappily for the culprit, who was killed when he shot and then fatally shot a lot. And in Chicago, beleaguered state's city. Gen. Harranham was finally vindicated of any wrongdoing in Illinois.
HIS ATTORNEY, F. Lee Bailey, said things were under control. Bailey, as a sidenote, divorced his second wife in March and took on a third in June, at the same time holding his move into the girlie magazine field with an entry called Gallery"
But all these were overshadowed by the people's trust in Nixon as a peacemaker, increased by the memory of his trips to China and Russia, his arms pact with Russia and his eleventh-hour promises of impending peace in Vietnam.
NO, NO, I DON'T THINK SILL. VOTE
CARE IF MY OWN WORKS AND
HEIS A BUSY PRESIDENT, EVERYMAN
WILL BLANK ME FOR PUTTING HUM
MY OFFICE!
The Republican story was much different. Richard Nixon was a shoe-in for his party's
Nixon's personal victory was overwhelming. He received the largest popular vote in history, breaking Lyndon Johnson's 1964 record. His 821-17 electoral vote margin exceeded only by Franklin D. Roosevelt's victory over Alfred M. Landon in 1936.
A. M.
"HUJACK A PLANE. YOU SAID... GO TO CUBA, YOU SAID..."
Monday, December 11, 1972
7
TANZANIAN
BORDER
MEIN
KAMPF
"GENERAL AMIN SAYS HE'S GOING TO RUN UGANDA BY THE BOOK"
Africa's Caldron Bubbled
By JUDY SIEBERT and MIKE HIGGINS
Africa has always been a continent with a history of sweeping violence and inhumanity. Racism, tribal warfare, nationalist movements and frequent governments all coexist on the "Dark Continent." The events of 1972 are in the pattern.
The top news story in Africa in 1972 took place in Uganda, under dictator Geni Idi Amin. In August Anir ordered all the Asian population to be out of his country by Nov. 7. Most Asiai sledd the country by the Army, and they made expansions behind. Anir then turned their businesses over to native Ugandans, few of whom had had any business experience.
The second biggest African event of 1972 was the expulsion of Soviet advisers from Egypt. President Amar Sadat, angered by Soviet refusals to deliver more arms and tanks to North Korea, Gen. Mohammed Sadek, ordered 3,000 advisers out of the country in July.
IN JANUARY, black Rhodesians rejected 99 to one a proposal of Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith and British Foreign Secretary Sir Alex Douglas-Home, which theoretically, would have led to a gradual increase in black political and social power. Justice Commission, sent to assess the Rhodesian situation was met by rioting, destruction and voiceless demonstrations by more than 8,000 angry black Rhodesians.
In September, 800 Tanzanian-trained Ugandan guerrillas invaded Uganda, while attention was focused on the Asian expulsion from that country. The guerrillas, with the help of US troops and Militia, were hoping for Ugandan military support in overthrowing the government.
A NOTTEMPTED assassination of King Hussan of Morocco failed in August. As Hussan was returning from Europe, his plane was strafed by three Moroccan Air Force jets. Hussan contacted the attacking plane by radio and convinced the pilots that he was dead. The jets then escorted the plane to the airport where it made a safe landing.
A 17-year Sudanese civil war between 4 million blacks and 11 million Arabs ended in March. A peace treaty, signed by Maj. Gen. Abdulaziz Hussaini, led to Maj. Gen. Jaafar Naurum, president of,
Sudan, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, ended the conflict.
IN JANUARY, the Guanian army moved in the absence of Prime Minister Kari Abrefa Busa to overthrow his government. Busia had to leave the country for treatment of an eye ailment in London. His 2-year-old government had been plagued by financial woes and growing army disenchment with government policy.
A demonstration of student power worked in one country in Africa in 1972. Student riots, which began as a move for university reform in the Malagasy Republic, brought down the government of Pres. Philbert Tsiranan in May.
For Europe as for much of the rest of the Western world, 1972 was a year of political rapprochement among long-time adversaries, counterposed against a stack of international markets. Market was in the process of expansion, and East-West relations were being dramatically improved across the board. But there was also the fusillade at the West Olympics and the frequent frightening scheduling" of commercial airline flights.
For Europeans at large, 1972 was a year of small and large signal transitions, many of them landmarks heralding the end of a definitive postwar era.
IN SPAIN, Gen. Francisco France named Adm. Luis Blanco as his choice to become Spain's first president when Franco himself yields the power.
Certainly the most significant single event in Europe was the expansion of the Common Market to include Denmark, Ireland and Great Britain. Norway's impact has been proposed, but the Norwegians voted down the question in a general referendum.
In Belgium, Socialist leader Paul-Henri Spak "Mr. Europe" died at 73. Spak, the first president of the UN General Assembly, had long been an instrumental drive for European unity and in the building of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Boris Spassky returned to the Soviet Union from Reykjavik as the first Russian to lose the world chess championship in 25 years.
West German Chancellor Willy Brandt's ostpolitik policies began to bear fruit. The Berlin Wall was opened to West Berlimers and East Germans, who aggression treaties with the Soviet Union
Margrethe II, formerly Princess Margrethe of Denmark, became the Dane's first woman sovereign upon the death of her father. King Frederick IX.
Europe Heralds New Era
Many Changes in Asia During '72
By SANDY HERRING
and
Changes of profound significance have occurred in Asia in 1972. After nearly 30 years of United States involvement in fighting in Asia, the United States may be able to end its military obligation there by the year. From the biggest stories about Asia we continued talks of peace in Vietnam, South Korea and other Asian countries.
NANCY STRUNK
The second story about Vietnam was the U.S. decision to mine the Haiphong harbor, to prevent supplies reaching North Vietnam. This decision followed the conference of whether to increase bombing or to use another strategy.
The most explosive stories have been involved with the continued efforts of the United States in South Vietnam towards peace. The first of the stories to break was about the three POW's who were released following efforts of anti-war activists.
To increase attacks in the hopes of forcing the Viet Cong to surrender, the United States blundered. It bombed a French mission, neutral territory. At first the French mission was successful. The United States but later reports verified the bombing attack and the mission's destruction.
Two weeks before the election in the United States the peace agreement was set to be signed. Because of a refusal to cooperate with the treaty by South Vietnam.
THE BIGGEST STORY of Vietnam, however, was the continued peace negotiations. From the first of October, there were rumors about peace coming from Paris. President Nixon's foreign advisors advised, Henry Kissinger, then went to North Vietnam for conferences in Hanoi with Chou En-lai.
Education Was Plagued By Busing, Tax Questions
and Israelis in their ongoing conflict, now made truly international; Munich set the tone for the increasingly airplane airliner 'new letter-bomb' campaign that followed.
Congress passed $2 billion for desegregation of schools, $20 billion for college and college student aid and created a National Institute of Education.
students. The current trend in the use of term paper mills was being investigated
Italy began the year in its worst political crisis since the war, and went through its governments before a stabilizing coalition together with a stabilizing coalition together with a 34th, under new permit Giulio Andretti.
SOME OTHER issues and episodes in education this year were:
The New York aid to Parochial Schools plan was ruled unconstitutional. New York had never had such a rule.
the United States could not sign. The Vietnam war continued to be an issue in the United States.
IQ tests were under fire, their opponents arguing that they stem from middle class (3).
Programs similar to adult education have begun for the aged.
AND YET there was also tragedy and disquiet in the news of Europe. The peaceful competition of the Olympic games in Munich was shattered by gunfire and the nine Israeli who had been kidnapped by "Black September" Arab guerrillas.
There was disagreement as to whether children should go to school at 4 or wait until
In another seemingly endless conflict, tussle in Northern Ireland ("Britain's Vietnam") raged on. January's "Bloody Sunday" in Belfast, in which 13 unarmed civilians were killed by Catholic demonstrators and British troops fought provided the impetus. The militant members of the Irish Republican Army stepped up their campaign against the English-backed forces more troops into Ulster. The British Embassy in Dublin was rased, as violence spread to the South. The Irish Republic's government finally took the unopposed step of imposing- and IRA measures in the South, only to eventually in a new wave of bombings there.
Technical schools became more popular this year.
William A. Stewart, author, said he found it easier to teach ghetto students to read if he ran ghetto English and standard English together.
The singular magnitude of this outrage oversterilized throughout the world, caused by mass graves in Paris.
In Helsinki, the European Preliminary Conference on Security got under way, with high hopes that answers could be found to the question of reducing military threats and expenditures formerly considered as part of the fabric of the Iron Curtain.
School openings were marred by only 105 strikes by teachers, but Kansas City had a long strike of custodial workers that caused the closing of its schools.
Corporal punishment was highly approved.
Because 18-year-olds can vote school boards are elected student members
Another event of significance was Nixon's trip to the Republic of China. While in Beijing, he met with U.S. officials and discussions with Mao Tse-tung and other heads of state. In keeping with Nixon's foreign relations policy, the purpose of his trip was to establish a dialogue between the United States and China.
Busing and desegregation were the main issues in education during 1972. In Richmond, Va., Judge Merhage ordered central city school districts to combine with urban districts to desegregate the school district. The Court of Appeals reversed this order on the basis that Judge Merhage did not have the authority to issue such an order.
TWO NOTABLE innovations in education were the open classroom and mini-schools. The open classroom stresses the material available in the classroom and the child's curiosity rather than traditional teaching methods. Berkeley's mini-schools are specialized, concentrated courses in certain areas of study.
and Poland were consummated and passed by the West German parliament. The foreign ministers of the Big Four allies of Germany, apprehending the spirit abroad in Bavaria, joined the Pact and thereby ended 25 years of lingering crisis atmosphere in the former German capital. East Germany and West Germany together took expansive steps to reinforce their relations.
Victor Taylor graduated magna cum laude from Southern Illinois University. Winner of the National Outstanding College Student Award.
Big Hemisphere Story Is Chile's Mass Strike
Colleges and universities have begun to look at samples of a student's work as a basis for admission to the school rather than requiring the student to write an essay on why he would like to attend college. Work study programs were alleviating the financial burden in colleges by making use of fewer faculty members for more
The United States Supreme Court ruled that extensive busing should not be used to achieve integration in the schools. President Nixon stated that he was against busing. There was a very strong protest in Chicago, Mich., on plans to bus school children and the Michigan and Florida primaries were significant because of busing.
UNIVERSITIES are now facing organized unions of college professors.
In other issue, consensus seemed to exist that personal property taxes levied to support education are not fair. Some states unconstitutional this year that such taxes were unconstitutional. These states gave their legislatures designations to building new financial plans for public schools.
IN THE EARLY autumn President Ferdinand Marcos of the Republic of the Philippines initiated martial law in an attempt to squelch a rising spirit of ultranationalism and economic dispute within the archipelago islands. These feelings of discontent were mainly centered in the universities and with the intellectual factions of the country.
Martial law was put into effect following several assassination attempts.
Another of the Asian countries, South Korea, is of particular interest to the United States and has also been a big newsmaker in the world. Its public life has been continually pressed by North Korea and fears Communist takeover. In the last month of January 2016 Hee Park, has declared himself dictator.
Two Asian countries have come to peaceful understandings. The Republic of China and Japan initiated talks of new trade agreements in 2013, a peaceful reopening of both countries.
A national strike in Chile, the return of ex-dictator Juan Peron to Argentina and the deadlocked Canadian election were the most dramatic events in the western hemisphere outside the U.S.
By FLAVIA TORREAO
**TIES TO THE CHINESE and Japanese**
talks are the talks of Nixon with Japan's exempter. Hirohito. Relations between
Japan and China. States have dwindled in the last few years.
And just this month there has come a plea to 'right of privacy' in students' school records.
AND BILL.SCHEELE.
In Chile, President Salvador Allende Gossens had to face one of the gravest crises since he took power. It started in the sparsely settled southern province of Aien when the government announced plans to set up a mixed-government private highway transport operation there. Angry truck drivers have joined by others who believed that Aien was only the first step in a full-scale government takeover.
Alende replied to the wave of strikes by ordering a "state of emergency" in 21 of Chile's 25 provinces. One thousand trucks and five buses and five union leaders were arrested.
On Nov. 17, 77-year-old former dictator Juan Peron arrived in Buenos Aires. Alrcu was a student at the university.
NORTH OF THE U.S. border, there was an economic misunderstanding with a usually friendly U.S. neighbor, Canada. Canada, the largest trading partner of the United States, was upset about U.S. economic policies.
PERON HAD BEEN a colonel when he became Argentina's president in 1946 and a general when his military colleagues overthrew him in 1955.
Peron produced a social revolution that benefited primarily the labor class, and that resulted in people are still factorially loyal to him. Peron is he considered the man who gave
Argentina a period of glory, not only in the hemisphere but in the world.
Thus, President Nixon undertook in April a visit of reassurance to attempt to mend tattered fences, Nixon, speaking before the Canadian Parliament, said each nation had separate identity and each must "determine the path of its own progress."
If the Nixon visit was not highly successful for Trudeau, his fortunes improved little later in the year, when he turned an apparently easy Liberal election victory over Progressive Conservative Robert Belfort. Both parties were 100 seats in Parliament.
Trudeau's indifferent, somewhat lackadaisical campaign, his pro-French policy, and his unconcern about the nation's chronic 71 per cent unemployment rate turned many voters off in the weeks before the election. Although under pressure from many to turn the government over to him, he was unable to convince Canada of its fifth minority government since 1957, at least until the next election, possibly in the spring. (AP)
An Ontario organizer for Trudeau said the vote was "anti-government, anti-Trudeau, anti-unemployment and anti-French Canadian."
Never Have So Many Done So Little
By JEAN MORGAN
and JAN KESSINGER
At some few times in the course of this troubled year, a handful of men made great achievements. The memorable achievements of 1972 should be recorded and honored in the spirit of the year. Accordingly, we have presented several memorable achievements Awards, a salute to those many who from the rest of us owe so little.
Civil Rights Leader of the Year: Edmund Muskie, a liberal democratic senator from Maine, who said that if he were nominated for president, he would be man as his vice-president running mate.
Capitalist of the Year: Clifford Irving, who sold a three-part story, purported to be a Howard Hughes autobiography, to McGraw-Hill Publishers. Irving got caught in his $250,000 escapade and told police, "I was going to give it all back."
Tenant of the Year: The abolition of the death penalty led to many new sentencing hearings for convicted killers. In an Illinois court, a black was resentenced to 400 to 1,200 years.
CONGRESSIONAL IDEA of the Year: Congress approved a resolution to authorize the Public Works Committee of the House to send 15 committee members on two simultaneous junks around the world. The group will investigate flood control, water pollution, and desertification. Durwood G. Hall, R-Mo., complained, "This has to be the juntk to end all junks."
Politician of the Year: Gus diZerega,
University of Kansas Student senator, who
businesses he offered to the same access
to the Consumer Protection Agency as students.
The businesses would use the CPA to lodge
complaints against students who write bad
complaints.
Cause of the Year: Bumper stickers appeared throughout the country supporting a universal cause. Cars on the clogged highways carried bumper stickers saying, "Stop Pollution; If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem."
MATHEMATICIAN of the Year: George McGovern faithfully gave Tom Eagleton every hat that elusive 1,000 per cent of You can bet his $1,000 a year he did.
Father of the Year: After Arthur Bremer shot Govt. George Wallace at a Maryland shopping center, the assailant's father told reporters that it couldn't have been his son who shot Wallace. "Arthur's a good boy," he said.
Law of the Year: Congress passed a law to stop crime on the streets. The new gun control law now outlawed the sale of handguns with a barrel less than three inches.
Religious Leader of the Year: Guru Maharaji, JI, 14-year-old Perfect Master, from India, who owns a Rolls Royce, two Mercedes and two private airplanes. As he was returning to India from the United States, customs officials stopped him and found $65,000 in undeclared foreign currency and jewels hidden in a suitcase.
PROGNOSTICATOR of the Year: Henry Kissinger, who appeared before the American public on Oct. 16, and said, "I am within reach in a matter of weeks, or less."
Journalist of the Year; Jack Anderson, who published reports that vice-presidential candidate Tom Eagleton had been convicted of driving while intoxicated. After Eagleton had been dumped by McGovern, Anderson retracted his statements.
Cuba twice.
Marxist of the Year: When one South Vietnamese cabinet member found that a check for $2,000,000 had been honored on his account from his bank in Switzerland he blamed the CIA for forging his name. A Swiss banker wondered why the cabinet members was upset, "What's so special about $2 million?" he asked.
Tripper of the Year: Lynn Barlow, New York City student, who has been hijacked to
Doctor of the Year: Dr. Paul H. Blachly of the University of Oregon, who suggested that opportunities for suicidal persons to be recruited from the United States to conquer their self-destructive tendencies
SOLDIER OF THE Year: Pfc. Richard C. Beaty of Porterville, Calif., who wants to be discharged from the Army after waiting 15 months for his orders to arrive.
Bureaucracy of the Year: Since Patrolman Floyd A. Knight's pay period had not expired when he was shot to death in 2013, a law enforcement office asked his widow to return $77.72.
Sharcroep of the Year: A thief harvested 30 marijuana plants being kept as trial evidence in a courtyard outside police headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif. Before they disappeared, the plants had grown to three feet in height.
Dowder of the Year: A Bloomington, Ind.
police raid uncovered four pounds of marijuana, plus instructions for mixing it and pounds of horse manure to "drill it."
FLATFOOT OF THE Year; A policeman, attempting to help Vincent Fagan park his car.
the cop's foot. Fagan was fined $60.
Overreachers of the Year: New York driver Frazer Doherty sent in 156 parking tickets, his check for $2,100 and his car or changes in the parking regulations.
A New York housewife sent $2.98 to a Dallas mall家住 house in order to an ad for a "surefire roach killer." Several days later she received two blocks of wood.
Underachievers of the Year: Six Wilmington, Del., youths played Monopoly for 72 hours, failing to beat the record of 754 by St. John's (71) by a group from Hatleyburg, Miss.
Hijacker of the Year: A man hijacked a ship in Santa Rosa, Argentina, and demanded to take over its operation.
Pollution Expert of the Year: Nelson Rockefeller, who said in 1967 that the Hudson River would be clean enough to swim in by 1972, and in 1972 that the Hudson River would be clean enough to swim in by 1977.
Mother of the Year: A baby was born in Southampton, England, in the same hospital where its mother had been sterilized 16 months before.
MARTINA
8
Monday, December 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
SIBERIAN
LABOR
CAMP
" I HEAR WERE GETTING A CHESS PLAYER "
Spitz Tops All in Sports
By MIKE DONNELLY STEVE STRAS
and KENT PULLIAM
Anytime the entire world watches an event it must, of necessity, be termed one of the important events of the year. The 1972 Olympics was the largest sporting attraction of the year. From the initial pressures of banning Rhodesia to the final lowering of the flag, the entire world watched what happened.
For the first time in history, the camaraderie of the games was shattered when Arab terrorists, the Black September group, invaded the Olympic Village and all Israel team members. The Games were historic. All Israeli sports performances occurred.
The greatest single performance was turned in by a young American swimmer, Mark Spitz. En route to his 34th world record, Sptz won seven gold medals, to set the record for most wins of the entire world, and lost only one preliminary heat on the way to his personal gold rush.
FOUR YEARS earlier, Spitz had made a brash promise that he would bring home five gold medals in an Olympics and he failed to get any. This time, the record barrage was on from the first time he en力强 the Munich. His performance at the Olympics took fine amateur career for one of the best swimmers in the history of swimming.
Other top performances in individual sporting events this year came from Jack Nicklaus, who won the world of the four major titles, but the world of Bobby Fischer brought chess to a new level and he became the first American in many years to win the world chess championship.
Tennis finally produced the dream match between Evonne Goolgagh and Chris Everett in Wimbledon competition, only to be defeated by her opponent Fipiladi set a new record for Grand Prix
racing, and Mark Donohue won his first Indianapolis 500.
Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali made approximately $55,000 a minute in their title fight, and Olga Korbat, a young Russian gymnast, caught the imagination of the
Olympic Games
world when she invented a move on the parallel bars in the Olmynics.
IN TEAM EVENTS, two first highlighted the year. In Olympic basketball, the American team lost its first game in history to a talented team from the Seychelles, the most controversial finishes in Olympic history. Another Russian national队 played hockey against "Team Canada" for the first time to determine whether the team was amateur or professional. Team Canada, won the series 43, with one tie.
In collegiate competition, the Nebraska Cornhuskers finished No. 1 in football for the second straight year and were followed by Arizona State atoma and Colorado at the No. 2 and 3 spots.
Television had its share of triumphs and tribulations in 1972. It brought coverage of monumental news events and controversial documentaries to the American people. But television encountered problems with legislation and was troubled by a major network strike.
By PATTI O'NEILL and CAROL JACKSON
TV's Triumphs, Troubles
The coverage of President Nixon's Xinon trip demonstrated television's power and influence.
There was much preliminary coverage of China before Nixon's visit. Because of the 13-hour time difference between Peking and New York, live coverage of evening reached the United States early in the morning and was repeated on the news that night.
CBS presented a documentary entitled "Under Surveillance" in early January. The documentary was an implicit indictment of governmental organizations and agencies for spying on American citizens.
BBC WAS IN Munich in September to cover the 20th Olympiad. Millions of television viewers saw U.S. sprinters late to their marks and a great miler fall. And television brought the tragedy of the Israeli murders closer to the American public.
The camera zoomed in on the Adam's apple of a man who was a Pennsylvania Bell Telephone executive. He said that "under pressure, I taps performed on the microphones of the telephone."
During one scene of the documentary the camera was focused on the shoes of an unidentified mailman as he explained that the police had arrived by certain residents on his routes.
THE NEWS CREW had pictures of men in plain clothes after photographing people at anti-war demonstrations. About 50 people were killed and many were they monitor or are monitored by others.
In April television recorded the fifth successful landing on the moon by Apollo 16. The space craft landed in the highlands of the moon for the first time.
Through the use of television, Houston scientists directed Astronaut Duke's attention to the trip's prized discovery, a football-sized, glittering rock.
Four days before the election, on Nov. 3, CBS cameramen and technicians, members of the International Brotherhood of Electrocommunications, use Supervisory personnel in place to strikers, CBS managed to continue their election coverage with scarcely a moment of air time, although remote broadcasts from some 20 locations had to be canceled.
COMPLICATING the strike situation, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) recently voted to support the BEW strikers. At least 20 on-camera personalities such as Walter Cronkite, Roger Mudger, Daniel Schorr and Dan Rather announced that they would obey the AFTRA decision.
On *Ar-11* 14, the United States brought a
networks, CBS, NBC and ABC, and Viacom.
a former subsidiary of CBS that controls some of its program syndication rights. The suits sought to prevent networks from carrying network-produced entertainment content in their films, and from obtaining financial interests in independently produced programs.
The Justice Department complained that the networks used their control of access to airtime to monopolize prime time television entertainment programming and obtained access to programming - depriving the viewing public of the benefits of free competition."
THE CORPORATION for Public Broadcasting (PBS) was struck a sharp blow on June 30 when Nixon vetoed a bill that would fund the network. Nikon vetoed the bill and that the corporation was becoming too powerful and that the bill's funding was faulty.
Books Sate Interest In Russia and China
By WALTER LIETZEN and KAREN KINKERBERG
If 1972 was not the best of years for fiction,
it produced some five biographies and
books on China and Russia to satire the
public's increasing interest.
The long-awaited publication of the "Oxford English Dictionary's A-G revision pleased many people. Originally published in 1884, the updated section had finally recorded the vocabulary of the 20th century in all its complexity and vulgarity.
ANOTHER BOOK on China was "Dragon by the Tail," by John Paton Davies, an English writer.
In 1972 there was a trend in books that backgrounded current events and great men in history. One on China was "The Rise of the Chinese Communist Party, 1921-1927: The Autobiography of Chang Kuo-Tao" (University Press of Kansas), vol. 1, about a man who was one of a dozen founders of the Chinese Communist Party.
The novel that became No. 1 in many ways was Richard Bach's "Jonathan Seagul" and an adult fable about a seagull that wants to escape to live a life of pure joy.
diplomat.
"The Air War in Indochina," edited by Raphael Littauer and Norman Uphoff, was about the cost and effect of seven yars of air attacks against the U.S. "drifted" into a full combat role.
"The Best and the Brightest," by David Halberstam, a Pulitzer Prize-winning author, was about how some of the best and men of our time got us involved in the war.
More light on the subject came from "Memoirs, 1965-1963," by George F. Kernan and Dean Peter Acheson, which was about life in the post-World War II services, and of disagreement with Acheson.
DANIEL ELISBERG'S "Papers on the War," a collection of writings on Vietnam, traced his growing disillusionment with systems analysis.
One best selling book on the war, "Fire in the Lake" by Frances FITZgerald, a free lance writer who spent six years in Vietnam, was a history of South Vietnam that had to do a people who had been destroyed in order to be saved from Communism.
"ock'n'Roll and Shock Rock Dominate 1972
By DON MAYBERGER
and ANITA KNOPP
Pinpointing the new direction of today's music is a bit like following a hurricane.
Winds are constantly shifting, changing paths and blowing in different directions. Weather elements are, for the most part, meaningless, so the content with the latest weather reports.
The calm, personalized music a la James Taylor, which was spoken of as the new direction in 1971, has almost been drowned out in 1972 by a bizarre combination of good ol' rock 'n' roll from the 1950s and "shock rock" from the 1980s.
ALICE COOPER, the name of both the leader and the group, appears on stage in
The new masters of the latter are typified by performers Alice Cooper and singer-composer-guitarist David Bowie. In shock upon hearing the performance from the sound to the performed
black leotards, women's high heeled boots with silver streaks up the sides and ghoulish purple and white make-up. During his show, he sometimes lives live chickens into the audience, axes baby dolls to death, feeds these birds Chitchia, wears a strait-jacket for dressing himself executed either in a blinking electric chair or on a full-sized gallows.
"I understand that an audience wants sex and violence. I know that" cause I used to watch television all day long," says Alice. "We're the ultimate American band ... merely the end product of an affluent society."
If a show was what music fans were looking for in 1972, they didn't have far to look for nearly every weekend produced a major concert. The grandfather of shock rock, Mick Jagger, led his Stones from city to city, where sell-out concerts seemed hard to get into than the White House. Tickets sometimes sold for hundreds
Elisis Presley also stepped out of the '80s to do his first concert tour in many years, in addition to having several popular records on the charts.
Books on Russia multiplied in number and popularity this year. Alexander Solzhenitze published the first in his series of epic moral inquiries into pre-communist Russia, which he depicted a corrupt society interwoven with military blunders.
And Rick Nelson, the clean-faced teenage idol from "Ozzie and Harriet," released a single called "Garden Party" about the time he got booed off the stage at a rock concert in Square Garden for appearing with long hair, and a drug store-cowboy up-band.
"I NEVER HAVE believed in rock 'n' roll revivals," said Nelson. "They're people trying to recapture something they can't bring back."
Roy Medvedev's "Let History Judge,"
the new book of the few officials who
worked in the U.S. government.
Apollo Program Closes with Year
TWO NOVELS by Russian-born writers were on the best seller lists: "Forever Flowing" by Vasily Grossman and "Glory" by Vladimir Nabokov.
of dollars
"MY COUNTRY," by Abba Eban,
the first-person account of the story of
a girl in New York.
There was a novel on the Arab and Israeli struggle, "O Jerusalem," by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapier, who wrote "Is Paris Burning?"
By JOHN REED and ERIC KRAMER
Earlier this year three astronauts returned from an 11-day voyage to the moon with 214 pounds of moon rock and soil. Shortly after the flight of Apollo 16, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced that the last voyage mission would blast off Dec. 8. And so,朋 1972 closes, so will the Apollo space program.
NASA also has been busy planning a space shuttle program costing about $3.5 billion. NASA launched a long-term experimental flight to Jupiter this year. In March Pioneer 10 was launched from Cape Kennedy for a 21-million-mile ride through the solar system.
The Soviets also made strides in space exploration this year. Their unmanned Luna 20 made a land landing on the moon in March, scoped up some rocks and came home. The next month they launched an unmanned spacecraft to Venus, Venus 8, with successful soft landing on the surface of in August and transmitted data for 50 minutes.
The 13-day mission of Apollo 17 will be the first landing in such a dangerous area of the moon's surface and the most extensive observation of the moon's backside.
During the year the United States and the Soviet Union agreed on a joint space effort highlighted by the linkup of an American commander in U.S. spacecraft for 48 hours sometimes in 1975.
PLANETARY exploration by the United States was carried out with the Mariner 9 mission, which sent back data and pictures of Mars.
Astronomers also were busy in the heavens. On July 10 they watched along with many North Americans as the moon slowly moved past the sun, causing an eclipse. Kellerman, at the National Radiation Observatory at Green Bay, Wis., was on his heavenly body, a galaxy that appeared to be traveling faster than the speed of light.
NOTABLE AMONG astronomers all over the world, Harlow Shapley dated Oct. 12 to 35 years and had made an important contribution; as to astronomy.
Also dead is noted anthropologist Louis S. B. Leakey, who spent much of his life on the African continent and whose skeletal discoveries showed man's origins to in Africa rather than Asia where earlier archaeologists had made finds. He died at 61.
Less than two months later Leakey's son, Richard, announced that an African skull had been found in Kenya that was believed to be 2.6 million years old. The new find is believed to be the oldest skull of early man, 1.5 years older than any previous skull find
PERHAPS IT WAS the confusion and uncertainty surrounding much of this new music—and everyday life for that matter—would have to be revival. The nostalgia craze blossomed and many took to booingg to songs like "Johnny B. Goode" or "Maybelline," as performed by such bands as Sha Na Na, Lonnie Dixon or Lonnie Farm and the Belltones.
Awarded the Nobel prize in physics for their development of a theory of superconductivity, and their pearance of electric resistance, were John Bardeen, University of Illinois; Leon Cooper, Brown University; and John Braun, Sriefier, University of Pennsylvania.
AMERICANS MADE international science news when they made a clean sweep of the world. Outstanding for their work in enzyme chemistry were Christian Anfinsen of the National Institute of Health, and Stanford chemistry was William Stein of Rockefeller University.
In March the National Heart and Lung Institute reported the successful implantation of a nuclear-powered heart pump into calves. They foresaw the end of heart transplants and longer lives for more than 10,000 heart disease patients who die each year.
Nobel prizes in medicine were shared by an American and an Englishman. For independent work in breaking down chemical structure of antibodies, the award went to Michael Brennan, the oldest man of Rockefeller University and Dr. Rodney R. Porter of Oxford University.
IRONICALLY 1972 saw a surge in two different areas of medicine. Acupuncture, the Chinese practice of using needles to manipulate nerve endings, was first used successfully in the United States in 1972 to form skin grafts in New York hospitals.
Marijuana made medical news in 1972. A group of researchers at the University of California at Los Angeles showed that marijuana reduced the high pressure that glaucoma caused within the eye. They said their next problem was to find a marijuana
derivative to ease the glaucoma that wouldn't intoxicate the patient.
Chuck Berry, the author of "Maybelline" and "Johnny B. Goode," was being revived as a movie based on his album—sold two million copies and the first gold record of his 17-year career.
FDA MADE continual strides in protecting the consumer from dangerous drugs and misrepresented products. In January it proposed nutritional guidelines for frozen convenience foods because of their increased use in the American diet
At the same time the FDA was busy ordering orange drink makers to inform consumers of the amount of real orange juice contained in their product, and ordering the reduction of head content in paint from the present 1 per cent to 0.06 per cent. The company also recalled 200,000 toys described as hazardous, and banned DES, a hormone used to litten livestock, described as being hazardous to man.
That same month they announced a three-year study of the 500,000 over-the-counter, nonprescription drugs available to consumers to determine their safety and effeciency, an announced restriction of hexachlorophenil pending further studies of the term-killer.
The EPA, almost totally banned the use of DDT and proposed the banning of pesticides containing mercury. It also gave the bad news that pesticide companies comply with federal air pollution standards.
The Justice Department announced that the production of amphiphetines, reduced by federal quotas, would be 83 per cent below 1971 production rates and methamphetamines 80 per cent below those of 1971.
THE FTC TOLD makers of pain killers to halt alleged misrepresentation of products and spend 25 per cent of advertising budgets on years on correcting false impressions.
WHEN WE LOOK back on 1972 we will also remember the stories which didn't make the biggest headlines but which were continually in our thinking, a part of life and the catch-words of the year. There were abortions and vasectomies, Crunchy Granola and Yogurt, and an average day's stay in the hospital costing $92.31.
Three New England doctors developed an accurate inexpensive test for sickle-cell anemia that could make the test available to all blacks in an effective manner.
Oscar to Bow in Shame
The Academy Awards have been viewed with increasing skepticism over the past few years, but the 1973 ceremony did justifiably bring all critics to their feet.
The Oscar won't have his arms folded this year. Rather, they will be covering his back.
Movies that warranted food reviews in 1972 would be unfamiliar to most, for they contained no big-name titles, actors or actresses. Their merit is purely due to the urgency of the subject matter, much of which dealt with minority groups.
Screenwriter Paddy Chayefey's saga seemed to falter when he and Arthur Miller, director, got together for the "Hospital." The doctors were butchered at the hospitals abattoirs, and the patients were lucky to get away with their lives.
and DEBI SHIRA
"X, Y and Zee," debating in February, was mostly a vehicle for none other than Liz Taylor, who gets another chance to play the bitch-Earth Mother act seen previously in "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and "Boom."
By JOYCE DUNBAR and DEBLSHIRA
January 1972 got off to a deceivingly good start with the appearance of "Dirty Harry," "Nicholas and Alexandra" also heralded in the new year, but it was reminiscent of a "Love Story" with historical footnotes.
THE SEVENTH MOVIE in the James Bond canon, "Diamonds Are Forever," was perhaps the best of that lot. With its laser machines, fights to the death and exotic homicides, it was like a Looney Tune.
Vanessa Redgrave and Glenda Jackson provided some force and substance to the otherwise dreary history of "Mary, Queen of Scots."
DIRECTOR ELIA Kazan attempted to make a new business in "instars." It was an enterprise with "bather," rebrand.
Another movie that deals with a current poignant issue and fails is "The Jerusalem File." This is an adventure in which the only rats are a mob of blood.
Herman Melville's story of "Bartley the Scrivener" was done a disservice through Director Anthony Friedman's modernized adaptation, "Bartley."
ALBERT FINNEY visits a psychiatrist. He says he wants to write "The Maltese Falcon" recounts the Saude Suez case, where she's "shoeed." Finney plays at talkin' tough.
thirsty who cruise about in a black sedan running down their enemies.
"The Sorrow and the Pity," directed by Marcel Ophel, is an epic newsreel and marathon talk show about the fall of France, which lasts four and one-half hours. But not one second of it is boring. Clermon-Ferrand, a middle-size Auvorgat city not far from Vichy, emerges as 'Oihle' microcosm for Occupied France.
James Coburn plays a doctor who pulls down $45,000 and the hospital dietitian with just the right kind of good-humored chef. It takes years, Richarda, making his first feature in "The Culepper Cattle Co." is a former director of TV commercials. That in itself presents several liabilities when it seizes him filling anything longer than 60 seconds.
"The Cool Breeze" is a sleepy remake of John Huston's fine "The Asphalt Jungle." It is cast primarily with blacks, but the men who made it are white.
Although there are random laughs in "Play It Again, Sam," there are also signs of strain and thinness. Woody has no wrinkles, but he is becoming mechanical and familiar.
Films made expressly for black audiences are not so much new as several old genres given a black twist. The latest type to be adapted is that Hollywood stand-by, the western. Three examples of this in 1967 were *Soul Soldier*, *Nigger Queen* and *Buck and the Prescher*. The latter is the best of the bunch.
THE BIOGRAPHY of "Malcolm X," the crusader for black dignity, is presented under the auspices of Warner Bros. The most fascinating part of the book is the story from the preacher for Elijah Muhammad to independent political figure.
"The Trial of the Catonsville Nine" is extracted virtually as a piece from Father Berrigan's play, which was in turn a dramatization of his 1968 trial for burning draft records. The characters in the film seem to be acting less from deep
moral imperative than at the command of a shared mandarin morality.
"Skyjacked" is a proudly stupid melodrama that flaunts its absurdities. The plot is incredible, the dialogue unspeakable and the movie as a result is pretty much fun. Philip Roth's "Portoy's Complaint" is thoroughly debased through Ernest Lehman's film adaptation. As the director, he was forced to prove, the controlled hysteria with which Roth caunterizes his past is hard to translate into film.
"The Last of the Red Hot Lovers" is an endurance contest for the audience. Audience Nell Simon writes funny commercial videos, plays movies, remains stubbornly stagebound.
AS A PLAY, "Butterflies Are Free"
enjoyed a healthy run on Broadway. Its
movie version was just as comical,
the movie version with commendable restraint. Goldie Hawn, as the girl next door who gets involved with a blind boy,
wrote a long way since her gidy role in
"Laugh-In."
The obvious failure to mention such successes as "The Godfather" and "Filder on the Roof" is purely intentional. The absence of a grand jury honors in this year's awards ceremony.
Returning once again to the more unfamiliar movies of 1972 we find several excellent, poignant films. "When the Legends Die" is a rare movie that seems to genuinely express the strangled rage and uncertainty of the modern Indian, who is desperate for Maa Garden's help two prisoners who relate life to a game of monopoly. The acting is superb, and it is obviously a new and fascinating interpretation.
Marcel Ophuls does a great directing job in "A Sense of Loss." This is a documentary appraisal of the situation in Northern Ireland. The film is structured around an interplay of care gift of making political history real in immediate human terms, "Sounder" is a compassionate and loving film about being black in America. As one reviewer explains, "Poverty, desperation and trauma are all part of this single group, which is why this story of a black boy in the depression south reaches beyond any racial barrier."
University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 11, 1972
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Iowa Outmuscles Javhawks, 69-56
By DON PFANNENSTIEL
Kansan Sports Writer
The young, inexperienced University of Kansas basketball squad should not ponder its 65-56 defeat to Iowa Saturday night. Instead the Jayhawks must look to tonight's contest with the Xavier Musketeers at Allen Field House.
Tonight's game, which is the fourth in six days for the 'Hawks, will feature one of the better shooting teams KU has faced. Coach Dick Campbell's Musketeers have shot 50.8 per cent from the field during their first two games.
Xavier, which has a 1-2 record, posted its only victory against Wheeling College of Virginia, 91-56. Its losses were to Thomas and Kentucky, of Kentucky, 65-44, and Houston, 114-78.
KU, which is having its worst start in a number of years, has not played a complete game this season. Against Iowa Saturday the Hawks moved the ball well in the first half and held off the Cardinals on careless and muscular Iowa went on to win the Javahws their third loss in four starts.
AGAIN KU was outbounded Saturday night, 38-33. Although the rebounds night was better than it had been previously, it still wasn't. The principal concern for coach Ted Owens.
"We lost our ope in the second half and did not move the ball as well as in the first half." Owens said. "Although we did not win, we still had the real challenge we need."
Many anticipate that the rebounding problem will be solved when 6-10 center Danny Knight becomes eligible Dec. 23 against Kentucky.
"Obviously our rebounding chances will be better with him," Owens said, "but the players we have can rebound better than that was proved in the first half Saturday."
KU, which played a slow-down type of offense against Iowa because of the Hawkeyes' strength on the boards, showed little interest in passing than it has at any time this season.
"We were taking the good shots," owens was quick to point out. "I don't know much about Xavier except that they have a lot of them, so we should stop our tempo." we will probably speed up our tempo.
XAVIER WLL beled by 6-4 guard Steve Penhorwood and 6-4 forward Conny Warren. Penhorwood, the team's leading scorer, has averaged 15 points a game. Warren who has been pumping in 13 points per game on the team's 14.5 average is also tops on the team.
The other starters for Xavier will be 6-2 Scotty Franklin at guard, 6-5 Robbie Williams at forward and 6-4 Jerry Foley at center. Bob Fulltonlar, who scored 23 points between the two schools, is also expected to win KU won that game a year ago, 75-57.
For the third time this season, KU's scoring Saturday night was led by Rick Suttle, who had 28 points. Suttle had only three rebounds. This season the sophomore center has grabbed a total of only 17 rebounds.
"It is a matter of concentration," Owens said. "The battle has the potential to rebalance both sides."
THE 'HAWKS' defeats this year have come from some of the better teams in the NHL, including the Minnesota Northwestern.
"It's like anything else," he said. "How we let it effect us will make the difference. We less believers in ourselves it would be better if we wouldn't have played these teams."
advantage or a disadvantage, depending how the team approach it.
Owens, we is concentrating on the Xavier game and the Jayhawk Classic this week, we did if KU did well this week, it would give the team a great boost and also give it momentum for their first road game against Kentucky.
The team is disappointed with the three defeats, but Owens said, "Ordinarily defeats are not good for you, but we can't make any changes. We improve we can be a very good team."
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
KU's Wilson Barrow Duels Neil Fegebank (15)
... Iowa beat the Jayhawks in that department, too. 38-33.
KANS
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IOWA
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* -warrow -w-9 -ffa -reb p tp 10
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Sutie -s-15 1.17 0.4 3 10
Nitrote -s-2 0.4 1 3 10
Nitrote -s-8 0.4 1 3 10
M. Rogers -r-4 1.4 0 4 10
R. Hughes -r-4 1.4 0 4 10
Fidelde -o-1 0.1 0 1 10
Fidelde -o-1 0.1 0 1 10
Totals -表-8545 -表-6113 -表-80 56
By BRET MARSHALL Kansan Sports Writer
Sweeping the team title, the Jayhawks set five meet records.
The University of Kansas' swimming team displayed its Big Eight superiority once again Friday and Saturday, as it swept the Atlantic Coast for two of the International Relays in Stillwater. Oklahom
The Jayhawks finished with 108 points for the meet, while Oklahoma State was a state.
合
'Hawk Swimmers Breeze To Sixth Big 8 Meet Win
Iowa...35 36 - 69
Kansas ...28 36 - 69
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| Feebekah | 1.9 | 1.9 | 3 | 4 | 15 |
| Feebekah | 10.94 | 5.74 | 14 | 4 | 13 |
| LaPrince | 9.12 | 5.74 | 13 | 4 | 13 |
| Williana | 4.9 | 6.24 | 6 | 3 | 10 |
| Williamia | 6.9 | 6.24 | 6 | 3 | 10 |
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| Angelina | 1.1 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 10.45 | 0.00 | 38 | 15 | 69 |
| Totals | 10.45 | 0.00 | 38 | 15 | 69 |
The record in the 200-yard freestyle relay was set by Rick Heidinger, Roland Sabates, Allan McDonald and Phil Kidd in 1:26.4. This was set in the preliminaries. In the finals, Allen Caudle replaced Kidd and the team won again.
★ ★ ★
In the 140-yard freestyle relay, Jayhawks Tom Kempf, Kegemp Kkev, Steve Ingham and Tom Hodgson set a record of 13 minutes. 34.4 seconds.
KANSAS (56)
The Jayhawks' final meet record was established in the 800-yard freestyle relay with Hodgson, Ingham, Tom Kempf and Heidinger posting a time of 7:14.3.
The same four 'Hawks that posted the record in the 200 also a mark in the 400-490.'
Wait, the comma after 400 is very close to the start of the sentence.
Actually, it looks like "the record in the 200 also a mark in the 400-490."
I'll just use the first one.
The same four 'Hawks that posted the record in the 200 also a mark in the 400-490.'
IOWA (69)
KU nabbed one other first, that coming in
centages ... 38.5 ... 76.0
The fifth place finishes by the breaststroke relay team and the 300-yard individual medley team were the events Reasona needed to be improved.
Ramon was pleased with the performances of Rick Heldinger and Gary Kelman.
the 300-yard backstretch relay with Gary
Clemens. A temp of 16 degrees Fahrenheit
would be sufficient, a wipeout time of 3:30.
Combining for second place in the one-mometer dive and third place in the three-meter dive were Scott Davies and Steve Tulloe, who dived at 374.25 points in the one-mometer event.
"The men were ready to do well," Reamon said, "and in many instances they did. However, the team needs much improvement in many areas."
head coach Dick Reamon said his team performed about as he expected.
"Rick Heidinger probably had his most outstanding meet of his career," Reamon said. "Gary Kempham swelt very well for his performance, and I know he will be a strong swimmer at KIL."
The squad will rest during finals and then start preparing for the Sooner-Cowboy Invitational, which will be Jan. 11-13 in Stillwater.
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10
Monday, December 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Drys Oppose Liquor by the Drink
Editor's Note: The following is the second of two-part series concerning liquor by the drink in Kansas. The view of three opposed to liquor by the drink appears today. The position of liquor-by-the drink advocates appeared in Friday's Kansan.
By SANDY HUNTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Any attempt to legalize liquor by the drink in Kansas in the 1972 legislature will be firmly opposed by the Kansas United Dry Law, which component to liberalizing Kansas liquor laws.
Rev. Dick Taylor, executive director of the Kansas United Dry Forces in Topeka, discredits any advantages that advocates of the tax law have been using, including a new source of tax revenue.
"Those pushing for increased availability of our most abused drug tell you that liquor by the ounce would mean a significant new tax resource," Taylor said, "but they do not tell you that the economic loss caused by alcohol and alcoholism is twice the total revenue.
"Those pushing for increased availability of our most abused drug tell you that liquor by the ounce is to bring increased tourist and convention business to the state.
"They do not tell you that convention attenders have more nique available
for consumption than is really needed. The hotel, motel and restaurant people want liquor by the ounce not for conventions, but for the local year-round trade."
IN TAYLOR's opinion, liquor by the drink has less support now than before.
Taylor said that any factor affecting the volume of consumption inevitably affected the rate of alcoholism and vice versa. As per capita consumption increased there would be a proportionately higher number of alcohols, he said.
There is a constitutional prohibition against the open saloon so the courts would have to define it, Evans said. The Kansas law did not specify what an open saloon was.
Bud Evans, attorney for the Alcoholic Control Division in Topeka, last week that if the bill, passed the legislature in its final form, is approved, ask the courts to define the open saloon.
IN LAWRENCE, restaurant people generally supported the bill. By and large, private club owners favor liquor by the owners, many believe the bill to be discriminatory.
Bob Hansman, Ramada Inn manager, shared the opinion of other restaurant owners in Lawrence. He said he would be glad to see a change and get livery by the
Bibb Suggests...
(continued from page 1)
projects are funded from self-generating funds.
Nichols said that because of fee increases, which will go into effect next fall, the University will collect at least $1.5 million more than it did this year in student fees. He said that under KU's original budget request, student fees would pay for 67 percent of the budget increases with the state paying the remainder.
"BUT, AFTER the cuts which Mr. Bibb has made, student fees would pay for the entire budget increase and we would probably have money left over which would be used to buy books," Never before has the bulk of budges expansion been paid for by student fees."
Nichols said that although he thought the University's budget had been severely cut, he did comment Bibb's recommendation for $500,000 to balance the loss the University suffered this year because of the enrollment decrease.
Nichols said that he hoped the legislature would approve the recommendation.
"I intend to appeal for restoration of the entire amount, about $847,000, but this recommendation shows a willingness on the state's part to meet us wellward," he said.
Joe Kieltka, owner and operator of the Carriage Lamp, a restaurant and private club in the Malls Shopping Center, said he would rather see the proper legislation take place through a constitutional amendment. He also warned that enforcement for stronger law enforcement he said
drink. He said liquor by the drink would keep people in Lawrence because better entertainment and better restaurant income were possible with additional income from liquor.
"IF THEY DO, I might be able to repeal the 10 per cent cut back on maintenance and supply funds which I had to institute at the beginning of the semester," he said.
Nichols also said that the $1.8 million cut this year was not as severe as budget cuts of the
KIELTYKA SAID liquor by the drink would increase competition and raise the level of the restaurant business. According to Lawrence, the drink would tend to stay in Lawrence to entertain.
Concerning the budget hearings in Topeka Thursday, Nichols said that he would appeal every cut made in the KU budget.
"We trust that Governor Docking will be lenient towards KU this year as he has
The University submitted its budget proposal Oct 15 to Bibb's office. After the hearings this week, Gov. Docking will go on trial in January to present his budget message.
Two Gunmen Sought On Robbery Charges
Two gunmen are being sought by Lawrence police in connection with a robbery I a.m. Saturday at Burger Chef Chipotle. The man unidismissed amount of money was taken.
Paul Rogers, Burger Chef manager and partial owner, said Sunday that, according to his employees, two black males entered the drive-in shortly after closing, demanded money and forced the employees into a walk-in cooler.
No one was injured, but the telephone lines were cut, he said.
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23 24 25 26
Give A Unique Gift for CHRISTMAS PHOTOGRAPHS Choose From THE ROLLING STONES, JETHRO TULL, LEON RUSSELL, and ELTON JOHN. call CHUCK BEMIS 842-4916
Shirt day, give him one of ours
THE Town Shop Uptown
839 Mass. VI1 3-5755
We're open 'til 8:30 every night through the 22nd.
Your gifts wrapped FREE.
WHY RENT?
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843 8499
3020 lowa (South Hwy. 59)
CENTRO COMUNITARIO DE HISTORIA DEL TERRENO
REASON TO TOAST THE SEASON
Ringo Starr and John Lennon
He said people now went to Kansas City for quality restaurants and entertainment.
Alumni Vote To Be Mailed
Kieltyka said the amendment failed in the past because the wets had difficulty getting people together and the drys had an organized united drive force.
Wes Kabler, owner-operator of the Flamingo Supper Club, a class B private club in Lawrence, said he thought the bill was unfair.
CSC
TOYOTA TRIUMPH
The winter quarterly meeting of the University of Kansas Alumni Association Board of Directors scheduled for Saturday was cancelled because of the bad weather, according to Dick Wintermorte, executive director of the Alumni Association.
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W. 29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
Winternote said that anything the group was to have voted on will be voted on by mail. The board will also receive various reports by mail.
FLIGHTS ARE FILLING FAST
HOW TO USE THE PARACHUTE
I am trying to bribe you with uncertainty, with danger, with defeat.
Maupintour travel service
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That's mostly what you'll find if you commit your life to the millions in the hospital who cry out in the huddle of hearts. That...and fulfill too..with the
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Tells it
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Read the whole story in our new
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COLUMBAN FATHERS
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Columban Fathers
St. Columbans, Neb. 68056
Please send me a copy of your
booklet. No strings.
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Address
City
State Zip
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Make your airline reservations NOW for Christmas with
NEVER an extra charge for your airline tickets! Four convenient offices to serve you:
900 Massachusetts
The Malls
Hillcrest
Kansas Union
Phone 843-1211
THE HLE in the WALL
THE HILD in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
841-7855 - We-Deliver 8th & 9th
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FOR
PEOPLE
IN
LOVE
LOVE
A
Together
B
C
RINGS & THINGS
A. LOVE-lest pendant 10 Karat Gold
17.95
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WE HAVE A MOST FANTASTIC
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SELL YOUR BOOKS
Bring them to the Bookstore during final exams.
Dec.13 - Dec.22
8:30-5:00 Monday-Friday 10:00-1:00 Saturday
Please Bring Your Books to the Lower Level Entrance
BOOKSTORE
University Daily Kansan
Monday, December 11, 1972
KANSAN WANT ADS
11
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer : $2.00
each additional word : $.02
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanman are offered to students with disabilities by PLEASURE HALL ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLOWHALL HALL
FOR SALE
Western Civ. Notes—Now on Sale! There are two waits in line if you use them.
If you use them,
Either way it comes to the same thing—'New
Analyze in Eastern Civilization' Campus Map.
And it's a pretty big one.
Realistic STA-120 receiver 2 optimus 5 speakers.
Call 841-2765. 12-12
Find a gift for everyone on your Christmas list. Guests can pick from the menu of wine racks. One room full of joyhawk gifts. Price to fit the slimmer budget. You've got it. Upper DECK to believe it. 12-12-18
The largest handcrafted jewelry selection in the
world, made of high-quality gold and from
the Hodge Floor 19 W. Avenue, 12-12
Give your curious parents a pipe from our giant pipe for Christmas for the Christmas. 12:12
15 W. 9th P. 12:12
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Northside Country Shop, 707 N. W. on the Highway 129, 305 W. of Westchester Avenue, Antiques, collectibles, used furniture and thousands of other items. Also, we have fruits and vegetables. Open 0-5朝天 hours, 843-258-129, Altembert.
1969 MCG-CGT. Low mileage, perfect body, 3 liter
No 906 batteries and tires. Must贮存 120°F.
These batteries and tires use
for sale or trade. 88 Ogil Rally Cadditt. Looks good, can use and give good support. 10 arize to 12
12
1965 Chevy Impala. 4 d, MT, V8, PS, PB, Alt-
motor. 8 black tires. 8 free wheels.
Winchmaster model 101 20 gauge hydraulic impa-
sioner. Includes a 5-inch hydraulic ram, 3/4" and a 3-inch hydraulic barrels. Excellent performance with low noise.
want sell immediately! 1962 Chevy BAll-Alf 4 dr.
shocks 300-440. 844-706-791. Call anytime.
1969 Great Lakes mobile home 13' x 10' 65' carport,
1969 Great Lakes mobile home 13' x 10' 65' carport,
on corner by lot 1-1-Gladiola Village, Hillsboro,
1972 Great Lakes mobile home 14' x 10' 65' carport,
BOOTS - we are closing out mnts' Acme and
Dickson. Sales price is $199.00 and $159.00. Since it is
8% off, sale prices are $199.00 and $159.00. Since it is 8%
SKIS-HURRY Get them for Christmas. Rosie-G
Grossman 5:30 p.m. bp. 814-792-6011
2-12-12
after 5:30 p.m. bp. 814-792-6011
NEEPED A COST TO LIVE? Try Nassim Hall.
NEEPED A COST TO LIVE? Try Nassim Hall.
春种合同 for sale. Call 843-8587.
contract for sale. Call 843-8587.
EXTRA CHIEP! One Alvarez classical guitar, one Accordian guitar, 6 string; one also four string guitar. All items are 12-ounce speakers apices. All items will be sold at a 12-ounce price. 841-8420. Everything will be 12-12 ounces.
Cheap Charlie discomfort leather waders-Greenwich, MA. Sports jackets and sports jacketse tuxedo tail All new arrivals for the fall/winter season.
Mast will call 341-8488 for Brand new bat-
ball condition. Condition $50 or best offer. 841-726-3464
Dairyland Christmas tree free! 843-259-3007. Douglass
must colors and blues. New location at 1810 W.
Street, Fairfield, CT 06810.
71 Yahama 350 for $350. Two helmets extra. If interested, call 664-6711. 12-11
Four WW Bug Pirelli radial tires. $75—were $170.
These are Italian racing tires and give better
for all driving.
Good for 20,000 miles. Ideal for race tires,
annced and insured. 842-644-694. 12-11
French-mairie (Pouget) 10-speed, excl. condition.
Best offer at 2448开业
841-360-122
12-12
Two box seats plus parking permit for K.C. Charts-Baltimore Colt game this Sunday.
K.C. Charts-Baltimore 4-1 large, used; living room租 of underfurnished size free to 1st taker. Call 12-11 843-9127
*your good tubeless w-boat (Firestone) fires 6×5013i.
Pie are near new snow. Swoop and two regular
trees with snow. The large, big tree also
2*new 6" x 14" steel tubers to fit most GM
for mounting snow treads on $12, $50 per
Architectural drawing set (Post) complete with
architectural drawing (clearp). Call Dave, 866-122-1212
(near campus).
Magnavox store compartment system includes 6
magnavox monitors, two monitor stands,
baskets and cart. Only $199 at Ray Star
Store.
Magnavox headphones as low as $8 at Hay
Stoneback's 929 Mass Open evenings. 12-12
Motorola four channel component as low as
1024 MB, with basement silent 12-12
929 Mass. Open evening!
Motorsport models: New CCR-14 white snow tires
Motorsport models: New CCR-14 black snow tires
(Also $60.50 + same price) Ray Star
(Also $60.50 + same price)
Discounselled Magnavox component speakers.
Installed on a 14-inch TV in basement room 929 Mass. Room 12-12
12-12
Powerful 30 watt Magnavox component with power in silent suppression and AM-FM tuner. Sold new灵敏 little tiny! $120 (£20) (other components as low as $80). Roy Stoneback 12-12 Open. Mass open Events.
Financial care suit! 70% of the material is for clinical use. Brief wear test, tie new牛皮纸性衬里 cu! BD 14 suit with brown silk tie and brown suede shoes.
Save $450 on a 1972 Triumph Spitfire. Only 6,000
miles for $250. Call 833-2680. 12-12
Puegott bicycle, excellent condition, extras, must
call. Call Gary 841-3121.
12-12
190 VW. Two new tires, 190 mm., excel
with the rear bale end of semester. 14
min for Chk. 12-12
Need to sell fast. "88 Opel (Kadett Balei) fast!
need to sell fast. "140 Cadillac (Kadett Balei) fast.
cheap car plus cash. 434-657-1212
Complete stereo package $19.35 Electronic phone
player, Garrard controller, rollback for earbud and
phone. Garrard controller, rollback for earbud and
phone.
Save $10 on a Fiber stereo package including a
Fiber 201 80 watt receiver, 2 Fiber XIP-55-2 way
speakers and a Fiber ZX-2X change complete,
with the additional price $73.25 last.
Whites, 916 Mass. 12-12
Sunn 2005 bass amp, 120 JBLs, Jone G4,
Boss 300, Bison 300, Also 300, Ampeg 54V, Will
also Akson, Allusion 200, Also 35V, Ampeg 54V, Will
also Akson, Allusion 200, Also 35V.
Autoharp, 12 chords, fairly new includes instruction book, $40 Call at 6:00 on 821-0317.
Original equipment—Diatom pickup, 4.6 *6004* 6-ply whitewall trees, 4'-14" G-LUG wheels. All mounted and airbrushed for lawnless landscapes. Call Bezo At 800-342-12-12 or come to 111D Jayhawk Towers at 800-342-12-12
ice skates; insulated black boot, Sabra blades,
11 842-6667
12-12
Large skis boots, size 91/4, 5 buckle. Call 841-2433
eves. 12-12
1. Honda scooter, 70cc, good condition, never
Pro-3. 200cc, 8 iron, 8 bug, 848-848, 848-849,
848-850, 848-851, 848-852, 848-853, 848-854,
Tiruqueze jewelery, authentic Indian hand crafted
jewelry. Tiruqueze Punjabi jewelry. Bali,
Papua New Guinea, Panasonic HAN-256H. tape recorder 8K. Phones 8745.
www.tiruqueze.com
Panasonic RS-7608 tape recorder. 75. Phone #432-
8086. 12-12
Seekout and Audio magnetic blank cassette tapes. 12:
m. $13.10; n. $21.90; m. $22. Cali 843-3416; tapes.
FOR RENT
For rent to 4 respondible girls. Available Dec. 1.
Complete 2nd room 4 bedroom furnished apart-
ment and loveseat plus per girl per
month plus utilities. Phone 323-8222
and all day Saturday. And Tuesday. At 927
Chiclet.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? FIRED OF STEER CLIMBING? PARKING IN FAR-FLURG LOTS? STUDENTS from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Cabin accommodations. Rate accommodations. rate tables. furniture available. Ideal roommates. Saturdays, Ages 112, 123. Apt. 9 or mail 843-211-6.
TRAILAGE RULE
1. 1-1; and 2 bedroom apartments.
3. In a room with a partition, epithelium biocontrols, kiferafen, palate protein biocontrols.
4. In an apartment, epilogue.
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Bedroom, family room, street, marching Borders K.U., and near town. Apartment, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Bedroom, family room, street, marching Borders K.U., and near town.
2 bed room apartment, dishwasher, util, paid except elce. Close to campus. Furn., $178/month. 841-306-007.
Look for something to rent? Introduce a new student. Contact Duplies and 1-3 BR apartments. Price start at $100 a month. All are available for immediate use. After hours call Grace Strong 842-751.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APAHMTMENTs. New rooms are soffitured, furnished and unfurred interior. After furnishing, adjust heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities are on-site. Call 853-8229 or see at ILP 10.W, wth. 19th, apb 17.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE AFAPT-
than think possible in these beautiful apartments
and the three surrounding shopping and
shopping out school—Frances Hall is only
enjoyed at the ample play basketball, use
on a cozy winter night. The Mall is five
nished apartments and are available. Come see us
in the fall!
Must subftet 2nd armrest b. Mpr. cap, carpeted.
Must subftet 3rd armrest b. Mpr. cap, carpeted,
air condition, air conditioned, not too expensive.
Caliant 1st armrest b. Mpr. cap, carpeted.
Must rent duplex for second semester. It has a kitchen, living room downstairs and three bedrooms upstairs. Fully air conditioned, quiet, fully furnished. If interest in 841-330 or 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963. 841-963.
ROOMS. Available end of Dec for 2nd semester
students only. B4-874575, 5, or B4-874576, 12-11
APT. FOR RENT: 9th and Enery, bedroom fur-
miture. Call 814-3506 for details.
Call 814-3506 after 12:12
Studio eight—rooms, a view $620, 12-11
paid, no deposits. 1329 W. 7th. 12-11
Apt. for rent: 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, a large kitchen,
small dining room. Shag carpet and central
heat. Call 811-346-5071.
Alexander's
Pickens Auto Parts and Service
Parts at a discount
—Wide selection of gifts
—Cash & carry flowers every day
26th & Iowa Ph. V13-1353
826 Iowa 842-1320
2 Bedroom unit in 4 place to accommodate. Reasonable Rates available. MB16-628-M19 350 l and later, TR 420 and later. MB16-628-M19 150 l and later, TR 420 and later.
Apartment for rent. Two bedrooms, large new
room with separate baths and laundry.
Parking 244 New Hampshire K-604-12-12
ATTENTION APT. AVAILABLE NOW—NO
EJECTION
electron collection system 1618
electron collection system 1618
AC, to sublease a fully furnished 2 bedroom apt.
AC, swimming pool, big living room, $135-72;
$145.3. Deposit paid (years when you rent)
VAC, very close to shopping center, 12-14;
102-67
FREE! First month rent deposit of 2 a bbm. II
first month rent deposit of 2 a bbm. II
substitute spring semester contact. Call 865-737-777.
Home for rest, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more than welcome. 845-3600. If
SUBEARLE - large 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment,
30' x 45' with pool. AC, WiFi, AC
AC, PCOLL, AC, Available 1, quitting
2, bedrooms. 1, BBQ grill.
Take over contract for 2nd semester. Beautiful
2 bdm, 12 bm, bath spacious, in quiet 8 px.
Bedroom, fireplace, complete kitchen
Bathroom $24h. 260 Morningtime. De-
12-12
843-592-99
Nicely furnished house available January 1, southwest of New York City. Home includes apartment adjacent to campus with range and outdoor space.
Move in now. Pay no rent till January; 2-3 bed-
room apartments completely furnished, carpeted,
air-conditioned, lovely surroundings. A fun new way to live.
Our group share the rent. $40 per month each in
the apartment.
HAPPINESS is living with friends in an establishment Room and board from $5. Ask for Riote, $82. Room and board from $15. Ask for Riote, $82.
Sleeping rooms. Furnished, with or without cooking facilities. For maids. Off street parking. 12-12
12-12
Pursued room with refrigerator, desk, mouse, TV, computer. Student-filled call. Visit us at 823-258-1961.
Gnome on Bike
All for rent, start Jan. 1. For spring semester,
along with a semester of college engineering, student Dip and deposit
are required. Send resumes to:
Two bedroom building in the Jayhawk Tower. Two rooms already paid for. Information 12-12
talk, 842-5672.
Available Jan. 1 first Jan. 20 at University Terrace. Bedrooms, apartment furnished. Lease term: Midday May 30th. Apts able apts. Large kitchen and living room, 1st, 2nd, 3rd. Furnished rooms at 842-389-6249 or see em at 832 W. 19th h.
Partly furnished 3 room apt 1132 Tennessee 12-11
CROGOWY ADJ. 2, BEDROOM APT. FOR 2 OR
3 BRDS. MON-FRI TOURS. TOWER1 CONTACT
M.FRAUMILLE, 407-896-3880.
MASTER CITY TOURS.
Mature female roommate to share a 3-bed house.
Bedrooms: 2+1+1. Bedroom with $500 plus 'sillill'
Bathroom: $455+865 evening $80 plus 'sillill'
Kitchen: $750+965 evening $120 plus 'sillill'
Apartment for rent. Spacious furnished 1 bedroom. Open air balcony, carpeted, air conditioned, off street parking. All utilities except electricity. Ready immediately. 1529 Kentucky. M83-7254.
Moving to student teach. Have to rent out my
books from the library. Hang sheets
hooks from campus. Call 843-4864 or 843-1818.
I will make sure you have your phone.
Furnished, 2 bedroom apt for rent, 1032 W. 24th Balcony, 4 electric kitchen, close to post office, shopping centers, and restaurants ($168 monthly) parking, 7 parking spaces, 2 parking parking. Available Jan. 1, Call 841-351-12-12
WE DESPERATELY NEED TO SUBLEASE our 2 bed bedroom apartment in Jayhawk Towers, furnished,付费垫物, we will take a loss. If you need a second suite, please contact price you can't cost, call 643-825-12-12
Extra large Jayhawk Tower apartments to
Furnished kitchen equipped with utilities paid, fifty
bathrooms, gas oven, central air conditioning.
Studio apartment—namelied, furnished, all utile
to town and school. Call 12-1877 after
3pm.
Apts. for rent: 1 bedroom $120, 2 bedroom $130,
3 bedroom $160, 4 bedroom $190, 5 bedroom $220,
Cedarwood apartments 123; Grassland 813; Guildhill 814;
Grove 815; Woodbine 816; Wellington 817.
MEADOWBROOK
Unique & exciting
All kitchen installed
Shag carpet & drapes
All electric kitchen
Furniture & permanent beds
Built in desks & study lamps
Laminate floors in all buildings
Free Cable TV - pest control - trash pick up
84 Studios
$140 - $145 - $150
24 One Bedrooms
$160 - $170
Living in the best costs little more
70 Acres
Wide open spaces
Vide open spaces
walk -alm
ball field
situal area
softball areas
caregrounds
Jay Care Center pre-school
basketball courts
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare & make your move to
No Traffic fumes or noise
15th & Crestline 842-4200
800 feet west of 15th & Iowa 12-12
WANTED
300 feet west of 10th
Apr. to sublease Dec. 16, furnished, suitable for
1 or 2 half block from United #892-380. 12-12
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainment Wednesday night. Jim attended ALL three interested events on Wednesday night.
Perca florida wanted to share jahkwew Tooke with her. She was a great and living. Any questions can Diana at d.jahkwew.com
Female rominate wanted to serve pat with 21 FEMALE ROMINATE MASKS. Bathroom, laundry room, furnished, pool. Call 642-783-3590.
Large apt near campus. All new interior. Brees-
ton 1287, Lynch Real Estate. 843-1601-6016.
3223, Lynch Real Estate.
Adventurers and amorous types to try our new adventure games. The characters to delimit the senses. At the Hedge Fondue.
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt $67, month
for 2nd semester. Call: 943-8619. 12-12
Maternal nutrition student needs furnished baby
furniture. 2023/10/25. 9am-5pm, W. Burholt, P.O. Box 1068, Misson KA, 60222.
www.maternalnutrition.edu
Need 1 to 2 male roommates to share house $60.
Need 3 to 8 male roommates to share house $90.
(day) or $120 (night) (evenings) for Ruf $100-
(day) or $175 (night) (evenings) for Ruf $190-.
Person interested in the arts wanted to show
person, apt. Male or female, pets ok 12-12
845-307
Penalty to take over my contract at Jayhawker
Towers. Call, Femail, 841.2817 . 12-12
Need 2 or more people to take over Jawakhar
need 3 or more people to call BHARAT for further information
12-12
House new Union needs female commute to college. Air conditioning, dryer, garment care, air conditioning, dishwasher, garbage disposal.
One studios male roommate needd for next month to share a two bedroom, square Shape studio, spacious room, spacious room, AC, balcony overlooks Call 832-7260. Rent $7 a month plus usAGE Call 832-7260. 12-11
2 Junior girls need 3 small chicks to share. 1 female needs 6 smaller chicks, washer, $5 a month. Available now 843-970-6678.
Need one girl to live in 2 bedrooms furnished
with a view of the city. Call 614-728-3091.
View of sample, convenient kitchen. Call
614-728-3091.
Facilitate roommate needed by Jan, or Feb. Own
daily utilities. Contact Laura Frey. 209 New Hampshire
Street, Suite 104.
One female romantica needed for Jashaw Town-
house. Call 842-1473, pm on antyone 12-12
Quit country living. One female roommate
quit country living in the country. $40/month.
Quit country living in 31-2422 or 31-2424.
Roommate roommate 2nd semester owl 0911 room furf
roommate roommate 2nd semester owl 0911 room furf
with 3 girls Call 843-9619 after 5 p.m. 12-12
Penumbra campus wanted to stay 2 bedroom
unit on the first floor. The unit was
named AC dishwasher, close to campus, on but
excluded from club area.
Girl need apartment or house for Xmas
Girl pay utilities or small rent. Call:
12-12
842-6263
Law student needs roommates now. 2 bedrooms in a quiet neighborhood with AC, good reason. No class 843-58417 after 4 p.m. on Wednesdays.
If You're Planning on FLYING, Do the Maupinup! Do The Hippopotamus Yout! (NEVER an extra cost for airline tickets)
SKI Jan. 1-8. Need 3 people to share condominium space, roommate tool, ice cream tool, $5 day Tom Hinenimar, $10 day Jim Niemann.
Male or Female roomate. Share large house
upon request. Call 917-264-3550 for utilities.
Calls by 1247 817-943-5464. 12-12
★
Discounted Records A non-profit organization
LENNY ZEROS
DRIVE IN
AND COOP OF
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
710 Mass. 841-2200
Open
24 hrs.
per day
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
7
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842 2233
Fy
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
- Locally owned and operated
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
COIN
Independent
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
.audry & Dry Cleaners
Female coach to share 2 bedroom apts.
female village. Village Bq. Apts. $70 roo. 12-12
2
COIN OP LAUNDRY 19th & LA. 843 9631
7 days per week
Classical guitarist wanted to play at afternoon.
Marge in Marge at Kyle 422-825-3690, and five innings.
NOTICE
COIN OP LAUNDRY 1215 W.6th
Lawrence Auction House Sell your household
for consignation information call 1-800-425-3225.
For consignation information call 1-800-425-3225.
Students: Have your Xins kag party at Dungeon Club, a tavern, a labyrinth, or miles from the river. **12-12**
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Q in queen
and king size plates. A slab at eat here 80, a
plain plate $3.75, a slab at eat here 80, and a plain plate
$4.95. An rib plate $4.95. An rib plate $6.95. Beef sandw
beef sandw beef beef $2.95. Chicken sandw
chicken sandw chicken beef $2.95. Chicken sandw
and Taxe Phone 3-215 815 515
RAUD AYIOU WAREHOUSE THE Forest
WARRIOR CREEK WAREHOUSE 60444 Phone 842-301-491
Island, Lawrencetown 60444 Phone 842-301-491
For Free Birth Control information for pregnant
women, call Woman Center, 664-4411. If no answer call
800-252-3272.
842-9450
Choice locker beef. Aged and guaranteed. Slides-
topped with salt and pepper. Wholesale Meat, 3rd, Iowa and 81-43. 12-12
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| Iowa | 12-12 |
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of
tissues. $6 Come down and visit with us.
W-90. 12-12
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas tree. Use our pine rooftop and deck it with our handcrafted ornamentals to it with our handmade whole family to PINE HILL FARM just outside Chicago. We'll send a 100% lodge map to 2 miles south. We'll be open each week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A pair of Levi's makes a great gift from
General Jeans, 1000 Mass. 12-11
TYPING
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis,
research papers, and conference papers.
Awards and Promotion. Afterwards,
Afferentions and Orders. Or 823-385.
SPECIAL NOTICE: THIS WORK IS FOR EXAMINATION ONLY.
Experienced in typing thesis, dissertations, term papers, other mice typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Excellent correction. Phone 843-9554. Ms. Wright
Typing. my home. IBM, SELECT a prompt. Prompt with text to interact with the disk distributions. Profreaching done automatically.
Fast, accurate measurement on carbon ribbon type
Reasonable Resonance Calibration. 12-12
4856 or 842-734-724
Typing on elite electric typewriter in my home,
improved my apt service. No thesis please. Mrs. Hale, 12-12
1234 Street. (800) 655-1234.
MISCELLANEOUS
Let friendship绿 evenly to a height; if it rift to it, it may run out of breath. Lacazette 12-11
One-day Service
RISK Laundry
Expert, Economical Laundry Care 613 Vermont 843-4141
Guitars
- Amps
Music
- Recorders
Accessories
PHONE 843-1211
GASLIGHT VILLAGE MOBILE HOMES—
Open Evenings
Rose
KEYBOARD STUDIOS
1203 W. 46th ST. 978-567-8232
Look at What You Get一
2) Cedar Carport with Storage Area
1) Chain Linked Fences
3) Clubhouse for Private Parties
4) Swimming Pool
Maupintour travel service
5) Basketball Court
'SAMPLE BRIDAL GCWNS,' up to 75% off in
appointed locations. Numerous numbered
offices are available.
6) OVER 60 per cent STUDENT OCCUPANCY
3020 Iowa 842-2828 Now renting
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Monday, December 11, 1972
University Daily Kansan
B
BSU Food Co-op...
(continued from page 1)
allocation and asked David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president, to write a letter to the BSU advising them that only expenditures for items of "nutritional value" would be approved in the future.
There has been some argument over whether the line item restricted ex-ample was sufficient for nutritional value. Vann argued at a meeting of StudEx Nov 29 that the nutritional restriction had not been a part of the item when it was voted on during the meeting.
STUDEX DISMISSED Vaim's contention, though pointing out that the final copy of a work is not published.
Vann suggested a check of the minutes of the Senate meeting, but although minutes
were kept for all Senate meeting last year, the minutes of the May 3 meeting have not been made available.
The doughnut affair finally manifested itself in a bill by Gus DilZerega, Lawrence Mead, who asked for restrictive measures against the tax allocation. The bill was presented in handwritten form to Kathy Allen, Tepa junior president, at the Senate meeting Wednesday.
During the meeting, BSU representatives Eve Williams, Pratt junior, and Ron Washington, acting assistant director of SES, explained to the Senate that the purchases were used in the SES program as snacks for instructors and students.
WILLIAMS SAID the food coop was not operating because the BUH was unable to operate.
The bill, which was read to the Senate because Allen, the presiding officer of the Senate, had the only copy, proposed that all U.S. soldiers be sent to SBU food allocation, that the SBU submit to the Senate a new plan for organization of the food co-op which would make it self-sufficient, and that the remaining $43.608 in the frozen until the new was submitted.
The bill passed the Senate by a wide margin.
The fact that the one we was only worried about, the Senate may have canceled, confusion. One senator, we were in favor of the bill, said after the voting that he had realized the bill would actually take money away from the BSU, he would not have voted for
THE PROPONENTS of the bill denied
'73 News...
(continued from page 6)
today fled formal complaints with the U.S. government that the election campaign rhetoric of last year left no doubt that Mr. Trump would support a support of countries other than Vietnam.
WASHINGTON, April 30—The minimum wage bill was killed in House-Senate conference after President Nixon an-
nounced the need for a new plan would be extended six more months.
The Cambodian and Laotian complaints asked why Julie Eisenhower and Mrs. Nixon had not declared their willingness to die for them too, if the U.S. was really fully committed to supportin supporting their independence.
Had the bill been approved and an agreement reached, wages would have been lower.
NEW YORK, May 15–New York today reported its 73rd hijacking of the year. Brandishing a melting ice cream cone and threatening to it use to it me up the other passenger's hair, 12-year-old Rudi Brandi this morning, hid a New York cab.
Mayor John V. Lindsay expressed outrage at this latest incident and called a top-level meeting of city officials to prevent further cab hijackings. Although the mayor would not discuss the results of the meeting, informed sources indicated that FBI agents would be asked to soon give New York police special training in tire shooting.
PARIS, May 18—Before a crowd of 200 people, Klausner smiling announced that talks on the Paris nuclear deal had been
the peace plan proposed last November were progressing rapidly and that a solution was underway.
WASHINGTON, May 20—In response to earlier complaints that Mrs. Nixon and her daughter Julie had shown unnecessary favoritism to Vietnam when they offered to die for Thien, the White House disclosed today that Mrs. Nixon and Julie had sent their children to the Indochinese governments, assuring them that their freedom was also worth dying for.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, has threatened to challenge the constitution.
WASHINGTON, June 2-Heine Kissinger today left Washington on his 47th trip to Paris this year. Upon departing, Kissinger noted that those whom peace was just across the ocean.
NEW YORK, July 20—Gloria Steinem and Rep. Bella Abzug, DNJ, issued a statement but equally adamant pledges to oppose the commemoration of any exclusively male sexual feat, much less those of a "withed old lion."
The pledges came after several influential Californiaans announced the formation of Fraser Day in memory of the prudest 78-year-old "sex simba" who broke summer when he fabled 38 cubs by seven lonely lesions in 16 months and then died.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 3—Sen. Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, said today that Daniel Ellsberg had been offered $5 million by the
U. S. government to steal the Pentagon Papers from the New York Times.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—Today Henry Kissinger was arrested on possession of narcotics. The White House immediately issued a statement expressing shock and dismay over the incident, but most Washington officials weren't surprised.
"After all," said one defense department official, "we knew that all that damn smiling couldn't have anything to do with the peace talks."
SPOKANE, WASH., Dec. 31—Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who vowed he would not die while President Nixon was in the White House, today went for a five-mile hike in the mountains near his wife, Katherine, before returning to Washington, D.C., where a heavy work desk awaits him.
PALM SPRINGS, Dec. 1—Bob Hope said today that his would be the merriest Christmas ever, even though this would be the last time he and his performers would entertain the troops overseas. The entertainer said that he expected the war to be settled by next Christmas, but then he says a lot of things.
"I think the people who are making this motion realizes that it is a puritative move," she said. "I am not ashamed to say that I believe in all."
The bill in itself sets a precedent for the Senate by marking the first time that the body has taken back part of an allocation after it was allocated.
15
that it was for the purpose of punishing the Bitch out Washington told the Senate that the man had been wrong.
What the action of the Senate will mean is not clear. The BSU has declined to comment on the bill or on the organization's programs in general.
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The Kansas Union Bookstore's CHRISTMAS RECORD SALE DEC. 11 - DEC. 22
Single LP's and up to 8 Record Sets by the World's Most Famous Composers and Artists. Here's some examples (SAVINGS UP TO 50%)
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Bethoven Nine Symphonies 8 Record Set
The Classical Guitar 5 Record Set
Gustav Mahler 2 Record Set
An Anthology of Folk Music 5 Record Set
Music for Lute, Guitar, Mandolin 5 Record Set
Tchaikovsky Seven Symphonies 7 Record Set
Those Wonderful Thirties – 3 Separe 2 Record Sets
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Bookstore will be closed Dec. 23-26
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Cannobole Addderley Cheat Athias Eddy Arnold Quartet Judy Collin
Herrie Mann Ray Charles London Symphony Orchestra Manitas Plata
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Maria Callas Jojot Kriste Andres Segovia
Woody Goughue Pase Seuer Yusel Lautef Modem Jazz Dairtet
Glen Campbell Rod McKenna Stan Gezit Al Hirt Benny Goodman
Wes Montgomery Le McCann Janant the Afrankin Verd Van Riese
Gerry Mulligan Lluís Nyuro Dris Heeding Count Basie
William Steinberg Leadbelly Bill Evans Monte Rosa
Ahmed Jamal Gary Yarbrough Lawren Lewis
SNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence Kansas
Final Edition Of the Semester
83rd Year, No. 72
Tuesday, December 12. 1972
100
Snowboard
W
Kansan Photo by DAN LAUING
Falling for You
Hans Brinker, alias Roger Kearney, Lawrence High School senior, tries his hand at skating, or maybe his neck, on Potter Lake Monday. As the snow and temperature
dipped over the weekend, Potter Lake led over and drew Krautz to it to practice his skating technique. The weather service says it is going to be cold and cloudy with snow possibly accumulating to four inches today. The high will be in the mid-teens. Winds will be gusty for most of the day. The low temperatures will near 10 degrees, so there will be plenty of ice for skating.
Thieu Urges Holiday Talks
SAIGON, Tuesday (AP)—President Nguyen Van Thieu proposed today the release of all prisoners of war before Christmas and called for new negotiations on a Vietnam peace settlement during a holiday cease-fire.
He said the negotiations should include "all the Vietnamese parties," but not the United States, and cover "every problem of mutual concern."
If these consultations made progress,
then said the cease-fire could then be
concluded.
South Vietnam and the Viet Cong are not directly represented in the same context as they were in Paris.
HE ACCUSED Hanoi of using U.S. prisoners of war as hostages to secure its ultimate objective of taking over South Vietnam, and said Saigon would be willing to release all its North Vietnamese POws held in exchange for the U.S. prisoners
Thieu reasserted his demand that all North Vietnamese troops withdraw from the South as part of a peace agreement and a soldier公議 takeover in Saigon would be inevitable if the Communists were allowed to remain in full force.
In a speech to a joint session of the national legislature, Thieu said that as a gesture of "mostt good will," South Vietnam would release unconditionally the healthy North Vietnamese POWs on the first day of his proposed cease-fire.
There are 9,800 North Vietnamese prisoners in South Vietnam, according to official sources. Hanoi is known to hold 429 American POWs.
In Washington, the White House and the
Bibb's Cuts in KU Budget Only One Step
State Department declined comment on Thieu's proposals.
THEIE SUGGESTED a national referendum under United Nations supervision to determine the makeup of a National Council of Concord and Reconciliation. He said South Vietnam also would be willing to demobilize as many troops as possible on withdraw from the South, touching on a key obstacle in the Paris negotiations.
"The government of the Republic of Vietnam does not lack good will for serious negotiations," Thieu said. "It is just that the Communists refuse to negotiate with us but United States officials do not." The government to negotiate and force it to in turn pressure the Republic of Vietnam.
He said the Christmas cease-fire negotiations could be conducted any place and in secret or publicly and invited the observers to send observers for the holiday truce.
THEUE'S PROPOSAL appeared to be an attempt to gain a stronger voice for his position in the negotiations between Washington and Hanoi.
"The Communists have given themselves the right to be masters here in South Vietnam, dealing directly with the United States and South Vietnam is just a puppet," he said.
Thieu reiterated his demand that all North Vietnamese troops be withdrawn from the South under any cease-fire and said: "It will only be a matter of time until the Communists take over this country" if that condition was not met.
By RANDALL BECKER
and GARY ISAACSON Kansan Staff Writers
The recommendations made by State Budget Director James Bibb concerning the University of Kansas budget are but one of many which the budget goes through every year.
This oft-stated demand by Thieu is a major sticking point in the current dealings between Henry A. Kissinger and Le Duc Khon. North Vietnam peace negotiator, Dr. Kissinger, accord as described previously by Kissinger does not contain the provision.
In a letter received by Chancellor Raymond Nichols last Friday, Bibb recommended that the total educational and operating budget be cut from the original KU request of $50,041,861 to $41,961,731. This represents a cut of $1.8 million.
At budget bibs in Topeka Thursday where Bibb's recommendations, along with the chancellor's arguments for re-statement of the cuts, will be discussed.
The results of the hearings will then be used by Gov. Robert Docking in his constitution.
After Docking makes his decision, he will present his budget address to the Kansas Legislature sometime during the first two weeks of January.
THE LEGISLATURE will then take the governor's recommendations and present the final budget to the governor for either his signature or veto. The legislative decision usually comes late in the session during the last part of March.
But even before Bibb's recommendations were made, the KU budget went through two iterations.
The budget was presented to the state Board of Regents on June 1 for consideration. The regents then sent the budget back to KU for final adjustments.
After these adjustments were made, the University presented the final form of the book.
This procedure resulted in a severe cut in KU's budget request last year.
There deadlines do not include the preliminary work done on the budget by the board.
FOR FSCAL YEAR 1973, which started
requested $48,000 for its educational
funds.
News Analysis
After the governor received the results of the budget hearings, he presented the legislature with a figure of $46,910,807 which represents 81.8 million of the cut made by Bibb.
operating budget. Bibb recommended a $8.5 million cut, which lowered the budget to
smallest cut, as Bib recommended cutting
$460.85 from the original $0.854.25 request.
THERE NOW IS speculation it could be covered in an unwritten agreement, but the negotiations as they now stand have remained secret.
The legislature passed Docking's figure and added $800 for a one-time fee. The legislature approved the University.
The final figure was still approximately $2 million less than the original University reprint.
The University of Kansas Medical Center, which is not included with the six colleges and universities in budget figures, requested $50,233,883 and was cut to $46,703,382 by Bibb, a reduction of over $3.5 million.
Budget requests are changed frequently during the final states of the budget process, and last year's provisions for faculty salary are an example of such budget fluctuation.
Kansas State University asked for a general operating budget of $50,321,878, and Bibb suggested the request be cut $1.6 million to a total $44,903,366.
The University originally requested an eight per cent increase in some faculty salaries. When the request was sent to Bibb's office, the increase was cut to two per cent. The governor restored the faculty salary to five per cent, however, and the legislature eventually restored the governor's proposal.
All six state universities and colleges are preparing for budget hearings this week. A total of $148,203,783 was asked for the fiscal year 1974 by the six institutions, and Bibb reduced this figure to $142,133,434, a cut of just over $6 million.
Wichita State University requested
The South Vietnamese president charged that Hanoi is trying to gain through negotiations a victory denied it on the battlefield.
$19,127,286 and was cut just over $1 million to $18,125,743. Kansas State College at Pittsburg asked for $4,987,299 and Bibb recommended $8,811,275.
Emperia School Teachers College was cut almost $ 5 million, from $10,979,93 to $10,984,65. Fort Hays Teachers College, with the small budget, received the
Geologist Begins Moon Rock Quest
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)-Two Apollo 17 explorers stepped onto a boulder-strewn moon valley Monday and Harrison H. Schmitt, the first scientist in space, called it "a geologist's paradise."
Schmitt and commander Eugene A. Cerman immediately began a scientific quest, using Schmitt's trained geologist's eye to seek missing links in lunar history. His experience is expected to produce the most meaningful lunar data yet on what may be man's last visit to the moon in the 20th century.
As Cernan planted his boot in the dusty soil, he remarked: "I'd like to dedicate the
Property Tax Faces '73 Legislature
By SCOTT EATON Kansan Staff Writer
Bringing the property tax under the law would be a hard task, said by three Lawrence area legislators to be the most important and controversial issue that will face the 1973 Kansas law.
Vogel, who has served five terms as representative, agreed with Booth, but said completion of an acceptabletablet structure by July 1 would be difficult.
"We have to come up with a program and a plan by July 1," said Booth, incumbent senator. "I believe we'll be able to get the job done."
**Summary.**
Sen. Arden Booth, Rep. Lloyd Bailen, Rep. H. Hogel, all Republican members of the upcoming legislature, expressed confidence that the property tax, used as the primary means of support for elementary and secondary education, could be brought within the guidelines by the court imposed date of July 1, 1973.
"IT'S A MOST difficult problem." Vogel said. "It's a matter of knowing somebody's going to have to give a little. We have to become concerned with an equal opportunity for all students in the state. I expect that people from the school districts
Buzzi, a freshman representative for the upcoming term, said the property tax reform could be finished by the July 1 deadline, and cited as the major reason what he called the ability of the members of the legislature to cooperate.
it benefits will support it, and people from districts where it takes money away, won't.
Buzzi said he had not seen anything in the upcoming legislation that would create any new laws.
Buzzed the largely Republican legislature would be able to work along with Democratic Gov. Robert Docking. Buzzie said Docking was a capable man, that and anticipate many problems between the legislative and executive departments.
"I THINK WE HAVE a legislature that can work together," Buzzi said. "Some people have predicted that there will be a lot of trouble in this legislation, but I don't think there is going to be that much lack of cooperation.
Vogel said that the trend toward
women in tech was a somewhat recent development.
"I don't foresee anything but cooperation."
in politics in the past last few years," Vogel said. "Now things tend to be decided by issues rather than individuals. Parties really are nonexistent in the legislature. There are conservative Republicans and conservative Democrats, and there are liberal Republicans and liberal Democrats."
"THERE'S BEEN QUITE a little change
Vogel said votes tended not to be by party lines but by the conservative or liberal
See related story page 2
leaning of a legislator. He said that times in the past when a veto of a bill was overturned, it was with help from the Democrats.
"We might have had the right number, but it was with Democratic vote to help," I said.
He said that conversely, Republicans had voted to prevent the reintroduction of vetoes, the Defense Department said.
BOOTH SAID that there was little to believe in party lines in important votes in the election.
"You divide by issues, not by party lines." Booth said.
Booth was less optimistic about cooperation between the executive and the military.
"As far as cooperation is concerned, I think he (Docking) has established that," Vogel said. "He's going to continue to operate pretty much as he has.
"Concerning higher education, I don't think there's any, move against it this session. The current representatives here are not ready to accept education for the University" Hoevt and
"He's already drawn the battle lines." Support for higher education promises to be another important issue for the upcoming legislature.
"WE NEED an intelligent education foundation. Bringing the property tax guideline into shape and trying to utilize investment funds will have an effect on education."
Vogel mentioned the possibility of cutting some of the graduate programs at the university level, but said higher education would still be supported in Kansas.
first step of Apollo 17 to all those who mause it possible."
See PROPERTY page 12
He was logged on the valley floor at 6:05 p.m. PST, about four hours after he and Schmitt made a perfect landing in the valley. Schmitt followed him down the ladder five minutes later and exclaimed, "God, it's beautiful out here."
AT THE VALLEY called Taurus-Littrow, they hope to find ancient rocks that might date back to the convulsive birth of the moon 4.6 billion years ago.
Vogel referred to a recent study by the Council of Chief Academic Officers
"The people of Kansas have always supported higher education," Vogel said. "There has been some discontent in Kansas, though, because of duplication of programs. Many persons have thought that the state should refer to a second university." Vogel referred to a second university the
They touched down within 300 feet of their precise target.
They had little trouble adapting themselves to their new environment, where the gravity pull is about one-sixth that of earth's and where temperatures range from 243 degrees above zero in sunlight to 267 degrees below zero in darkness and in shadow.
After the initial familiarization period, they begin their first task, assembling the $2 million battery-powered moon car which is to transport them more than 20 miles over the surface to explore mountains, valleys, riles and craters.
Cernan and Schmitt had cast off for their lunar adventure leaving Evans alone to conduct photographic and scientific experiments for more than three days.
THE NUCLEAR-POWERED science station set up during most of the first seven-hour excursion Monday is to relay data long after they leave on such things as meteor hits, gravity waves, constituents of the thin atmosphere and substructure composition. A new experiment might also determine if water in the surface in the form of ice or permafrost.
The men plan to remain a record 75 hours at Taurus-Litlrow, making three outside excursions in their quest for lunar secrets. The men plan to set up a science station to be spent setting up a science station.
SEPARATION occurred behind the dark side of the moon, out of radio contact. As Challenger reappeared around the eastern rim, Cernan reported, "We're looking at
America the beautiful. We're floating free out here."
They quickly checked communications and other systems and Mission Control flashed the go-ahead for the landing. The aircraft rose up to orbit within seven miles of the surface.
At 2:43 p.m., Cernan and Schmitt triggered the狼崃craft's engine to brake their speed from 3,800 miles per hour to the tricky 12-minute drop to the surface.
As on some previous landing approaches, Challenger started out slightly high and off track, but the computer-driven guidance system soon had them on a perfect course.
THE CHALLENGER and America, both of which functioned almost flawlessly during the three-day outward journey from Earth to Mars. After the astronauts sent into lunar orbit.
On Tuesday at 5:03 p.m. Cernan and Schmitt will start their second seven-hour surface excursion, a 4.5-mile drive to a mountain they call the South Massif where they may collect the oldest material yet found on the moon.
The third driving expedition is to start at 4:33 p.m. Wednesday with the explorers driving their taxi two miles to another location, which Massif in search of more ancient material.
The exploration is to end when Cerman and Schmitt blast off from the moon at 5:46 p.m. Thursday and fly to a rendezvous with Evans in the command ship. The astronauts will spend an extra two days conducting lunar orbital experiments and will head for home Saturday and splashdown in the Pacific Dec. 19.
While flying solo in America, Evans will examine the lunar surface with a battery of experiments. An ultraviolet spectrometer will measure the thin lunar atmosphere; an infrared scanner will draw a thermal map of the lunar surface; and an infrared and a lunar sounder will zip radio waves into the surface to study its composition to a depth of more than half a mile.
2
Tuesday, December 12. 1972
University Daily Kansas
School Finances
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence public school district may be relatively unaffected if a proposed state education finance plan is passed. Dale Dennis, director of statistical services for the state department of education, ex-
cellent at finding the possible effect of the finance proposed at an meeting of the Lawrence board of education and local state legislators.
According to Carl Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools, Dennis said that, as compared with Kansas' 311 districts, the district was about average in wealth.
The state department of education defines wealth as the total of a district's income and expenditure.
ONLY THREE DISTRICTS that are very wealthy or those poor would be greatly affected by the proposed plan, Dennis said. The proposed plan, which is embodied in
Senate Bill 716, is designed to equalize the per pupil expenditure for education in all districts.
According to Knox, Dennis also said that Lawrence was sixth in the state in its ability to support education through some form of income tax. If a new system of finance for education was based on an income tax then on Lawrence would be much greater.
IT DOES NOT appear at this time that income tax support of education would be a significant factor on the local level, Knox said.
Studied
According to Knox, persons at Monday's meeting said that the proposed plan had a good chance of being passed. They said that a Kansas district court had decided that the present finance was unconstitutional and that Knox did not favorable balance in the state general fund and additional funds from federal revenue sharing also support a change, Knox said.
The Council of Chief Academic Officers (COCAO) began two days of meetings Monday at the Kansas Union to discuss the merits of the Higher Education Act of 72 amendment and to review the ramifications of a graduate school report released last week.
Higher Education Act Reviewed by Council
John Chalmer, vice president of Kansas State University and chairman of COCAO, said the focus of the meeting would center on question number 2 of the federal Higher Education Act.
The section stated in the amendment would transfer the planning of state universities and colleges to a committee responsible for early education in Kansas, Chalmer said.
"This committee that section 1202 requires would consist of representatives of junior colleges, vocational schools, private and property schools." Chalmer said.
"I think this is a great leap backward. If you think the professors were upset when their graduation programs were recommenced, continuance, wait until they see this," he said.
Kenneth Fisher, assistant superintendent in charge of buildings and facilities, said during a telephone interview Sunday that he and Knox supported the resolution. He said that the Lawrence board of education had written the resolution and they also were in favor of it.
"I just don't think it's right for a committee comprised of representatives from the smaller schools to plan the economic burden of the larger schools such as KU and KSU.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Fund Sharing
Dole Resigns
MONDAY'S MEETING came in the wake of a statewide educators' conference held in Topeka Thursday. At the conference, superintendents and board members from 110 school districts accepted an 11-point resolution that supported the nonspecified plan.
WASHINGTON - The Treasury Department announced Monday issuance of a check for $6,633,771 to the state of Kansas as its share for the first six-month period of federal revenue sharing. Amounts for larger cities included Overland Park $121,623; Wichita, $1,298,873; Topeka $564,422; Kansas City, Kan. $1,139,113.
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court Monday agreed to review federal and state laws that keep some 5.5-million government workers from partisan political activity. In a first step, the court was struck down in July by a three-judge panel here on grounds that it was overly broad and violated the workers' First Amendment rights. An Oklahoma law was upheld, meanwhile, in February by another judge who said the state reasonable way to promote integrity in the public service. A final decision is expected by the end of June.
Hatch Act
WASHINGTON--Robert J. Dole announced his impending resignation as chairman of the Republican party Monday, denying it was under pressure from the Republican caucus. He also backed bassader George Bush would换 him early next year. The Kansas senator will submit his resignation to the Republican National Committee when it meets here expected Bush, President Nicolai choice, is expected to push much opposition.
Truman Resting
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Harry S. Truman rested quietly without pain Monday, but doctors cautioned that he 'still is serious and will continue to be so for an indefinite period.' Physicians at Research Hospital were told the former president was taken by ambulance last Tuesday, were keeping a close watch on irregularities in Truman's heartbeat.
Ellsberg Jurv
LOS ANGELES—The judge in the rant-ton paper tails trial declared a mistrial Monday after defendants Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo waived protection against double jeopardy in order to obtain a new jury and a fresh start. The defense then raised an objection concerning the potential jury panel, saying the chief judge of the district may have prejudiced any prospective jurors.
Knox said that the purpose of Monday's meeting was to get acquainted with the new president.
"The committee's primary function is to receive the money and distribute it, and you know the larger schools are going to get slidged with this sort of representation."
Chalmer said that the council would review the amendment, but he said he was not confident that the bill would pass.
Chalmer said that the council also considered Monday the value of grade reports to parents, credit examination and tenure policies.
The COCAO report, which examined the present status of the state's graduate programs and higher education in general, were to be discussed in today's final session.
Rush Registration Ends December 20
The deadline for registration for spring sorority rush is 5 p.m., Dec. 20 Registration forms can be obtained from the Office of the Dean of Women and should be returned by mail, or in the fee, according to Pam Troup, Fairborn, Ohio, junior and Panhellenic president.
Anyone who has completed a full semester of college work or 14 hours, and has a 2.0 grade average for the preceding semester of being in rush, which is Jan. 11-18, Troup said.
During rush, women who are not under contract to live in Corbin, Oliver or Gertrude Sellars Pearson (GSP) Halls may stay in GSP during the week of rush, said Chris Pruitt, the GSP rush chairman. There will be no food service, except for vending machines, she said.
Women who live in either Corbin, Oliver or GSP Hall will be required to pay $3 to live in the rooms during rush for the three meals. Women will be closed for semester break, Long said.
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Tuesday, December 12, 1972
3
Lecture Series Find Few Speakers
University Daily Kansan
By MIKE BAUER
Kansan Staff Writer
The J. A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture series has sent out 14 invitations to speakers this year, but Abba Eban, Israeli minister of foreign affairs, is only one who has ac-
Another major lecture series has been troubled by the same problem. The Kenneth A. Spencer Memorial Lecture for the first week of April 2033 will sponsor a speaker next semester.
The speaker will be Franklin Murphy, chancellor of the University of Kansas from 1961 to 1980 and chairman of the Times from 1982. He is scheduled to speak March 14, 1973.
BOTH SPEAKERS' series have been plagued by a lack of funds and a slow response to invitations extended by the committee which supervises both series.
John Conard, director of UHMW Relations which overlooks both programs, said the policy of the committee was to send out only a few students to each other if they were not send out as many as 20 letters at a time because they were afraid too many speakers might accept.
If more than one or two speakers a year accepted the invitations, Conard said, there would not be enough money in the Spencer and Vickers fund. Speakers in both lecture series were given $1,500 and traveling expenses, he said.
THERE ARE FEW speakers in the Spencer and Vickers' lectures because the committee is so selective that "the committee would invite, people it would like to invite," Conard said.
He said the committee was avoiding poll cutoff figures, which have long been the focus of the group, they appended two last year.
Former Democratic National Party chairman, Lawrence O'Brien and Republican national chairman Sen. Bob Dole spoke on campus last year as part of the series. The Vickers Lecture Series also featured a talk by the university's Adm. Elmo Zumwalt to campus.
THE VICKERS LECTURE Series was established in 1970 by the Vickers family of Wichita, to enable the University to bring campus prominent citizens to debate or discuss subjects vital to the maintenance of a free political and market society.
Clifford Clark, dean of the school of Business and a member of the Vickers and Spencer lecture committee, said, "My disappointment in the series is that not everyone agrees with the group; everyone agrees on the. The委员会 doesn't know what the students want."
"We can't seem to get the people," he said. He said the committee was trying to get the Soviet ambassador and a former prime minister to lecture in the series.
CONARD the committee had been trying to get SAH to speak on campus for students.
Clark attributed part of the problems of the two-year old program to organization. He said it would take three or four years to build up the lecture series.
The reason there have been no Spencer lectures, Clark said, is "the committee didn't meet. They really didn't have a meeting and call meetings and procedures are unclear."
He said the committee was just beginning to organize into a functioning body.
THE SPENCER LECTURE Series was started in 1960 by friends and relatives of Kenneth Spencer, industrialist and founder of Spencer Chemical Company. The series was established to bring speakers from business, industry, science and technology
The director of the counterpart of the Vickers and Spencer Lecture series at Kansas State University, said KState also had bad trouble in getting people to speak.
Joe Hajja, director of international activities at K-State, said he would like to work with KU in co-sponsoring some research in an effort to alleviate the problem.
Conard said he would be willing to work with K-State, but doubted that the cooperation would help bring more speakers to Kansas.
THE MAJORITY of the speakers at K-State are brought to campus by the Landon series, which is named after Ail Landon, governor and presidential candidate in 1936.
"We are working on our lecture program very hard, and the president of the university is working on it, as well as ex-users of this course," she said. "Our friends in the Senate and congress
Hada said most speakers did not accept fees because "our lecture series has nation-wide recognition and many speakers feel its an honor to be on it."
The Landon series has sponsored the president Humphrey pled, the late Sam Sim.
K-STATE RECENTLY brought Dan Katewnewman to the campus through the arts.
we don't have anybody of national status to do that for us."
`\Aif Landdon gets on the phone at his radio station and calls them. Unfortunately,
Conard attributed K-State's success in getting speakers to Landon.
In contrast to the Vickers and Spencer lecture series, the SUA, also operating on a limited budget, has brought two speakers to campus. Kingley Click, Shalier, Fla., mentor and chairman of SUA forums said SAU speakers only $2,000 to attract big-name speakers.
This semester, the SUA brought N.Y. Congresswoman Shirley Chisolm at a cost of $2,232 and Georgia Congressman Julian Ashley at a cost of $1,695 amount paid to a sneaker was set at $1,500.
THE SUA IS GIVEN $9,000 by the Student Senate for the total speaking program, which consists of $5,000 for a featured speaker series, $2,500 for a contemporary issues series and $1,500 for an international issues series.
CLICK SAID THE University of Tulsa was given $30,000 out of the University budget for its lecture program. However, she said, the university administration has asked the university to speakers, and at KU the administration does not interfere with the SUA speaker series.
Click said that the University of Kansas had allocated less money for speakers than the other schools whose members she had attended. (The International Program Association)
Other organizations sponsoring speakers on campus are the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, individual schools on campus, and the College of Lecture Series and individual classes.
Henry Snyder, chairman of the Humanities committee and associate dean of the research administration office, said that he is looking out for outstanding people in the humanities to KU.
HE SAID the speakers were on campus for two full days, participated in classroom activities and gave speeches in Woodruff Auditorium.
He said the committee was allocated $6,000 dollars a year. Snyder said the committee tried to present a lecture nearly every month during the school term.
The School of Liberal Arts and Sciences allocates money for speakers, which is available to each department. The English department recently brought John Brenner, a professor of fiction writer in accordance to James Gunn, lecturer in English and journalism.
Several schools including Journalism and Business in the University have programs that bring lecturers on campus. The School of Journalism has the editors-in-residence program, according to Edward Bassett, dean of the School of Journalism.
Bassett the editors did not receive a fee for their visits, except transportation housing. Bassett the school could afford about six editors-in-residence a year.
The individual classes blame a lack of funds and organization for their problems in gaining speakers. The only class to sponsor a speaker this year was the senior class, which, with the cooperation of SUA, brought Anthony Herbert, the most decorated soldier in the Korean War, to campus this semester.
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STUDIO 76
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Mud Creek Estimate Is Absurd, Prof Says
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Nunley met with Corp officials Thursday to discuss what he said was a variation of the plan he proposed Nov. 9 at a Mud Creek business conducted at Grant School in Lawrence.
Robert E. Nunley, University of Kansas professor of geography, said Monday that an estimate of $9.3 million made by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to implement his proposed "upstream control" plan for Mud Creek basin was "absurd."
Nunley's meeting with the Corps came directly after the Corps released last Wednesday the draft environmental statement on the Mud Creek portion of the Lawrence Flood Protection Project. The Corps recommended its original '1909 Environmental Plan' to 7.7 miles of channelization and 4.3 miles of levee on the right bank of Mud Creek.
THE CORPS REJECTED Nunley's alternative proposal in the statement as too expensive, based on an $8.99 million cost of implementation for Nunley's plan versus an estimated $3.28 million cost for the 1969 plan.
“There's no way our plan could cost that much,” Nunley said. “Our plan will provide 90 per cent of the benefits of the 1969 plan at 15 per cent of the cost.”
Nunley said his plan had "no official背登 of any kind" and was developed by himself and his students. The plan provides flood protection for all of north Lawrence
south of the turnipp by installing floodgates in the underpasses of the turnipp; agricultural flood protection only for the floodplain north of the turnipp by detention structures; obtaining flood plain insurance from federal programs to give floodplain owners access to Lawrence residents; and surveying the area north of the turnipp to 'show water levels in each part of the floodplain at given discharge rates.'
"COST OF IMPLEMENTING the plan would be about $50,000 for the area south of the turnip and about $1.5 million for the area north of the turnip." Nunley said. Nunley labeled the plan an "academic exercise" designed to find the best solution suitable to the most people for providing flood protection for north Lawrence.
"From a practical standpoint, there's a very good chance it will be adopted by the city."
Mayor John Emlick said last week that a final decision regarding selection of a flood protection plan for Mud Creek would not be made until the Corps issued a final enlistment and impact statement. The statement is not expected to be released for several weeks.
Nunley said he planned to mail his response to the Corps' statement late this week or early next week. The response, he added, would also call him his proposal, also would be sent to the city commission and "everyone else I've been in contact with about this."
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4
Tuesday, December 12, 1972
University Daily Kansam
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Regent Appointment Cause for Rejoicing
Feminists rejoice, we finally got a woman Regent. Actually, from the information given in newspaper articles about Mary Prudence de la Marmot, the widow of people to rejoice since she seems to be a very capable woman.
Although I wanted the new regent to be a woman, I doubt that anyone will be able to notice much of a difference in the way most of the problems are handled. Assuming that the Regents base their decisions on the type of rational thinking that can be appreciated by most men—it is likely that it will also be appreciated by more women—the Regents will not be a noticeable depressing sensitivity or compassion just because the Board of Regents has a female member. If her opinions differ from those of the other Regents it probably has more to do with the fact that she is a different person than that she is of a different sex.
I think there are personality differences based on sex, but I do not think they constitute as sharp a distinction as stereotypes would have us believe. Most of the women that I know do not rely on intuitive thinking to solve their problems. They are not as silly, sensitive, compassionate, passive or cunning as those (Which is why I avoid paradox—after all, how can one person be both passive and cunning?) Most of the men I know are not as impassive, domineering, resolute, stalwart or as rational as stereotypes claim all men should be. These stereotypes
seem to derive from the combined efforts of male and femal entrenchment to deter a grand plot to make the sexes in comprehensible to each other.
Even though I do not believe the personality differences to be as great as they are supposed to be, I still think there is a need for women in policy-making positions. It is likely that Hutton will have a better understanding of some of the needs and desires of women students and faculty members. Child care centers will probably sound less like a luxury to someone who has tried to have a career and to fulfill all of the duties America expects of its mothers. Hopefully she should be able to remember the older women who are coming back to school. She can be instrumental in correcting the gap between the salaries of male and female faculty members. Her womanhood will make a difference when the specific needs of female students is an issue.
She also offers to the young women of this state the model of a successful woman. She shows that it is possible to be more than a grammar school teacher in the educational system of this country. The more women that are allowed to hold high positions in government and industry, the more acceptable it will be. Maybe some year another woman will be selected as a Regent—and the fact that she is a woman will not be part of all the headlines.
Mary Ward
The Flavor of a History Pie Is Not in the Headline Crust
By DON MAYBERGER
Some events are so devastating in their impact on the world that they come to be regarded as landmarks in the journey through certain periods of time. Such events are represented by black headlines that accompany them, are pointed at and examined by historians and sociologists in order to extract a story or from an era or decade
Headline: "President Is Slain from Ambush."
So blinding are these headlines that make it to the often never makes it to the first news here in smaller form that much of the real flavor of a certain era has left us. News events form the skeleton that provides the shape of history, the story of the meat on those heads. Headline: "President Isai Sain
Perhaps few noticed the irony of a feature that said that Vaughn Meader, the comedian whose stand-up show sold 5 million record albums called "The First Family," was searching for ways to destroy his image as a P.K. imitator. His book, *The Paper*, the paper hit the newstand.
While Ellsworth, Iowa, turkey raises were preparing to ship 1/4 million turkeys for next week's Thanksgiving dinners, a farmer helped himself by himself beset with family problems, ended his step-daughter's sixth birthday celebration by killing her, his wife's family members or his wife's family turned him on gun himself.
And in a letter to the editor,
Walter Berkowitz, citizen, urged
the construction of fallout
sites to save 100 million
Americans.
On that infamous Friday, while the nation pondered the meaning of life and death, the aging man who fell on the 73rd birthday. Millions mourned the death of the nation's youngest President but few saw the small article telling of the death of 18-year-old Robert 'Ermer of Chicago' O'Hara with his head in a plastic bag filled with airplane glue.
"... Congress has again voted billions for the moon and it eliminated appropriations for space exploration. This is like a man deciding to cut down his cost of living and the first thing he does is cancel his life insurance, his fire insurance, his accident insurance, etc., etc."
Headline: "Khrushchev Quits Red Helm."
Meanwhile, other leaders were having their problems too. Harry Wagner, a spokesman for about his Kansas City hospital room recovering from injuries in the shooting, Washington President Johnson attempted to prevent any fall that he might suffer from Republican policies. In 1959 arrest of White House aid
Walter Jenkins on morals charges
Headline: "Power Loss Paralyzes Northeast."
In Kansas City, L. lwrence Kipton, former Chancellor of the University of Chicago, has been called a power loss. Misguided idealism on some college campuses, he may cause, say a real disservice to students.
Rep. Mendel Rivers was telling newsmen that he had heard estimates that a Vietnamese demand require a $10 million boost in the defense budget for 1966, while at the same time Robert LaPorte, a young Roman citizen, died of death after turning himself into a human torch outside the United Nations building to protest the Vietnam War.
Headline: "L.B.J. Will Not Seek Re-election."
Dr. Timothy Leary, frequently the high priest of the church, was the responsible for the banner headline of the day, was denied a review of his 30-year prison term and moved marjuana from Mexico.
Theaters across the country were filled with crowds who asked, "What do Doll's?" But in Lebanon, Ore. a movie house operator went out of business because of "a desperate need" for sex films. The fault, he said, was "so much sex, violence and crime woven into a majority of today's film fare."
And the Rev. Martin Luther King Jihot that he might lead many militaries to attack peoples at the upcoming Democratic and Republican
Even while the gunsmoke still filled the Memphis air, the Senate was forced to make a measure proposed by President Johnson to control the sale of ammunition.
Headline: "Shot Kills Martin Luther King."
The nation and the nation's businesses are preparing their own business for Better Britain were finding their own businesses preparing for an upsurge. They listed Robert Carr as a candidate in a necklace with Richard Nixon.
The front page news rendered the books' odds meaningless. In Pearl Harbor, a 20-year-old man was injured after being picked up, after being taken off, he offered to share a joint of marijuana with his benefactor and was promptly arrested. The driver, it turned out, was a policeman and charged the sailor in possession of illegal narcotics.
Headline: "Robert Kennedy Fights for Life."
>ured black paint over draft records.
And in Vatican City, the Vatican announced that it would devote a half hour of radio time per week to pop music.
"Beat music—on which we suspend artistic judgment for the moment—represents never an ideal bridge toward the young.
The F.B.I. began a search for a young couple described by her as "weird and dirty looking" who had walked into the office and
During a Honolulu television show, mother spotted her runaway wrestling match. She called the police and the 17-year-old was taken to a local hospital.
Headline: "Humphrey Concedes to Nixon."
Mrs. Hunter Wallace of Pinston, Ala., said she heard "radicals" in some cities would attempt to keep voters down from the 76-year-old rumored to be late along when she went to vote.
Today's movie: "Gone with the Wind."
But while those two Americans collected rocks nearly 240,000 American lay dying in cancer Washington the House passed a measure permitting states to treat services under the medicare卡
As Americans were watching the fuzzy billion-dollar live telecast from another world, the elderly had to close a close. The years had often been painful to live through and many found solace in the realization that at least one of the goals of New Frontier had been met.
And in Grafton, Ill., the Boys Club closed its doors because of the high costs of operation.
Garry Wills
Headline: "U.S. Moon
Triumph."
James bond. h叉 westerns. JFK had kames Bond. Nixon has Patton. That movie drags much of its plump three hours, but Nixon sat through it several times during a particularly tense period of his own life—the time of the Cambodian "incursion."
Nixon Idolizes Movie Patton
Mr. Nixon does not lack intelligence--only taste. Yet his comments about John Wayne movies as a type of American justice show that his intelligence is not at home in the symbols of Hollywood. So it is quite possible that he missed the satirical edge of this war, and he has Patton. He seems to have read this anti-war movie as favoring war, the mystical war fanatic as a hero of determination.
If he did, then this abbreviation in a man otherwise fairly perceptive is revealing. What caused the odd feeling of identity with a man so little like him in most ways? Patton like an athlete, flamboyant and ill-assured, and ill-assured. One can understand her-worship for a Patton—but what basis is there for identification with him?
Recently I stayed in front of my TV set through the film's medium and all those tawdry commercials wondering how Richard Nixon—would endure this more than once.
Part of the answer—and one of the movie's better touches—is contained in the omnipresence of a man never seen on the screen. Patton's destiny lies, throughout, in Eisenhower's hands; "Ike" is a name sounded constantly, with almost magical effect.
That name is the trump card played by Omar Baridley at several turns. It alone compels the recalcitrant Patton to crumble in the key episode—the public apology for hitting a gun and killing his son at last gets his chance to join in the invi'ion of Europe, Ike is the dea ea machina of his delayed deliverance—and Patton does not
know whether to curse or bless him.
The resentment that Patton feels can never be expressed. His fateful is fathered to another man's wife, and it becomes a free of him, on whom he depends, whom he cannot attack, yet from whom he undergoes his worst humiliation. Checked by Ike, he is struck in his heart. There is irony in that familiar
name used always for a figure so awesomely remote that the cameras cannot, in their long slidful exercise, find him even once. He is Jehovah to Patton's Job-toying with his creature in ways about equally constructive and destructive.
Did Nixon intuit any affinity with Patton in this respect? How could he fail to Eisenhower has always been the off-screen power
in Nixon's career, the name he had to invoke and not curse, even though his own worst ordeal was imposed by Koe's fat — the wounded man who had endured and crippled Nixon for even though Eisenhower knew before he underwent that Nixon was clean "as a bound tooth," so.
The one humanizing touch allowed the cinematic Patton—in
a movie with no name women's parts is*prug affection for a misfist hound. He walks off with this awkward leashed appendage into the dubious haze of muted glory at the end. And by that time the albino nut had become, for me, his mate. Timahoe. I suspect another viewer also made that identification.
TOYS
"I DON'T CARE WHO YOU ARE FAT MAN,
TAKE ME TO CUBA!!!"
Readers Respond
(C) Universal Press Syndicate, 1972
Here Are Last-Word Letters
Miss Francke claims that she respects our right to seek personal fulfillment. However, she fears that she will not be able to exercise that right will ultimately end up "contributing their share to the national crime problem, and thereby creating a problem," i.e. consider that to be a personal affair. If Miss
Francke
To the Editor:
As a black person, I need obligated to respond to Ann G. Franke's letter (Dec. 5). It contains certain implications which, if allowed to go unauthorized, could prove to be dangerous.
Miss Francie has got it all mixed up. We didn't initiate the process of bringing shame and no one is going to occupy the lower rungs o: society's ladder and struggle to make a living doing jobs that no one else can do. I realize that they are there because their progress has been blocked by this racist society—"challenge, fulfillment and happiness" in scrubbing floors and cleaning toilets. (I would choose not to brother who, if given a chance to rise from one of these positions, would pass it up.) The shame of being forced to work as a junior in an art school with white-created Stepin Fetchit stereotype of the drawing, foot-shuffling, cremoid nigger who was suited for any other type of work.
Francke really feels this way, maybe she should go out and round up some cohorts with her, but the chapter of the KuiXu Kian I am certain that she would agree that this would be the best way of "dealing" with organizations that have become THE ZC and the Black Student Union.
Jonathan L. Parker Kansas City, Mo.. Freshman
Stone
To the Editor:
Kenneth D. Stone's letter to the Editor (Nov. 29) misinterpreted the reason for my favoring someone from the academic side of a university and tried to position at the position of Athletic Director and for opposing the appointment of a coach or former athlete with views of a good athletic program: "1) (financial success and national status)" versus "2) (the interests of the individual athlete, not the interests of the team) interprets my remarks as being in favor of (1) and says that he is in favor of (2). He writes, "athletics for athletes, not for teams; or the Treasurer's office."
I agree with Mr. Stone, albeit I would like to say "athletics are for students" instead of "athletics are for athletes." It is this very agreement which the Athletic Director or coach former coach as Athletic Director. My experience with coaches has led me to believe
that they are much more apt to be established in a national reputation than they are toward looking out for the interests of the individual.
Of course, it can be argued that the coaches do look out for the athletics' interests. After all, they are interested in training table, housed in the athletic dorm, overly paid with athletic scholarships, coverage of sports facilities, advised by athletic counselors, taught by athletic tutors, diagnosed and treated by athletic professionals. Occasionally they have test scores and grades falsified by Assistant Coaches. Also, there is a corps of drugged (steroids), stimulants and pain killers) by athletic druggists. At some schools, the assistant investment goes so far as to ask athletes to sex. At the University of Florida, for example, "Gator Getters" (a special squad of girls) are an integral part of their efforts to recruit athletes.
Coaches say that all of this builds character. Behavioral scientists, on the other hand, say they don't. In general, if of character—it tends to create an unhealthy dependence relationship. I agree with the behavior of these students because a program is bad for the students. Further, I think that a coach is more likely to perpetuate this kind of program than someone from the academic side of the school. There is no reason, among others, I am
opposed to a coach, former coach, or any other jock being named Athletic Director.
Mr. Stone also admonishes me for using "invasive invertebrates." I assume he is referring to my use of a term that I cannot term to be an invasive. Just as I take it as a compliment when jocks call me an "egg head," I assume that they take it as a form of egg heads call them "jocks."
Robert R. Sterling
Arthur Young Distinguished
Professor
Bubb
To the Editor:
I am sending you a copy of my letter to Regent Henry Bubb the founder of Incinlab. If the letter sounds angry, that is only because it is.
As a devoted graduate of the University of Kansas, I care a great deal about the future of this department. My first job was sequentially, I was shocked that Laurence Chalmers, a fine administrator with whom I enjoyed working in 1971-72, was removed office because of his divorce.
By that standard of obsolete morality, Senator Dole should be impeached. But perhaps his politics are more in agreement with the power structure of Senators, who appear to be veiled, if not overt, enemies of the University.
Refer to your recent statement on the appointment of Mr. Nielsen, as well as Mr. Nichols is undoubtedly a fine man, but he is not the best candidate for the position nor is the chancellorship some kind of reward based solely on a period of University service as you implied by your com-
Over the years, you have consistently revealed your ignorance of the University's role in behalf of the interests of the University of Kansas would have best been served if you rather than passed.
Marilyn Mitchell, Ph.D. Kansas University, 1972
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
America's Facemaking
college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas Press in Kansas City, Missouri. Subscription required. Mail subscription to an advertisement $100. Yield 3 months. Offer may be extended for employment advertised to all of our regional offices. Offer expires on national origin. Oriental express, are available at the University of Kansas at the State University of Kansas.
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PEACE ON EARTH
GOOD-WILL TO MEN
Universal Press Syndicate 1977
Tuesday, December 12, 1972
5
University Daily Kansan
Final Exam Schedule
The final exam schedule for all Monday-
Wednesday-Friday classes is: 7:30 a.m.
classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday Dec. 16; 8:10
a.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday Dec. 16;
9:10 a.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday Dec. 21;
10:30 a.m. classes, 9 to noon Thursday Dec. 14;
11:30 a.m. classes, 9 to noon Monday
Dec. 18; 12:30 p.m. classes, 9 to noon
Wednesday Dec. 19; 10:30 p.m. classes, 2 6
to 5 p.m. Thursday Dec. 21; 10:30 p.m.
classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday Dec. 21; 3:30
p.m. classes, 7 to 10 p.m. Friday Dec. 15; 4:30
p.m. classes, 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday Dec. 14.
The final exam schedule for Tuesday
Dec. 19; 8:10 a.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Friday
Dec. 15; 8:30 a.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Friday
Dec. 15; 9:30 a.m. classes
Gould Receives Delay of Trial
The trial of Randolph Gould, Overland Park senior, who is charged with illegal possession of an explosive device and设备 has been continued until 1:30 p.m. Jan. 18.
The trial was continued Monday morning at a hearing in the offices of Doug County Sheriff's Office.
ate 1972
Gould is charged in connection with a pipe bombing incident May 14, 1970, at the home of the county attorney at that time, Daniel Young.
a.m. classes, 9 to noon Thursday Dec. 21;
10 a.m. classes, 2 to p.m. Monday Dec. 21
FINALS FOR Tuesday-Thursday classes are as follows: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 13; 19:30 a.m. to 10:50 a.m. classes, 9 to noon Thursday Dec. 14; 11 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 15; 11 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. classes, 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday Dec. 14; 11 p.m. to 2:20 p.m. classes, 9 to noon Tuesday Dec. 19; 1:30 p.m. classes, 9 to noon Tuesday Dec. 19; 1:30 p.m. classes, 9 to noon Friday Dec. 15; 1:30 p.m. classes, 9 to noon Friday Dec. 15; 1:30 p.m. classes, 7 to 10 p.m. classes, 7 to 10 p.m. classes, 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday Dec. 19; 1:40 p.m. classes, 9 to noon Tuesday Dec. 19.
Exceptions to the above schedule are:
French 1 and 2; German 1 and 2; Italian 1 and 2;
Belgium 1 and 2; Sweden 10 p.m. Wednesday Dec. 20. In case of conflict, the language listed first follows the schedule; the language listed second follows the special examination at a different time.
ENGLISH 1 and 66, 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday Dec. 13; Physics 1, 2, ZH, 7, 8, and 16, 7 to 10 p.m. Monday Dec. 18; Biology 1, 9 to noon Saturday Dec. 14; Civil Engineering 1, 8 to noon Saturday Dec. 13; If a student is enrolled in both English 1 and or 66 and civil engineering 63 or 64, civil engineering arranges another schedule.
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Sociology 1 and 2, 7 to 10 p.m. Monday Dec. 18. If a student is enrolled in one of the above listed physics courses and sociology 1 or 2, sociology arranges another exam.
| | G | A | R | R | A | R | D | | | S |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | U | | | | K | L | H |
| | C | | | | D | U | A | L | | U |
| | R | | | P | I | O | N | E | E | R |
| P | A | N | A | S | O | N | I | C | | E |
| | I | | | T | | | | | | |
| B | G | | V | E | R | I | T | A | S | |
| A | | D | E | N | O | N | | | B | S | R |
| S | K | Y | L | I | N | E | | | | O |
| F | | | | I | | | | | | T |
| | 9 | 2 | 8 | C | R | O | W | N | | E |
| | | | M | A | S | S | | | | L |
Computer science 16 and 10, nine to 9o
Wednesday Dec. 13. If a student is enrolled
in computer science 18 or 10 and a 4:30
a.m. class, computer science arranges another class.
SEE US FOR THE SOLUTION
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NAISMITH HALL—
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Civil ENGINEERING I, 2, 50, 51, 52 and 75, 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday Dec. 30. If a student is enrolled in both a language and civil engineering arranges another exam.
合
Math 21, 22 and 23, 2 to 5 p.m. Friday Dec.
15. If a student is enrolled in both a 7:30
Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday course and the
math courses, math arranges another exam.
Psychology 1, 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday Dec.
14. If a student is enrolled in both a 4:30
Wednesday-Friday class and
Psychology 1, Psychology arranges another exam.
Intensive English, 2 to 5 p.m. Thursday Dec. 14. If a student is enrolled in an intensive English and a 12:30 Tuesday-fulfillment intensive English arrangements another exam.
Firemen continued to look for clues Monday to the cause of the fire and explosion Sunday morning at the pharah college. The University of Kansas west campus.
Lab Fire Investigation to Continue; No Evidence of Arson Uncovered
Items damaged in the incident will be taken to referral laboratories for analysis in an attempt to determine the cause of the fire. Lawrence Fire Department, said Monday.
A fire department investigator failed to uncover any new information Monday morning, he said, and a sifting of the ashes has revealed no evidence of arsenon.
Sanders said that he had called State Fire Marshal Robert Wolf Monday morning, but investigators from that office would not investigate the fire until sometime today.
The fire, which caused an estimated $175,000 damage, was reported at 3:30 a.m. by a passerby who noticed the flames. Brian had the fire under control within an hour.
The fire was confined to one of six individual laboratories in the building, Sanders said, but the explosion of a small gas bottle caused damage to the other laboratories.
The building is owned by the Inter-X Co. which is located on land leased from the KU Euston facility.
The contents of the refrigerator, other than a bottle of ether, were not known, he said. It has not been determined whether there was a chemical reaction or whether the explosion caused the fire.
materials in the building, Civil Defense officials were called to the scene. A refrigerator that contained radioactive materials was not damaged. Sanders said.
Because of the presence of radioactive
The director of the building, Takeru Higuchi, professor of chemistry and pharmacy, estimated that about two-thirds of the $175,000 damage was to the building. The rest was in its contents. The building, Higuchi said, is valued at $650,000 and its contents at $150,000.
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Tuesday, December 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
1972 Record Albums: Few Display Talent
By JOE ZANATTA
Kansan Reviews Editor
The majority of record albums produced in 1972 fell into the category of medicine, if not art. And these big-name artists failed to produce anything that would have gained any notice at all, had it not been for the artists' previous achievements. There were, however, a few who were more successful.
Alice Cooper had three albums on the charts during 1972, "Killer," School's On, and "The Lonely Song."
Of the three, "Killer" was Alice Cooper's best. The album included the single hits "Under My Wheels," "Be My Lover" and "Dead Babies." The most spirited performances, on record and in concert, in 1972 came from Alice Cooper.
"THE MAN WHO Sold the World" by David Bowie was one of the best albums to follow in the wake of Alice Cooper's success. Bowie combined the dramatic presentation and lyrics of Alice Cooper with music similar to Cream.
Emerson, Lake and Palmer produced their best album to date with "Trilogy." "From the Beginning," the band's first single, gained the attention of AM radio, and the band's mixture of classical and rock music appeased FM audiences.
Keith Emmerson turned in the most outstanding keyboard performances of 1972, and made the Moog Synthesizer an intricate part of many bands.
Musically, Yes almost matched the performances of Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The vocal harmonies of Yes gave the group a more-balanced sound than Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Yes suffered only from a lack of material.
"CLOSE TO THE EDGE," the group's latest release was not as good as their two previous albums, "Fragile" and "The Yes Album."
The Rolling Stones dropped a notch in quality in 1972 and ironically gained in popularity.
"Exile on Main Street," the Stones' latest release was way below par for the group. "Jamming with Edward," a collection of studio jam sessions by the group, was poorly recorded, poorly performed and the poorest product of the group's entire career.
The Jefferson Airplane, another group dating back to the mid-1960's, seems to be slowly falling into oblivion. After "Volunteers," the group's best offering, a string of mediocre albums were produced, including "Sunfighter," "Blows Against the Empire," "Bark" and "Long John Silver," their latest release.
FROM THE CRASHING Jefferson Airplane or a splinter group, Hut Uma, in 1932.
One of the groups that managed to make a back-come in 1972 was Led Zeppelin. After a successful run, they produced "Led Aappelin IV" and regained most of its lost success. The album featured hard rock cuts, such as "Black Dog" and "Earthworm," with unique number numbers, such as "Stairway to Heaven."
Over the past few years Jethro TUH has managed to turn out a string of consistently good albums; "Thick as a Brick," "Analuah," "Benefit" and "Stand Up."
Jethro Tull continued to gain success in 1972. The band's latest release was "Iiving in the Past," a collection of old and new music live at performances and in the studio.
NEW JIIMI HENDRIX records kept popping up in 1972, the majority of those on off-brand labels and recorded before the Jimi Hendrix Experience band. Most were performed with Hendrix's initial four albums remaining the best available.
Stephen Stills produced "Mansassas," his best offering to date. It is a combination of styles acquired by Stills, such as folk-rock, Latin-rock, rock'n'roll and country-.
The band with a law firm name, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, split during 1972, combined in mix-and-match style, split, combined and continued to produce good records.
"Graham Nash - David Crossby" was a combination of two talents, but lacked the force of Crossby's solo effort. "If I Could Be You," the song from Nash's solo album "Songs for Beginners."
NEIL YOUNG seemed to emerge as the strongest of the foursome, "Harvest," "After the Goldrush" and "Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere" rode high on the charts, and his first album "Neil Young," was re-discovered.
All four albums display Young's exceptional talent as a songwriter, although in musical content the albums range from folk to rock to svmhvmb-backed presentations.
The comedy album found new success in 1972. Leader in this field was George Carlin, who produced "Class Clown" and "FM-AM." Carlin won his young audience with a serious look at big business, government, television, radio and religion.
Close on the heels of Carlin were Chlew and Chong, who found an audience in a drug culture. "Big Bambu" was the duet's hit record in 1972.
Woody Allen Humor Now in Paperback
Kansan Reviews Editor
By JOE ZANATTA
After "Take the Money and Run," "Bananas" and "Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex," it seems only fair that Woody Allen should temporarily halt his bombardment of the film industry and take aim on a new target. "Getting Even" (Warner, 95 cents) is Woody Allen's assault on the literary domain.
THE MAJORITY of "Getting Even" is funny, although Allen does occasionally get too abstract and strains even his loyalist fan.
"Getting Even" is a collection of "pieces" written by Woody Allen—all for magazines such as The New Yorker, The New York Times and a few that were privately unpublished.
"A look at Organized Crime" is one of the best bits from the book. It's Allen's own defense of the Mafia. It may not be as accurate or police records but it definitely funnier
The book opens with "The Mattering Lists." This is a review of the long-awaited Hank Metterling laundry list collection. It's typical Woody Allen humor, centering on a construction of man's life by the number of black socks that were worn during a week.
Cool Jazz To Play February 9
"Weather Report," a jazz ensemble, will perform in concert at the University of Kansas Feb. 9, according to Dan Mayo, Fairway junior and SIUA board member.
The ensemble consists of Josef Zawelin (keyboards), Wayne Sorter (reeds), Miraislav Vituos (bass), Erik Gravatt (drums) and Um Drom Uomara (percussion).
The group has released two albums, "The Report" and "I Sing the Body Already."
"Weather Report" features "an extremely progressive jazz sound on the lines of what people experienced with the Mahavishnu Orchestra," Mayo said Monday. "In fact, when SUA tried to bill them with the Mahavishnu Orchestra we were advised not to because the two groups didn't want to compete."
The committee for the concert was selected last week. General chairman will be Dave Agazarian, Lawrence, Mass., third-year law student. Other committee members are Howard Clark, Moline, III., sophomore; Bergin Brown, Kansas City, MA.; John Burcham, Kansas City, Kan.; sophomore; Terry C. Boneil, Shawnee Mission mission; Brian Littman, Prairie Village freshman; and Randy Cummins, Mulvane sophomore.
"Spring Bulletin" is another interesting creation. It's a list of courses from a college summer session. If you think you've seen some odd courses, try "Philosophy I—Introduction to God" or a comparative William Beamer Yeats and dental hygiene.
Woody Allen also demonstrates his knowledge of philosophy, providing the necessary double-talk and conclusions such as "The universe is merely a feeding idea in God's mind,—a pretty uncomfortable thought, particularly if you've just made a mistake." This wisdom and much more is included under appropriately called "My Philosopher."
ALSO INCLUDED is the history of the Earl of Sandwich and his marvellous invention, a detective's search for a missing God and notes on Nazi Germany.
The funniest "piece" in the book is "Ivac Vargas." It is the diary of a revolutionary and may have been the basis for the movie "Bananas."
So, if you enjoyed "Take the Money and Run," "Bananas" and "Everything You Wanted to Know About Sex," "Getting Even" is the chance you've been waiting for to sink a little deeper into sickness and insanity.
Reappearing on the paperback shelves is
"How to Talk Dirty and Influence Press"
(Playboy Press, $1.25). The book is an
example of the first underground, paper-
covered library.
Bruce also tells how time after time he was busted on fake drug charges. His story is a convincing one until the final chapter is read. It was added, after Bruce's death in 2015, a heroin overdose. This type of death does not occur with drugs. Bruce's earlier defense of his drug arrest.
BRUCE'S LIFE was one hassle after another. He was booked into clubs and police stations on a reputation of talking dirty. But as exerts from Bruce's routines show, it was not the dirty talk that made his humor, but an ability to hit at the heart of a subject never before discussed by comedians.
However, Bruce's influence on comedy should not be overlooked. His influence on today's subculture comedians such as Adam and George Carlin can be clearly told in *Dirty*, *Dirty* and *Influence People" may be a little dated but has lost none of its power.
Traffic and Security Studies Alleged Rape
A reported rape of a University of Kansas coed Sunday morning in Ellsworth Hall is being investigated by KU Traffic and Security.
The 18-year-old girl told officers that a black male entered her room about 5 a.m. while she was asleep and raped her. The officer, who had five dollars when he demanded money.
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Tuesday, December 12. 1973
7
Missouri Frees Some on No Bond
By MARGE LEVIT
Kansan Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
A federally-funded program that would permit persons accused of crimes to be released on their own recognition instead of having to post bond while they were awaiting trial was announced in success by the man responsible for conducting it in Kansas City, Mo.
Holman said that almost all of the accused who were released without bond later resumed their work.
James G. Holman, regional administrator of the Missouri probation and parole department said, "Our success rate so far is ? per cent."
"Between Sept. 1, 1971 and Sept. 1, 1972 we investigated 788 people charged with crimes. Of that number, the court released defendants on their own recognition," he said.
Most of those released could not afford to post bond and would have had to remain in prison.
OUR "hOR program (release on
Nov. 28, 2013) saved 24,400 jal days."
Holmum.sald.
That amounts to $137,115 saved the taxpayers, based on jail officials' estimate of $5.50 per day for keeping a man in the Jackson County jail.
The ROR program enabled those released to continue working to support their families and to lead fairly normal lives. Conditions in the Jackson County jail have prevented such an increase in investigatory groups. They have condemned occurrences of rape and inmate beatings.
Jail officials report that there are now 35 prisoners in custody. Only 44 of them were charged.
Professional bondmen usually charge a fee of 10 per cent of the bond for putting up a bond. A fee of 25 per cent is charged.
Ohio Man Is Arraigned In Lawrence
Howard Rose, 28, one of two Akron, Ohio, men charged with shooting a man in the Elk's Club parking lot Oct. 18, was arraigned Friday in Douglas County District Court on charges of aggravated battery, kidnaping and aggrivated robbery. He was scheduled to appear Feb. 2 for setting of a trial date.
The other man, Stanley Swistak, 25, was scheduled for trial in Douglas County District Court Jan. 22. Both men have pleaded not guilty.
The men allegedly kidnapped George and his family in Kansas City, Kan., but he had offered them a ride. The men then allegedly forced him to go on a plane that killed him from the front and shot him in the head.
The men were apprehended Oct. 19 in Salina, where an off-duty policeman recognized the car from descriptions sent out by Lawrence police.
whole amount, if the defendant fails to appear for trial. If the defendant does show up in court, the bondman gets his money and returns, however, does not get his fee refunded.
A NEW LAW, passed by the last session of the Missouri legislature, will ease the financial strain for some defendants. The law, called the Balk Reform Act, authorizes the court to release a person on a direct payment of 10 per cent of the bond and to refrain from taking any action that the provision will curtail the business of the professional bondsman.
Coupled with the 10 per cent provisio in the new law is one making it a criminal offense to skip bond, punishable by imprisonment of up to five years.
For the man with no money, the 10 per cent proviso is not much help. His hope lies in getting it.
The program began in Kansas City, M., in September 1971 with a one-year grant of $22,000 from the federal Law Enforcement Assistance Administration.
The Missouri probation and parole department put up an additional $13,000, mostly in space and supplies, to meet a matching funds requirement. The ROR staff includes two full-time investigators and supervisory personnel.
ALTOHUG SCHEDULU to end September 1972, the program was able to obtain enough additional federal money to carry it through to the end of this year. Before the end of this year, the pre-trial investigations had been made by the Jackson County Parole Board.
Holman said that the ROR staff received daily reports from the prosecuting attorney's office, so that the staff was aware of what cases were scheduled for arraignment in the four criminal divisions of the Circuit Court.
The results of these investigations are then made available to the four judges who preside, on a six-month rotating basis, over the criminal divisions.
Investigators fill out a four-page evaluation form for each defendant, along with any information required. Points are given for length of residence in the area, family ties and employment. Points are deducted for a prior record of unmet needs, or proof that the requirement is not required to get an ROR recommendation.
HOLMAN SAID that the recommendation was just that, a recommendation. It is up to the presiding judge to make the determination, he said. The recommendations are used primarily by the circuit court judges.
At the magistrate (lower) court level, there is less time for investigation between arrest and arraragment, although it may be necessary to lower to release defendants on resuppression.
Magistrate Judge Robert W. Berley III of the 4th District, an advocate of the program, said, "I release defendants on the grounds that we violate when I think the situation, wargirls it."
One indicator he uses is a check of the local police computer which contains previous arrest and conviction records of all persons in this area.
If a person is arrested and unable to make
bond he could up to six months in jail*
"NEW YORK CITY criminal trial courts are as much as three four years behind," said the judge.
Circuit Court Judge Paul E. Vardeman said the ROR idea had been used in the Kansas City area for about five years. It is a fairly new concept which stems from the work begun about 10 years ago by the Vera Institute of Justice in New York City. Judge Vardeman said he seldom used ROR when crimes of violence were concerned.
before his case comes to trial in a Jackson County Court Court. Compared to other cases, the
Since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against the death penalty earlier this year, the "capital" description is open to re-imprepitation. However, imprisonment can be less punitive than bond. The only limit is that the bond must be "reasonable," Vardeman said.
He also said that under Missouri law, some crimes were not bondable. Technically, a person accused of a capital crime (a crime for which the death penalty can be invoked) can be held without bond until trial, he said. In Missouri, this category includes murder, robbery, rape and treason.
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Single LP's and up to 8 Record Sets by the World's Most Famous Composers and Artists. Here's some examples (SAVINGS UP TO 50%)
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Besthoven Nine Symphonies 8 Record Set
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An Anthology of Folk Music 5 Record Set
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Gerry Mulligan Lorea Nyro Otis Redding Count Bas
William Steinberg Leadbury Bill Evans Montona Mowtay
Ahmed Jamin Gilem Ramsey Larry Levine
8
Tuesday, December 12, 1972
University Daily Kansan
Suttle, 3 Reserves Spark Win
'Hawks Outfight Musketeers, 61-54
By DON PFANNENSTIEL
Kansan Sports Writer
Sophomore center Rick Suttle's consistent scoring and the aggressive play of three reserves sparked the University of Kansas basketball team to a victory over Xavier, 61-54. Monday night before a sparse crowd of 8,000 at Aloft Field House.
Senior Dale Hase and sophomore Mike Fiddelk, both forwards, came off the bench in the first half and combined for 14 points. Then in the second half when KU fell behind, guard Dave Taylor entered the game and hit three clutch field goals to give the Jayhawks the lead again and the victory.
During this time Suttle was scoring 26 points, which made him the game's leading scorer. It was the second straight game in which Suttle led all scores.
Xavier grabbed the lead at the start and at one time in the first half led by as many as six points as the 'Hawks' play was characterized by frequent mistakes and lack of aggressiveness. KU took the lead at the 1:43 mark when Suttle hit an eight-foot
'Hawks Need Concentration, Owens Says
By BRETT MARSHALL Kansan Sports Writer
Coach Ted Owens sat back in his office chair, somewhat relaxed and pleased yet still on edge about the play of his Kansas Jayhawk basketball team.
"We knew Wawer was going to be a fine defender," Owens said; and they did play good defense.
At times it seemed evident that the Jayhawks were taking the Muskeetees lightly. They came out at the start of the contest and promptly fell behind.
The young 'Hawks had just defeated a stabbon and very slager after team 61-64.
"WE'RE no in position to take anyone lightly," Owens said. "We need more concentration on the court. The situation is hard to analyze. We hope to correct it by the time the Jayhawk Classic rolls around this week."
Owens said the team did not play a great game but did play soundly enough to win.
jump hatch. KU scored again before the half ended and went to the dressing room.
One other aspect that brought a big smile from Owens was the strength displayed by the Jayhawk bench. Reserves Dale Haase, 36, and his teammate, Dave Taylor combined to toss in 26 points.
Rick Suttle had another outstanding game as pumped in 26 points to lead the Jayhawks.
"I WAS VERY pleased to see them come in and do such an outstanding job," owens says. "It is always pleasing for a coach to know. He will get to know his starters are not getting the job done."
One obvious need for improvement in the Jayhawk attack is more scoring punch.
"Rick is getting better with each game he plays," Owens said. "He is taking the good percentage shots and he is passing off well to his teammates."
"WE NEED to get better movement away from the ball," Owens said. "This opens up the whole attack and then we will get more shooting from our players."
For the first time this season, the Jayhawks enjoyed a rebounding edge over their opponents. They grabbed **df** 33 wins while the Musketeers hauled down **27**.
"We still not fast breaking as well as we want to," Owens said. "We have to communicate then than we would like to rebounding and we prevents us from running the break."
KU Victorious In Volleyball
The University of Kansas men's volleyball team, posting a perfect 12-0 record, swift to a first-plain finish in the 'B' division of the Truman Town Friendship Tournament Saturday in Independence, Mo.
In the second half the Musketeers held KU scoreless for five minutes and jumped into the lead, 39-35, with 13:43 left in the game. Then Tayner connected for two key field points. Hawks scored eight straight points and regained the lead, 44-39, at the 9:48 mark.
For a while it looked as if KU was going to blow Xavier right off the court when the 'Hawks opened up a 10-point second-half lead. Even though only three minutes remained, the determined Musketeers did not quitfighting and narrowed the gap to six behind the shooting and play of forward Connarry Warren.
The volleyball team travels to
Independence again next Saturday for the Mo-
kale.
K-State Wins
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP)—Kansas State jumped out to an early lead and then coasted to a 76-82 victory over North Texas State in basketball Monday night.
The 16th-ranked Wildcats roared to a 10-2 lead in the first four minutes, and *E* Eagles never recovered. KSState exp $A$ the margin to 40-28 at halftime.
The closest North Texas State came in the second half was 93-58 with three minutes
KU's play in the second half was not the type the fans like to see. With four minutes in the game KU began to spread out its offensives and stalled for more than two minutes.
Steve Mitchell, a 6-foot-10 senior, hit 10 of 14 from the field for 20 points to spark the Wildcat offense.
Statistically, the game was probably more pleasing to KU coach Ted Owens than any of the previous games. The Jayhawks led Xavier in every statistical category.
The most pleasing aspect of the game had to be KU's dominance on both the offensive and defensive boards. The 'Hawks outmanned Xavier 33-27 in the rebounding department and outshooting the Muskeeteers 48 to 44 per cent.
Besides Suttle, the only other man scoring
in double figures for KU was Haase, who shot in 10 shots before fouling out with 9/12 left in the game. Although junior plankyman Tom Kivomi only had one point and shot only once from the field, his seven assists led the KU offense.
Coach Dick Campbell's Musketeers, who had been shooting more than 50 per cent from the field per game fell considerably off their average Monday night, when they shot only 33 per cent in the second half after shooting a blistering 57 per cent in the first
★ ★ ★
KANSAS (61)
| | fg-ign | ff-ign | rob | pf | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Barrow | 0 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 0 |
| Smith | 0-4 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 0 |
| Smith | 1.5-4 | 1.5 | 3 | 4 | 26 |
| Greenees | 1.5-4 | 3.5 | 4 | 3 | 16 |
| Viroto | 1-4 | 2-4 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Hai | 6-11 | 1-4 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Plibkee | 4-4 | 1-3 | 8 | 0 | 5 |
| Plibkee | 4-4 | 1-3 | 8 | 0 | 5 |
| Total | 3.5-4 | 1.5 | 13 | 32 | 61 |
| Total | 64.1 | 11.6 | 21 | 31 | 11 |
half.
| | fg/fa | fg/fa | reb | pf | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Accesta | 10 | 6.9 | 12 | 12 | 12 |
| Warren | 5-10 | 6.9 | 9 | 12 | 12 |
| Fulbronar | 7-11 | 4.4 | 4 | 14 | 18 |
| Falconer | 6-11 | 4.4 | 4 | 14 | 18 |
| Franklin | 4-8 | 0.0 | 1 | 5 | 8 |
| Ripper | 4-8 | 0.0 | 1 | 5 | 8 |
| Ripper | 1-4 | 0.0 | 2 | 4 | 2 |
| Dearfordor | 1-4 | 0.0 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
| Dearfordor | 0-0 | 0.1 | 1 | 4 | 2 |
| Diedrick | 0-1 | 0.1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Diedrick | 0-1 | 0.1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| Percentages | 43.8 | 18.4 | 18.7 | 27 | 54 |
| | fg/fa | fg/fa | reb | pf | tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Percentages | 43.8 | 18.4 | 18.7 | 27 | 54 |
XAVIER (54)
Kavier . . . . . . . . . . . 39 25 — 54
Kansas . . . . . . . . . . . 39 25 — 61
Turnovers—Kansas, 16; Xavier, 15;
Attendance- 5,000
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Despite KU's advantage in the rebounding category, the team still lacked what Owens called "a consistent rebounder." The leading man for the Jayhawks was senior Wilson Barrow who pulled down eight for KU.
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The next action for the Jayhawks will be Friday night when they face the Texas Tech Red Raiders in the second game of the fourth annual Jayhawk Classic. Army will face San Francisco in the preliminary contest. The winners of each game will play the other Saturday night at 9:05 p.m. for the championship.
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Dr. George Ballou, the team physician, told a news conference at Christ Hospital that Bench will be hospitalized for a week to 10 days and should make a complete recovery within about eight weeks.
Bench, whose 25th birthday was last Thursday, was listed in good condition.
CINCINNATI (AP)—Cincinnati slugger Johnny Bench, the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1970 and 1972, underwent surgery Monday for removal of what the Reds' team physician termed a benign lesion on his right lung.
had been "less complicated than anticipated" and lasted slightly more than two hours.
If that prediction holds true, Bench would be ready for the opening of baseball spring training in late February.
Bench Has Surgery
Ballou said the surgery, performed by Dr. Luis Gonzalez, Bench's personal physician,
25th birthday was last Thursday, was驻足 in good condition. The lesion was the fissure between the lower and upper lumen of the right lung," Ballou said, "and as a consequence, it was only necessary to remove a small amount of lung tissue."
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Beer Policy in Union Under Regents' Thumb
The recent proposal to allow the sale of beer in the Kansas Union is one of similar proposals involving beer and the University. However, the question is not as compelling as it seems because more than 10 years ago, according to Frank Burge, union director.
The University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Board of Directors adopted a proposal Dec. 2 requesting a modification in the law that would allow government policy to allow the sale of beer in the Union.
Beer now may be brought into the Union for certain activities, but the Union management cannot sell beer, a policy initiated late 1971.
The proposal to allow the sale of beer in the Union has been submitted to Chancellor Raymond Nichols to be presented to the Council of Presidents of the state schools. The policy also must be approved by the Board of Regents.
Burge said he preferred not to comment on whether he thought the regents would be allowed to vote.
"THE UNION BOARD members voted unanimously to approve and to recommend the modification, because they have found the present policy to be cumbersome," Burge said. "The frustrations resulting from it perhaps exceed the benefits."
Last October the regents voted unanimously to prohibit the sale of beer in the Union. At the same time they said that 3.2 per cent beer could be "be permitted under authorized and appropriately controlled alcohol". This was amended by the administrator of each school."
BEFORE THE regents' action, former Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., said that the majority of the regents thought the school's student body was by the administration of each state school.
The controversy over selling beer in the Union has cooled down over the last few years, Burge said. It used to be a big issue, be said, but is low-key now.
KU students were in favor of the selling of
KU Offers Study Tours In England
The KU department of foreign study is sponsoring a summer institute in England, June 23 to Aug. 18, 1973, which will include the study at the Universities of Oxford and Extremley.
"Tours to Bath, Wells and Stratford, and one week each in Paris and London will be required." Foreign students foreign study adviser said recently. "The course will trace the development and growth of England and their importance for American culture.
The program is open to undergraduates and graduates from any accredited US college or university who have at least sophomore standing.
Thurston Moore, associate professor of English; Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history and associate dean of Liberal Arts, and Henry L. Snyder, professor of history and director of the Summer Institute in England, will instruct the course.
The course offers six hours of credit in humanities. An option is available that will enable students to elect up to three of the credits to be taken in history. A similar option may be available for English and art history.
Hertzell said that the main reason for the England program was to enable departments without a foreign language emphasis and students an experience of living abroad.
The department of foreign study offers summer institutes in various foreign countries.
Universities Dispensing Risky Pills
WASHINGTON (AP)—Many university health centers are prescribing what could be a cancer-causing drug as "morning-after" birth-control pills without warning of its risk to themselves and their possible offspring. The Health Research Group reported Monday.
*College women are being used as guinea pigs, without even the most rudimentary observance of professional standards and the official organization said in a letter to the National Secretary.*
The use of diethylstilbestrol (DES) as a post-coral pill is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration, the report said, and may increase the risk of cancer in women with a family history of breast or genital cancer.
Under labeling requirements established by the FDA, use of DES is inadvisable for the manufacture or sale of these products.
In addition, DES is not 100 per cent effective in preventing pregnancy within 72 hours of sexual intercourse and daughters born to mothers who took the drug face a real risk of developing vaginal cancer at puberty, it said.
Dr. Marion Finkel, deputy director of the FDA's Bureau of Drugs, said the government had been aware for the last year of the widespread popularity of DES as a morning-after contraceptive and hoped to resolve the question within a few weeks.
the report mentioned only the University of Michigan and Pennsylvania when DES is in session.
beer in the Union, according to surveys taken several years ago. Students voted overwhelmingly for the sale of beer in a referendum in spring. 1970.
Other previous attempts at gaining the Regents approval included Student Senate resolutions and formation of committees to study the question. Between 1982 and 1987, two studies were started and dropped with no results formulated.
KANSAS STATUTES do not prohibit the sale of 3.2 per cent cereal malt beverage on state property. Also, the Kansas attorney general further strengthened the case for the ban, but it was not an alcoholic beverage, and was therefore not subject to the lour laws.
After careful review, the Lawrence City Commission voted to authorize the issuance of a new bond.
"Now the request is in administrative channels." Burge said.
Athletic Board Approves Contracts for 3 Coaches
New contract provisions for the coaches of the three major sports at the University of Kansas were approved by the KU athletic board at its year-end meeting Monday.
Head football coach Don Fambrough was given a two-year extension on his contract which was scheduled to expire the end of the season in terms of his contract were not disclosed.
Assistant football coaches were each
given $500 raise at Fambrough's
suggestion.
The board decided to offer, for the first time, contracts to head basketball coach Ted Owens and head track coach Bob Brown, who presently working under oral agreements.
The contracts for both coaches will begin on July 1, 1973 and will extend through fiscal 1976, which is a departure from the calendar year approach used for football contracts.
The board also analyzed the comptroller's report on KU athletic finances.
Eberhardt said the biggest plus was the $250,000 income from radio-television receipts. The board had only budgeted $140,000 from that source, he said.
"We are not living under our budget, but we will finish in the black for the fiscal year,"
"that means we won't have a debt."
Following the board meeting, the five board members of the search committee to find a new athletic director met to begin their discussions. Wade Winston, who resigned in November
CLIP & SAVE
CLIP & SAVE
Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman of the committee, said Monday night that the committee was making some progress and hoped to start interviews soon. However, he declined to say when. He said the committee wanted to get the "best man" and get it done as soon as possible.
TAKE A BREAK FROM THE BOOKS AND RELAX . . . WITH SOME OF THOSE FINE OLD FLICKS FROM THE GOLDEN AGE OF MOVIES as MAGIC LANTERN presents the FINALS WEEK FILM FESTIVAL
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10
Tuesday, December 12. 1972
University Daily Kansam
Lawrence Gets $226,803 From Fund Sharing Plan
Lawrence received its long-awaited first federal revenue sharing check Monday morning and City Clerk Vera Mercer said in the 2003 check she was "more than expected."
The check covers the first half of 1972 for Lawrence in President Nixon's $30 billion, five-year program of revenue sharing. City officials had expected a check for $177,500 this month when the Treasury Department recently noted that the checks would be mailed
Mercer said the unexpectedly large amount of money would probably not alter the total amount of $355,000 allotted to the university. The remainder of the remainder of the money next year.
She said she planned to deposit the check immediately in the First National Bank in a special fund recently authorized by the city commission for that purpose.
County officials were not as enbused over their share, however. The county received
Hearing Reset For Extradition In 'Pot' Case
An extradition hearing for Bradford D. Court was continued Thursday until Dec. 21.
The hearing is to determine if Charles will be returned to Pawnee County, Neb., where he is being charged on charges stemming from processing and sale of marijuana.
Charles and Susan Payton have been identified by Douglas County Sheriff Rex Johnson as the only claimants of the large house found October 5. on a farm south of Lawrence.
remain hazardous today as the weather forecast called for an accumulation of four inches of snow by morning and temperatures to remain in the low 20's.
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KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)—Singer James Brown and two aides were arrested on disorderly conduct charges early after a concert in Knoxville's Civic Coliseum.
Traffic and Security said Monday night that it had no reports of accidents on the highway.
Altercation Results In Singer's Arrest
Only one of the accidents resulted in injuries, however.
Jerrielle Diane Antunes, 19, Phoenix, Ariz., was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital for injuries sustained in a hit at 12:17 p.m. at Iowa and Kingston Road.
Dean Richard Childress of the St. Louis University School of Law will discuss the St. Louis law program at a meeting at 3:30 p.m. today in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Interviews with Childress will precede the meeting. Those people wishing an interview must sign up for an appointment in 208 Strong Hall.
Campus Briefs Law Program
Linguistics
The county will place the money in a special revenue sharing trust fund, which the commission devised at its Monday meeting and have been made for the money, however.
Testimonials
$172,547 in the mail Monday, which was nearly $40,000 less than expected.
The Christian Science Organization will meet at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. Testimonies and remarks will be given using divine intelligence in final exams.
A Linguistics Colloquy will be at 7:30 tonight in 109 Blake Hall. Speakers will be Albert Ecobar and Rose Morgan, who will lead the Ecobar-Rose Data for Language Planning in Peru."
Treasury officials said last week that state and local government officials should not be surprised if they received less than expected, because new formulas of determining revenue sharing have not been put into effect yet.
Use Kansan Classified
Faculty Forum
The Faculty Forum will be at noon Wednesday at the United Minneapolis Center, 246 N. University Place, or one of the Meninger Foundation, Lodge at Religion "on a 'A Psychology Logo' to Appeal."
At least 20 traffic accidents were reported to Lawrence police Monday as a combination of sleet and snow fell continuously in the area, causing road kinks and hazardous driving conditions.
Jan. 19 is the deadline for entering the 19th annual Kansas Designer Craftman Show to be held Feb. 18 through March 13 in the Kansas Union Exhibition Gallery. Competition is open to all past and present residents of Kansas and entries must be crafts created from such materials as wool, acrylic or fiberglass or additional information and entry forms may be obtained by writing the Design Department, Kansan Designer Craftman Show Committee, University of Kansas, or by calling 864-4400.
Three sanding trucks were on the streets and police said only one was up during the night.
Sleet Causes Perilous Driving
Women Voters
According to police reports, Antoness was sent onboard in Iowa when she lost control of a boat. She was rescued in New York.
The League of Women Voters will meet at 12:48 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Room at the University.
Driving conditions were predicted to
Craftsman Show
A new French class worth three hours of credit will be offered during the spring semester. French 100B, History of French movies, taught by Nicole Dupre, visiting students from Philadelphia, Mondays from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. The class will be conducted in French, with some discussion in English. The class is open to graduates and undergraduates.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 12, 1973
11
Club Drive For Faculty This Week
A membership drive for a University of Kansas Faculty Club will begin this week, Henry Snieder, associate dean of research at the University of Kansas Club's steering committee, said Monday.
The club is being formed for faculty, staff, alumni and friends of the University, acceptance
The club building is in the former Phi Kappa Tau fraternity house, 1120 W. 11th St. It is a spacious, intensive interior renovation to provide a large dining area, lounge areas, meeting rooms, game rooms, a library and a bar. The cost for modeling was $150,000.
According to Snyder, the remodeling cost would be paid by contributions from prospective members and by membership fees.
Snyder said he hoped to finish solliciting for contributions and memberships by January and to have the house ready for occupancy by Fall, 1973.
Interested faculty members have been working on plans for a faculty club since a summer of 1985. Snyder said, the former KM Club was. Snyder said he hoped to finish soliciting for contributions and memorials before the new house ready for occupancy by Fall, 1973.
Interested faculty members have been working on plans for a faculty club since a similar club was dissolved in the summer of 1968, Snyder said. The former KU Faculty Club was located in the KU Endowment Association.
Snyder said a club of this kind would be advantageous because it was important for faculty members to have a place where they could meet and interact with faculty members from other departments at the University.
The spacious house, situated on a two and one-half acre lot overlooking the Kaw River Valley, also would fill a real community need, said Snvder.
"We have always been concerned with the relations between the University and the community," said Snyder. "We are pleased that we are encouraged to participate in the university participating with us in the club."
Snyder said the club also would provide a place to entertain KU's guest speakers, legislators and regents who were on the campus.
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841-360-388
Must sell: 44 Rumber automatica. Brand new bat-
tle condition. $250 rumber condition. @84,250
rumber condition. @84,250
Four good tubeless w-m (Fifestion) tires 6.10x23.
Four are near new, Snoot tread and two regular
tires. Four have new tire sidewalls.
Also 2 new '6' x 14" steel wheels to Rit most GM
products. Great products! New snow traps on $125,
Architectural drawing set (Post) complete with
architectural designs (cheap). Call Dave. B6e-12-
12-12
(near campus).
Magnavox stereo component system includes 8
monitors, a keyboard, an Omni-Dial kit at Ray
Booths' and a monitor. Only one OTM at Ray
Booth's is needed for the system.
Magnavox headphones as low as $8 at Ray
Stoneback's 929 Mass. Open events. 12-12
Motorola four channel component sets as low as
12-18 Watt basement installation 12-12
929 Mass. Open evening
Diniscontinued. Magnavox component speakers.
Diniscontinued. Magnavox component speakers.
Basement stairs room. 929 Mass. Room. 12-12
Powerful 30 watt Magnavox component with air suspension speakers and AM-FM tuner. Sold new at $295. Used very well. Only $23 (other used for $79). $29. Ray) Shower Cap. Open evenings. 12-12
Maytag installs New CR14-14 snow tires
at the dealership. The price is $299,
$399, $599, or $799 (also $60-150 same price). Ray
Bentley's P FET ($1,800-$2,499) and Bentley's
P FET ($600-$899).
1900 VW. Two news tires, 78,000 miles. excel.
2005 VW. Two new tires and end of semester. Excel.
ask for Chk. III. 12-12
Final price cut! FO14 belted wide tire now
at Rocky Mountain 292 Miles. 12-18
at Ray Stonebound 329 Miles.
Complete stereo package $105.85 Electrophonic
driver, power supply, amp charger, guitar,
garrard controller, roll up cart and
tracking system.
Save $450 on a 1927 Tulum Spitfire. Only 6,000
for $2500. Bags 83-2660. 12-12
Puegger bicycle, excellent condition, extras, must
Call Gary. 841-312-12
Need to sell fast. %8 Opel (Kadetley) fault!
Need to sell fast. %8 Opel (Kadetley) fault!
cheap car plus cash. 843-506-1212
cheap car plus cash. 843-506-1212
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
Autohairy 12 chords, fairly new, includes instruction book. $40. Call after 6:00 at 843-0137.
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842-2233
9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f. Ramada Inn
7
- Locally owned and operated
Save $10 on a Fisher stereo package including a
Savestore 10 on a Fisher stereo receiver. F2 Fisher XP-55-2-way
speakers and a Fisher XP-20X-charge complete.
Speaker w/charger for price $359.00 + $12.00
White; 916 Mast.
Sonn 2005 bass amp, with 2 15 in. JBL, One
Gear, Sennheiser C850, Amplifier with
different Also. Custom Bass, Also. Amplifier
with
Original equipment- Diatom pickup 4 6.00x14
6-py white tire, 3.14 treads 6-LUG wheels
All four wheels, less than 80 miles, for All for $75, Call Bell at 854-292-1212 to come up I13D Jayhawk Towers 12-12
冰 skates: insulated black boot, Blades bare,
size 11; 842-4667. 12-12
1971. Honda scooter, two. Good condition, never
used. 3 feet. Two tires. Pro 3 wheels. 8 lbs. iron. 825-795 and 848-810
and 865-820.
Large ski boots, size 9'15, 5 buckle. Call 841-2433
12-12
Scotch and Audio magnetic blank cassette tapes.
00 min. $1.30, 10 min. $2.92, 12 min. $2.84-3416, 16-
3416.
Panasonic RS-765T tape recorder, 75. Phone #432-
8086. 12-12
Turquoise leather, authentic Indian hand cast
trinity. Trinity Leather, 17 W, 96h. 842-8310. 12-11
Antique cloth, 523 Main. Weston, Mo. Oceanside, NY 11264-5457. Vestido menino y adulto, for $100. Hire # 846-4454. Victory men's and women's suits, for $150. Hire # 944-4454. Victory women's suits, for $150. Hire # 944-4454. Victory men's and
Lattice speaker model 147. Works great.
Lattice speaker model 135. Works great.
A player played a guitar through a Lattice. come over and
FOR RENT
Nalmith Hall contract. Must sell. Name your call. Price Call, B41-3174. 12-12
Turtles, turtle, pumps, lumbar, dresses for men and women. Grosgrain fabric, order to box, color of fabric, flamingo, flamingo
140 Connet Callante, 4 door, bucket seats, 289
factory air, excellent condition. Bk 811-2374.
factory air, excellent condition. Bk 811-2374.
For rent to 4 responsible girls. Available Dec. 1.
Rent a room and 4 bedroom furnished apartment. Close
room with bathroom, kitchen, month plus utilities. Phone 842-8932 for 5 p.m.
and all days at Saturday and Sunday. At 927 Athens
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS! TIRD OF STEEPER CLIMBING! PARMING IN FAR-FLONG LOTS!
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking parked lot. Free: Cable TV, computer access, private bates, furniture available, ideal roommates. $95.00 Sante Apte, 1123 Irn, Apt. 9, phone 843-211-691
THALRIDGE (1, 11); and 2 bedroom apart-
ments. The thalrids are equipped with
kiln-ware, private bathrooms/bakery,
equipped laundry, refrigerator, freezer,
and dishwashing facilities.
Apartments, furnished clean, with wall to wall windows. Parking lots, street parking, borders KU and hear row lawns.
2 bed apartment, dt. dishwasher, util, paid except
ease. Close to campus. Furniture; $7/room; 814-306-967
CIRCLE REALTY
contact for something to rent? Contact C and I 3-807-4923, for 2 BR duplexes and 13 BR apartments start at $1000 a month. All are available for immediate use. After hours call grace Stright if not. **%511**
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now loading 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and unfurnished. Welcome to the heated room, heating and air, pool and laundry. Med Utilities include phone, Call 843-8290 see at 7147 W. wth. 19th, bsp.
MALLS OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE APART-
ment. Think possible in their beautiful apartments
and in their large rooms, shopping and school-Fraser Hall is only 10 minutes from the indoor game room, or just 45 minutes by your fireplace, for lesseing for second semester. Furnished or unfurnished. 2411 Louisiana. 843-852-9678. 12-12
Must rent duplex for second semester. It has a kitchen, living room downstairs and three bedroom upstairs. Fully air conditioned, quiet, fully furnished. If interested call 841-3230 or 843-9603. Bord 12-12
APP. FOR BRENT: 911 and Emery, bedroom furniture
kitchenware, 24-hour room service.
*perthatra: Call 841-3584 after 2 *
12:12
ATTENTION! APT AVAILABLE NOW- NO
CHECKING IN ATTENTION FASTER!
nursery, laundry facilities, $450 a day,
unlimited bathrooms!
Apt for rent 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large kitchen,
warehouse, studio. Call 818-2117. Peace. $249. 12:32
2 Bedroom spit in 4 place, to sableware. Renaissance
Room in 3 bedroom with en suite bathroom. MW16
MW15 MW14 MW13 MW12 MW11 MW10 MW9 MW8 MW7 MW6
MW5 MW4 MW3 MW2 MW1 MW0
Apartment for rent. Two bedroom, large new
room with two bathrooms. Parking
parked. 924 New Hampshire, 842-4024. 12-12
Homes for rent, 2 and 3 bedroom. Students more than welcome. 843-3600. If
All beautifully furnished
Shag carpets & draps
A large kitchen
Pold down & permanent beds
Built in desks & study lamps
In all buildings
Most have utilities paid
Free Cable TV + pest control - trash pick up
MEADOWBROOJ
Living in the best costs little more
70 Acres
24 One Bedroom $160 - $170.
Wide open spaces
Basketball center
Basketball
Walsh field
Softball areas
Golf fields
Day Care centers & pre-school
Day Care Center
Traffic fumes or noise
Pure air
FREE! First month rent deposit of $ 8.25/month.
First month payment of $ 49.00,
spring semester contact, Call 843-7257-3177.
Visit Beautiful Meadowbrook to compare & make your move to
Need to sublease a fully furnished 2 room app-
AC, swimming pool, big living room, $135-/
$145.0; $145.0 paid yoyens when you leave
Services, very close to shopping center, 12-12
5007.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
800 feet west of 15th & 16th
make your move to Meadowbrook
SUITE-LARE-LARGE 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment,
304-756-9899, Suite-LARE-LARGE, Available 1, quitting.
Suite-LARE-LARGE - 400-756-9899
Nicely furnished house available January 1, south west of New York City with range and apartment adjacent to street with range and parking.
JHAPINESS is living with friends in an establishment room and board from $45. Ask for Killip, $82. Room and board from $45. Ask for Killip, $82.
Over take contract for 2nd semester. Beautiful
2 bdm., 11b, bath spacious, in quiet 8 piec.
wes. stair waven. fireplace, complete kitchen.
kitchen; $210, 469 Morningside, 12-12
833-0529.
Sleeping rooms. Furnished, with or without cook-
ing room. Not furnished. No knives. No
kidnapping. No town. Npts: 843-757-6900.
12-12
Move in now. Pay no rent till January. 2-5 bed-
room apartments, homes completely furnished,
carpeted, air-conditioned, newly landscaped.
A lot of lovely surroundings. A new hotel way to live.
Each room has a flat, $40 per week. 12-12
each in groups of 4. A 833-360. 12-12
Available Jan. 1, then Jan. 20 at University Terrace Apts. 1k, and bedroom apartments, furnished with large kitchen and large afts. Large kitchen and living room. 1st, 2nd and 3rd floors. Cal 843-1433 or 848-2490 or call
Two bedroom apartment in the Jahayaher Tower.
Already paid already for information.
Lilv. 425-5671
12-12
Apartment for rent. Spacious furnished 1-bedroom. Open air balcony, carpeted, air conditioned, off street parking. All utilities except electricity Ready immediately. 1529 Kentucky. M43-7244
Mature female romance to share 3 bd. house
20 min walk from shopping center.
845-762-9600 meals + 8 plus 'u' fee
845-762-9600 meals + 8 plus 'u' fee
...
Moving to student teach. Have to rent out my
space. Call 822-4364 or 822-1400
blocks from campus. Call 822-4364 or 822-1400
Furnished, 2 bedroom ap for rent, 1703 W. 24th Balaencon, all electric kitchen, close to post office, shopping centers, and restaurants, $160/month parking, free parking, free parking, parking, available Jan. 1. Cell 841-351-12-12
Extra large Jayhawk Tower apartment in suburban Bronx. Finished kitchen, kitchenette, sold by Furniture House, 170 Eighth Avenue, NYC.
Studio apartment--panedel, furnished, all utilities paid, close to town and campus. Call 12-123-4567.
WE DESPERATELY NEED TO SUBLEASE our 2 bedroom apartment in JAYHAVEN Towers, furnished utilities付費 can take a loss. If you want it to stay, please call to吏智. price you can’t buy: call 824-6535. 12-12
Apts. for rent: 1 bedroom $12.00 2 bedroom $130.
3 bedroom $175.00
Cedarwood apartments, 1934 Guildhill
688 S. Dewey St., Los Angeles, CA 90019
Ap. to abschule Dec 16, furnished, suitable for
1 or 2 Hick块 from Block 842-8506 12-12
Large afp near campus. All new interior, fire-resistant. Located near 843-1601 of Larrys Lynch, Laryn Real Estate.
Two bumm, sub. All unit, all $38 per person for room upstairs. Furnished in wood floors. P furnished. Funded and central air. Heat Cal.
1 bdm. kit, $21.100, iel. utilities. Furnished.
paned, gas fireplace. Call 842-7540. 12-12
For right 2nd sonometer. Furnished basement apt.
814-839-6050. Call
WANTED
The Sanctuary is looking for good entertainments on Wednesday night at this session. All these interested parties are invited.
Formal roommate wanted to share, apt. with 2
young women. Room is located in landy room,
furnished, pool, Call 617-498-5500.
Female roommate wanted to share Jawahryk Turk
and Amelia Turk. Great living. Any questions call Dalia at 412-850-6397.
Adventurous and amorous types to try our new
dolls to defight the stresses at the Hodge Podium.
Female roommate for 2 bedroom apt. $67/month
for 2nd semester. Call: 843-8619. 12-12
Nur 1 or 2 male commuters to share house $50
or $60/hour (day) or $75/hour (weekend); for
mon, 12:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Wed., Sun.
or 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on Mon., Tues.
Mature journalism student needs furnished bach
classroom.
W. Hur伯, B.P. 1056, Moskau. Km. 6202.
W. Hur伯, B.P. 1056, Moskau. Km. 6202.
Person interested in the arts wanted to take
obtained dpm. apt. Male or female, poke on
845-497-12
12-12
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
YARN—PATTERNS
NEEDELP点-RUGS
CANVAS—CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREW!
10. 5 Mon.-Sat.
1050
Need 2 or more people to take over Jawahzer
and need a second semester counsel. 14-12
for further information.
2 Junior girls need 18 cheek chicks to share a wash, $35.99; washer, $2.00; a month. Available now. 849-767-086.
Female nonmale wanted to share 2 bedroom
apartment in the Bronx, NY. Send resume
nucleated at NCU, stairway, dorm on bus
parking lot, 40th Street, Bronx, NY 10468.
Female to take over my contract at Jayhawker Towers. Call Emily, 841-2817. 12-12
Need one gt2 to live in 2 bedroom furnished
room. Contact us for a listing of
campus, convenient kitchen Call 614-895-
7063 or visit www.hawaii.edu/campus
Female roommate 2nd semester, own room, furniture with 3 girls. Call 943-8195 after 5 p.m. 12-12
Female roommate needed by Jan, or Fsh, Ohw.
Male roommate needed by Jan, or Fsh, Ohw.
Half staff, contact Laurea Frazy. $20 New Hampshire.
Quiet country living. One female roommate
has her own bathroom. Country, $40. 12-12
plus utilities, $43-52 now!
Girl needs apartment or house during Xmas
or utilities or small amts. Call 12-123-
842-6283.
500 E.23rd
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUN
Law student needs roomside now. 2 bedroom
ac, walk-in closet, microwave,
AC cool, reasonable. No lease. 843-7494 after
10am.
SKI Jan. 1-6. Need 3 people to share condomting
experience. Send resume, $5 day. Tom Hinson, him.
@skiski.org.
Classical guitar gift wanted to play at afternoon
Kyle at 842-469-810, $10 and a free meal. 12-12
Kyle at 842-469-810, $10 and a free meal. 12-12
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apt, w/in
village. Student. Village Sq. Apts. $70 mn.
0766 12-12
0766
Male or Female roommate. Share large house
utilities. Contact by 1247 Furn. 8345-5464; tlc
utilities. Come by 1247 Furn. 8345-5464; tlc
Depressively need a female roommate (a for spring)
or female housekeeper. Dove the call.
All interested phone call: 841-2513. 12-42
842-0444
One or 2 girls to share two bedroom apartment
with a boy. Prefer Junior or older. Call 843-6488 for
admission. Prefer Junior or older. Call 843-6488 for
admission.
National Merit Scholarship dropout with 4 years of experience in the school community at modest but living wage in the academic community. Experienced payroll, lab and education work. Req. Master's degree, experience in urban Teacher Corps, research or structured learning, and Fortran 95 structural knowledge. Literate, able to type. Call 843-276-1000, mail Merit.Lang, l
Female to share 2 bedrooms at jt, at Jayhawk
Female to share others $6 a mo. At utilities paid
Call 843-1571
NOTICE
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
for consignment information call 862-750-4231.
For consignment info call 862-750-4231.
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We B-ar-Q in quean in Michigan, 600 S. Michigan Ave. We have $75. A stab at our here $40. Large rb plate $85. Cake $95. Beef sandwich $55. Bread $55. Powder of beef and milk $15. chicken $25. Sausage $25. Sundae $25. Sun and Two cups VI 2-318. $51 Michigan St. Tf. 8
For Free Birth Control information for preg-nancy,
www.vivianwomencenter.com. If no answer call XU
Women Center, 644-4441. If no answer call XU
Women Center, 644-4441.
Students! Have your Xlan xmag party at Dune
Boot Camp, a club, a tugboat and a bait shop.
Students! Have you ever, very, Karen, j12-18
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAREHOUSE--The finest
audio at cost plus 10%. Its work is
superior. Phone 843-242-1517 or
843-242-1518. www.stereowarehouse.com
Choice locker bottle. Aged and guaranteed. Sides:
12-9 inches. Fruit juice. Wholesale Meats, 31a and Iowa 843. 12-12
The Hodge Podge has a nice selection of fruits
to $Come down and visit with us. 12-12
W. 9th.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
fune-ups starting service
vrence. Kansas 66044
2434 Iowa VI 1-1008
50
THE sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Entry Plaza
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Enjoy the Shrimp, to Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our music is and has always been. There is not something for quietly enjoying the food.
Phone
843-1431
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Silicon Valley
- OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
- OVERHEAD CAM ENGINE
• 0 TO 16 MPH -13.5
- FRONT DISC BRAKES
Open 4:30 Closed Mondays
LOVE THAT DATSUN
RECLINING FRONT SEATS
UP TO 25 MILES PER GAL
Christmas Tree Farm. Choose and cut your own Christmas trees or place them in a basket with its hand-painted ornaments. Bring the tree to your home on Christmas Day at Lawrence. East on highway 10, 4 miles to county town of Hampshire. Weekend weekend w
To the girl who brought by our culler call; our
person please bring K.C. home, we miss him. 12-12
We now have elephant bells in navy, brown, and burdany at General Jeans. 1000. *Made* 12-12.
TYPING
Experienced in typing theses, distortions, term papers, other mime. typing. Have electric typewriter, pica type. Accurate and prompt service. Proofread, polish corrected. Photos. 843-954. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced tystist will typify term papers, these,
theses, book chapters, articles, and other
Aftermen and evenings. Or 842-3855.
Or 842-3860.
Fast, accurate performance on carbon ribbon type-
less membranes. Reasonable Rate. 12-12
4580 or 944 - 873-743
MISCELLANEOUS
Typing, my home I.M. LSMC. Selective ppm. Prompt variations. Procedures dialog. Distinctions. Proceeding done automatically.
Typhin on eitie electric typewriter in my home.
Appt service. No theta please. Mr. Hairy.
12:15 12:18
"SAMPLE BRIDAL GGWN$" up to 75% in
by appointment only 425,968 number not
in
Hand-crafted cardies make nice Christmas gifts. They are made from a wide variety of materials. Also, multiple cuts, and other handmade items can be used to create your own cardie.
Peace is such precious jewel that I would give it for but is truth. Lucas McGeese's Fare & Trees.
Check out the great discount section at General
Jewels. 1000 Mass. Valves to $10 now section 19.12-
12
Mother's helper needed. Babyshifting and house-
work. Phone 842-7530 5 a.p.m. 12-12
Wishing you a joyful holiday season and a peaceful new year. Lucas Mouse! Faces, 12,12
HELP WANTED
Yellow Brick Road preschool and kindergarten
by race, sex, etc. Apply to New York City
NY 10024.
Lawrence Travelodge. Help wanted for night sleep, 11 p.m. am. Three days a week. Saturdays from 8 to 10 p.m. $17.5 an hour. No calls. Apply in person at the office of Travelodge. Must be neat and clean.
Word disguisher experienced at the help desk can recognize and correct a word in an email message. Trinity Leahner helps with word processing and offers Trinity Leahner's online training to help users improve their skills.
LOST
Minolta SRT 100 32mm camera. Leather case.
Tissue box. Nose pad. Offered. Call 835-794-6251.
Nose pad. Offered. Call 835-794-6251.
Lost between G-zones and Strong, gliding glass
into the void. Return to Mova. Waddle Matilda,
return to Mova. Waddle Matilda,
PERSONAL
Students. Have your Xmax klog party at Duae
Museum, located near the campus in Perry, Kansas. 12-12
miles from the campus in Perry, Kansas. For you lovers at Christmas, provides yourself
with a new klog. For Kuma's Kailie 12-12
The Hodge Paddle. 15. W. 98h.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
CSC
TOYOTA 1HUMPH
Competition
Sports Cars Inc.
2300 W.29th Terr.
Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone:
(913) 842-2191
1) Chain Linked Fences
Look at What You Get—
2) Cedar Carport with Storage Area
3) Clubhouse for Private Parties
51 Basketball Court
5) Basketball Court
4) Swimming Pool
6) OVER 60 per cent STUDENT OCCUPANCY
3020 Iowa 842-2828 Now renting for next semester
for next semester
2
12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, December 12, 1973
Property Tax Faces '73...
(Continued from page 1)
(COCAO), which is made up of the chief vice presidents of the six state schools. The study suggested that 68 graduate programs in those schools be discontinued or put on probation.
He said that it took more money to finance graduate programs than it did to finance undergraduate work. He said it might be easier to consider cutting some of these programs.
"WE SHOULD TRY for quality instead of manliness." Vosel said.
Buzzi, also head of the firm of Buzzi and Associates, Inc., a Lawrence insurance firm, said. I think it's best if we have no knowledge of the law at this level. It can be a shame on the federal level.
Another important issue facing the kansas Legislature in the coming term is whether to continue the lawsuit.
"You have to make sure that you don't totally remove an individual's basic rights, including his right to litigate. As long as fault insurance is a good idea."
Buzii said he expected any no-fault insurance bill passed in Kansas to be a good
"WE HAVE THE FINEST insurance commissioner (Fletcher Bell) in the United States," Buzzie said, "so we should have a good plan." I think the final bill will be a good one.
Vogel's assessment of the proposed nonfault insurance bill substantially agreed
"I'll support the bill Commissioner Bell supports," Vogel said. "He has always protected the people of Kamsar. I think he's the one that will be able to support the supporters would be good for the people."
Buzza said the area of penal reform would receive a great deal of work in the coming months.
"It WILL POP UP as an issue because there are so many people working on it. I think there will be quite a bit done, although we have to positive steps will be taken." Buzz said.
vogel said that he didn't think Kansas would hear too much about the bill for penal reform this session. He said that the law, passed in 1974 to work out any needed amendments.
Vogel and Booth both said that they doubled that a sales tax increase would be worth $1 billion.
CHUCK WAGON
HERE'S THE CHOW CHART
WERE GARANTEE IN THESE IFFEN YUH LAK WESTERN BARBQ.
we can count on it passing" Vogel said.
Vogel was referring to a proposed one-half per cent increase in the sales tax in Kansas.
CHUCK WAGON
HERE'S THE CHOW CHART
WERE GARANTEEIN THESE IFFEN VUH LAK WESTURN BARB Q
Our Vittles are jest rite fur you,
yur kin, and yur dollars . . .
STEAKS AND CHICKEN
BAR-B-QUE
SALADS, SANDWICHES
SEAFOOD
Open Weekdays 11-9
Sundays 11-8
Closed Tuesdays
Gibson's
W
Iowa
Street
N
The Chuck
Wagon
IFFEN YOU LAK WE CAN FIX ALL THESE VITTLES TO GO
"The Governor said he would wipe it, so we can't count on it passing." Vogel said.
Buzzi said he expected the sales tax increase to be approved.
TWO ISSUES that have appeared before the legislature in earlier sessions also are expected to turn up in the forthcoming bingo. They are liquor by the drink and bingo.
"I would like to see bingo go to the people in a Constitutional amendment," Buzii said. "As far as liquor by the drink is concerned, I think that's going to creep back in, probably with no stand-up bars, but liquor by the drink at the tables. The minute that goes through, the opposition will take it to the Supreme Court."
VOGEL SAID that the lottery and liquor by the drink not consumed nearly as much time in the legislature as people had been led to believe. Vogel said he favored having the word lottery removed from the Constitution by constitutional amendment. He said he also favoring done the same with the liquor issue.
All three of the legislators said that there were no great surprises in the way the legislature was set up at the special one-day session Dec. 4.
Booth said that the law, as it might be
passed, would probably include sale by the ounce in establishments where at least 50 per cent of the income came from sales and other sources where the seating capacity was at least 40.
The legislature met to elect legislative and party leaders and to begin work on the formation of legislative committees.
843-9844
Chamber Music Series
MIRANDA E. SMITH
2408 IOWA STREET
An evening of video & audio pleasure
HELEN DONATH Soprano
Tuesday, December 13 University Theatre, 8:00 p.m.
This evening, concerning good service as the theme in "The Flamingo," an American feature film (with a $12.50). The author, Frank Aid, is a young journalist who the situation in southeast Asia was quite similar to any other U.S. area. You can read the story before... FitzGerald have been made form the likes of Mary McCarthy, too. No, you haven't read the story before... FitzGerald have been made form the likes of Mary McCarthy, too. No, you haven't read the story before... FitzGerald have been made form the likes of Mary McCarthy, too. No, you haven't read the story before... FitzGerald have been made form the likes of Mary McCarthy, too. No, you haven't read the story before... FitzGerald have been made fro
Admission $2.50 KU IDs do not admit.
You'll love to see yourself in our clothes!
JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS-over 1,000 items with an additional 20%
saving on our usual low,low prices. Look for the TAG showing the Manufacturer's Suggested Price. Our Usual Low Price—and the SPECIAL 20% OFF PRICE.
Portable and Table Radios
7 CROWN Coin bank radios
9 LLOYDS Portable and table radios AM, FM and Short Wave types
4 CRAIG Clock radios both AM and FM/AM types
19 AVRIN portable AH-tube CRAIG portable, and table radios
12 PANASONIC AM small radios
4 RCA AM radios
15 PANASONIC FM/AM portable, table and clock radios
PANASONIC FM/AM
19 TOSHIBA portable radios AM, FM/AM and multi-band types
8 TOSHIBA clock radios both regular and digital
8 TOSHIBA clock radios both regular and digital
Cassette Tape Recorders
18 BELAIR Stereo cassette portable, some with FM/AM radio
9 BELL & HOWELL stereo recorders some with stereo, radio
9 DENON portable cassettes, some with FM/AM radio
12 CROWN portable cassettes—1 stereo, some with FM/AM
10 ROBERTS MONO and stereo cassettes, some with radios
20 CRB portable casettes, some with Win.AM
FM/AM cassette portables, some with
FM/AM
14 CRAIG Stereo cassette, some with radios
15 DENON Stereo cassette recording decks
1 FISHER QUAD 4 channel playback deck
1 HARMAN-KARDON stereo cassette deck
1 BELL & HOWELL portable cassettes
2 AMPEX — one with FM/AM radio
3 PANASONIC portable recorders
5 BELAIR 8 track stereo portables with FM/AM radios
8 Track Home and Portable Players and Recorders
6 PANASONIC 8 track stereo portables, some with FM/AM radio
Players and Recorders
5 AUTOMATIC RADIO PORTABLE 8 track stereo
players
14 CRAIG 8 track portables, some with FM/AM radios
4 STANDARD cassette portables
OPEN EVENINGS TILL 8
AUDIOTRON
928 MASSACHUSETTS
massel change
SUNDAY MARCH 16th
WEEKEND HOURS
Black and White
10 PANASONIC asso
1 CRAIG 16" diag.
2 R.C.A. portables
2 ZENITH portables
7 CRAIG 8 track home stereo players, some with FM stereo/AM radios
14 SKYLINE 8 track home players, some with FM stereo/AM radios
2 BELAIR home 8 track stereo players
1 KINEMATIX 8 track recording deck
2 PANASONIC 8 track home players
24 Assorted 8 track playback decks
1 ROBERTS 8 track recording deck
2 R.C.A. 8 track stereo portables
17 SKYLINE 8 track portables
Black and White TV's
10 PANASONIC assorted sizes of portables
1 CRAGI 16" diag. screen
2 R.C.A. portables
2 ZENITH portables
T.V. Tables, Stereo Tables
26 Assorted GUSDORF tables
Car Tape Players
Car Tape Players
9 AUTOMATIC RADIO 8 track car stereo players
2 AUTOMATIC RADIO cassette car stereo players
16 CRAIG 8 track car stereos—some with FM
stereo radios
16 Cartridge radio adapters for AM, FM and FM
stereo
22 TOSIBIA 8 track car stereos with speakers
27 IDI 8 track car stereos, some with radios
2 CRAIG Cassette car stereos
2 B.C.A. 8 track car stereos
2 R.C.A. 8 track car stereos
Entertainment Centers
Stereo Phono Home
6 DENON-Columbia home stereos with
cassette recorder
OFF
OUR
USUAL
LOW
PRICES!
cassette recorder
1 Electro-Voice HI-FI stereo
1 Electro-Voice HI-FI stereo
2 FISHER Connect
18 DENON-Columbia home stereos all with
AAA
12 PANASONIC home stereos all with FM stereo/AM radios
Electric Guitars and Amplifiers
ALTEC-LANSING valenta cathale
AZTFC Athena speaker system
2 BASS Guitars
6 12-String Guitars
15 Multiple pick guitars with solid bodies
A ZLEZ & HOWELL FM stereo/AM receivers
High Fidelity Components
5 BOZAK Speakers and X-overs
1 ALTEC-LANSING valencia cabinet
2 Portable guitar amps
3 ELECTRO-VOICE tuners and amplifiers
2 FISHER speaker systems
2 LB L. Speaker components
1 J.B.L. Speaker components
2 M-INTOSH Stereo tuner
10 PIONEER Speaker Systems
7 BOGEN heavy speaker systems
10 PIONEER speaker Systems
4 15" Unmounted speakers OAKTRON
4 15 Unmounted junctions, unmounted
OXFORD $ 3'' \times 9'' $ horn tweeters, unmounted
6 PERFEX bookshelf speaker systems
/AM receivers
3 ROBERTS FM stereo/ AM receivers
4 KYUNGKEK soundspeaker sys
22 SKYLINE air suspension speaker systems
25 SKETCH an allison specifier.
13 STANDARD tuners, amps and receivers
14 WAFEDTEAD speaker systems
15 VIRTIFASQ graphikizers
19 SKYLINE receivers, some with 8 track player built-in.
Color TV's
1 PACKARD-BELL 23" diag. console
1 PACKARDABLE TV's, assigned sizes, portables
5 PANASONIC CTV's
3 R.C.A. 23' Color TV
3 TOSHIBA 11" diag. to 18" diag. screens
3 ZENINTS console
Record Changers
1 BSR Record changer with base and dust cover
1 FISHER record changer module, complete less dust cover
34 GARRARD changers with bases, cartridges and covers
Some display models only are available—others have a few pieces in factory sealed
cartons. Very limited quantities on all items on this special. All offerings are subject
to prior sale. Sale ends December 23, 1972.
1.