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WINDY
BRIAN
SNOW!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Faculty Members Fight Fat
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
83rd Year. No. 81
Thursday, February 1, 1973
See Story Page 3
PETER JOHN MICHAEL SCHUMER
B. D. B.
PADRE NOBIERTA
Kansan Staff Photos by DAN LAUING
Expressions Reflect Routine Senate Meeting . The mood of Zane Lewis, graduate student, changes as business proceeds .
Senate Elects 2 to Council
By JOHN PIKE
Kenan Staff Writer
The Student Senate Wednesday night elected Rick McLaughlin, Dallas sophomore, and John Beisner, Salina sophomore, to the University Council.
Travel Fund Recommended For Regents
TOPEKA (AP) — The Senate Ways and Means Committee today added $10,000 to a supplemental appropriations bill to give the Board of Regents a travel fund for conducting interviews in its search for a new chancellor for the University of Kansas.
Sen. Ross O. Doyen, R-Concordia, committee chairman, said the idea to give the money was his and was not a request by the resents.
"I just think they should have the money for these interviews and their work in connection with the search for a new committee and the committee agreed," Doven said.
"They're going about it much more systematically this time, and I think it good. I want them to find the best man available."
Doyen said from nearly 200 persons who initially expressed an interest in the KU chancellorship, the regents have reduced the number under consideration to about 30.
He said this list would be further reduced to about 10, some of whom would be asked to write another list.
Also nominated for the two seats vacated by graduates were Rick Laucer, Evanston, Ill., junior, and Gary Lasche, Overland Park junior.
The Senate approved an allocation of $650 to the Committee on Indian Affairs (CLA) after lengthy debate on the reasons for the fund request.
Tom Beaver, who heads the CIA, represented the group at the meeting, and told the Senate that the CIA requested the information to be provided to the team obtained from the Endowment Association.
Beaver said the CIA mistakenly thought the allocation was granted at that time, and therefore spent $16 on CIA programs before it was discovered that the allocation had only been approved by the Finance and Auditing Committee and not by the Senate.
Beaver said the money which was spent actually came from the Endowment Association loan, and was there therefore unencumbered by Senate procedures.
"Since we got the money on loan from the bank, we've been rewarded, we bypassed all the hassles," Reservoir said.
The CIA was still asking for $650, Beaver said, to pay off the $136 already spent and to cover the costs of telephone expense, office supplies, and out-of-state travel.
Beaver said 80 of the $156 had paid for the shipping cost on a large collection for Indian art which was exhibited last semester in the Natural History Museum. The art itself had been donated to the exhibit.
The International Film Series requested and received an additional $1,200 for its production.
to $800 without serious loss to the schedule, as only five films out of the planed 14 would be released.
Gus DiZerega, Lawrence graduate student, suggested that $800 be allocated to cover all the films but the five, and a donation requested of the patrons at the five films which would otherwise have been scraped.
Representatives of the Film Series told the Student Executive Committee last week that the film was on hold.
The idea of charging admission or ac-
See SENATE Next Page
Nixon Claims Right To Impound Funds
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon said Wednesday that the American tax payer already was overburdened and the government would fund if the spending would mean higher taxes.
The constitutional right to impound, or refuse to spend, funds appropriated by the government.
Nixon spoke out at a news conference, when he was asked to respond to critics who say that his impoundment of funds was the wrong action, that the constitution gave to Congress.
Claiming that Congress represents special interests, Nixon said that he would represent the general interest of the nation and that the interest "whether it be rich or poor or old, is not break the family budget by raising the taxes or raising prices."
"Therefore," the President said, "I will not spend money if the Congress overspends, and I will not be for programs that will raise the taxes and put a bigger burden on the already overburdened American taxmaster."
THE IMPOUNDMENT issue has stirred up Congress.
At a Senate Judiciary subcommittee Wednesday, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, said that if Nixon refused to execute his will he would have less access to enforce its will are "cruel at best."
Sen. Sam J. Ervini Jr., D-N.C., author of a bill to bar impoundments for more than 60 days without the concurrence of Congress, said a cooperative effort by the President to improve conditions if we are going to put the financial house of the federal government in order."
House Speaker Carol Albert, D-Doka, meanwhile, said "no series of acts strike more directly at Congress' fundamental power over the purse than the usurpation of president's impoundment of appropriated funds in the final months of the 92nd Congress."
In a speech prepared for the 50th anniversary celebration of Time, Inc., Albert added, "The President has interpreted his re-election as a mandate to strike down the domestic programs passed by Congress over the past 30 years."
Another speaker for the Time celebration
was republican Senate Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania.
"Congress was happy to turn the depression over to a strong president," Scott said, adding that wars can't be fought peacefully achieved "by a committee of 53."
On other legislative matters, at the President's news conference:
—NIXON, who did not consult Congress on most of his major war decisions, said Congress would have to support any effort to lift the embargo. Indochina as “an investment in peace.”
—On executive privilege, the protection of administration officials from disclosing information on Congress, Nixon said that he did not want to abuse the privilege and that his general attitude "is to be as liberal as possible" in protecting information available as congressional witnesses.
Nixon Plans Incentives For Indochina Peace
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Nixon said Wednesday that he was sending Henry Kissinger to Hanoi next week to discuss postwar financial aid for North Vietnam and the personally would meet this spring with the Tetanase President Nguyen Van Thien.
Holding his first news conference in
Reform Would Jeopardize NDSL
BY CATHY SHERMAN
Kennedy Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
Many University of Kansas students might have to seek student loans for fiscal 1974 from sources outside of the Office of Student Financial Aid if Congress approves the budget cuts President Nixon recommended Monday for two student financial aid officers. Jerry Rogers, director of the student financial aid office at KU, said Wednesday.
Nixon called for the elimination of funding for the National Direct Student Loan program (NDSL) and Educational Opportunity Grant (EOG), Rogers said. These two programs would be replaced by a "basic opportunity grant" which would be provided to students in the program. The program would provide grants to students not loans, Rogers said.
"Basically, the government just wants to get out of the loan business," he said.
If Congress should decide to eliminate further funding for NDSL, then the amount
of money the financial aid office had to lend would be drastically reduced. Roards said.
in fiscal 1973, $800,000 of the $1,100,000 loaned to about 1,700 students from NDSL. Rogers said, was from federal and state funds, he added, a lease of a loan up to $1,000 an academic year.
"All that we could lend next year would be money we collect from students making a living."
Rogers said that if students could not obtain the loans, many might have trouble getting loans from private sources, particularly those students from low-income families who did not have established credit or bank accounts. The NDSL is available to any students who shows need within the limits of the funds available.
Interest on the NDSL is 3 per cent and is lower than interest on loans from private sources, Rogers said. There is no payment on the loan until the twelfth month of termination, Rogers said, and the student has up to 10 years to pay.
Rogers said he thought that in many cases the new basic opportunity grant would be a better deal for the student than the NDSL, because it was a grant and not a loan.
Students who wanted more than the grant would provide them might have preferred a different option.
The basic opportunity grant recommended by Nixon would provide a maximum of $1,400 to any student who qualified, Rogers said, but the student must have obtained parental financial statement, as they do now, which could lessen the amount.
Each family's financial situation would be studied to determine how much the family could reasonably contribute to the retirement fund. The amount would then be deducted from the $1,400.
One of the differences between the old EOG, which involved 381 students and 40 teachers, compared to the opportunity grant, would be that the funds for the new grant program would be kept in a federal pool for distribution rather than individual universities as it is now. Roger G.
Rogers said that if Congress did approve cutting off the funds late this spring, after the deadline for financial aid applications, it would produce a considerable burden for both the financial aid office and the students.
nearly four months, Nixon said the intricate agreement signed Saturday in Paris could bring peace "in Indochina for a very long period of time."
Nixon said the once-warring parties needed "incentives to peace." He cited the Indochina-wide reconstruction program as a response to it, saying it "a potential investment in peace."
With the postwar aid, Nixon said, the North Vietnamese "will have a tendency to turn inward to the works of peace rather than turning outward to the works of war."
The visit to Hanoi Feb. 10-13 will open "vitally important . . . direct communication" with top North Vietnamese leaders, Nixon said.
Kissinger's mission as the first ranking American official to reach Hanoi in more than a decade was announced by the White House about an hour before Nixon appeared in the executive mansion's news briefing room.
Nixon announced he would meet with Thieu at the Western White House in San Clemente, Calif., at a "mutually convenient" time in the spring.
Fielding reporters' questions for 36 minutes, the President also;
- REITERATED THAT he would not grant anemity to those who "chose to desert their country" rather than serve in Vietnam;
—Bitterly chastised critics in the media and intellectual circles, declaring he had achieved peace with honor although "I" tags some of you to write that phrase.
Data 'Sandbox' Developed
See NIXON Next Page
By MYLA STARR
By MYLA STARK
Kansan Staff Writer
To most people, a one-of-a-kind computer worth $1.25 million is an awesome machine. To Robert Nunley, professor of geography at the University of Chicago and co-founder of such a unit, it is a toy.
Nunley has developed a rather whimsical philosophy about the new Spatial Distribution Computer (SDC) which is used in the KU Space Technology Building.
BLACK AND WHITE trees of diminishing size give the walls an illusion of space, Nunley said, and the dropped ceiling and indirect light break up the space as does the computer. The deep pile carpeting is the self-explanatory color of sand.
The home of the SDC reflects this philosophy. Nurley and his associates worked for several months turning the University allotment of $3,800 for "equipping" the computer room into a information center about the function of the SDC.
"We know that we don't know all of the answers to the enormous number of problems, so we have developed a flexible set of tools to get into and build sand castles," he said.
"It is a big sandbox," Nunley said.
Nunley said the room was designed to promote comfort, so that people using the SDC could relax and enjoy "playing" with it.
"Most computer rooms have an antiseptic atmosphere," he said. "We emphasize playing rather than working with the computer—interacting with it rather than running it. I call it my cybernetic sandbox for scholars."
The SDC, which Nunley has nicknamed FACES (Facility for Analyzing Complex Environmental Spaces), is the only computer of its kind in the country. Its unique quality is the ability to analyze multidimensional concepts.
"MOST COMPUTERS are one-dimensional and are programmed by feeding individual numbers into them," are arranged in the form of a picture."
"Students in geography, fine arts, architecture, chemistry and physics will all be able to use the computer," he said. "It is useful with any information that is visual."
Nunley said the SDC was capable of analyzing any process which occurs in two or three dimensions, such as the spread of a cloud flow of a stream or the migration of people.
According to Nunley, the SDC combines the advantages of both analog and digital computers. By combining the strong points of both types, the time involved in setting up and finding answers by computer has been greatly minimized, he said.
THE SDC WILL be ready for limited use in one month, Nunley said, but will not be put into full operation for another six months. This will give the developers time to write programs and "tune up" the computer, he said.
But the computer's analytical capacities are not limited to working with artificial intelligence.
"The same problem that takes one minute
Future plans for the SDC system include construction of a second computer unit and a color television monitor to display program results.
on the SDC could require several hours or several days on a single dimension computer.
Nunley said that the SDC was the first general purpose multipurpose dimensional computer to be developed in the country. He said that the SDC specialized three-dimensional computers.
THE ORIGINAL IDEA for the SDC system was born seven years ago in Chicago, and the term was not begun until January 1972. In the interim, construction plans were finalized.
Working with Nunley on the project are Geoffrey Roper, Montreal senior, and Michael Fischer, a junior in geology and geography at Beltol College in Beltol, Wisc., who is involved in a work term program offered by the Beltol college. The program allows him to get credit for his work here. Fischer is the DCS systems analyst.
In July 1971, a $250,000 grant was received from the National Science Foundation in Washington, D.C., and construction of the computer was begun six months later. The NSF also contributed $160,000 for preliminary research on the SDC.
The difference between the NSF contribution and the $1.25 million cost of the computer was contributed by Interpretation Systems, (inc., IIS) a custom electronics firm based in Lawrence. As a return on investment for its work with the SDC in their product line, Roper said.
According to Roper, ISI has already sold a similar system to a firm in Alaska for use in the analysis of remote sensing data from satellites. One component of the SDC will soon be used by the medical industry in the analysis of x-rays, he said.
M. B. S.
Kansan Photo by FELICIA SMALLWOOD
Robert Nunley Works with FACES, a Unique Computer Worth $1.25 Million
His new Spatial Distribution Computer is housed in the Space Technology Lab . . .
2
Thursday, February 1, 1973
University Daily Kansan
10
Jane Sidney, Western Springs, Ill., Sophomore, Operates Weaving Loom
Kansan Photo by BRAD BACHMAN
. New visual arts center is in the planning stages . . .
Arts Department Scattered
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
The department of visual arts spans the entire University of Kansas campus. Offices are in Marvin Annex, and classes meet in Strong Hall, Gread Hall, Farmley Farm, Memorial Stadium and other out-of-the-way places.
University officials have recognized the problems of decentralization, and a new system for managing operations is being developed.
Design, painting and sculpture, are the three principal subdivisions of visual arts, said John McKay, associate dean of visual arts. Included within design are communications graphic design, illustration, ceramic textiles, jewelry and silver-smithing.
MCKAY SAID there were three special programs in which students could obtain degrees through either the School of Fine Arts, the College of Liberal Arts or the School of Education. Art history degrees are taught in both the School and the College. The difference between a bachelor of fine arts and a bachelor of arts degree (B.A.) in art history, is that said to B.F.A. requires studio courses and a B.A. does not. Degrees in theater design also may be earned from both the School of Fine Arts and the College. Art education majors in the School of Fine Arts and transfer into the School of Education as juniors, he said.
THE DEPARTMENT of visual arts uses 12 different buildings, McKay said. They include the Bailey Annex, Mechanical Engineering, Memorial Stadium, Chamney Farm, Chamney House, Marvin Annex, Oread Hall and Hall on a building on 14th Street.
McKay said that the main disadvantage of decentralization was that students were unable to learn from each other by being in touch with peers, teachers and students from the knowledge of advanced students.
He said members of the faculty saw each other only during scheduled meetings. This
precludes any informal discussion of classics by hindrance in improving methods, by reducing the
MOST OF THE VISUAL ARTS classes meet in leftover space that is unsuited for the activities students try to do, McKay said. The buildings are not designed for visual arts, and the cost of maintaining them is high because of their ages.
Mkay said that the lack of space had made it necessary to limit the number of students enrolling in beginning art classes, and that students not majoring in art were unable to take courses. Enrollment is not required for junior and senior classes, he said.
He said many of the buildings used by the visual arts department were already overcrowded, and that a new visual arts center would alleviate the hardships on other schools and departments within the University.
THE DISTANCE between classes is not a big problem for art studio classes because it is not necessary for students to be on time, he said, but many students do have difficulty being on time for lectures immediately after a studio class.
McKay said the dull surroundings had a demoralizing effect on faculty members. He added, however, that low salaries were a more important factor in hiring and training faculty members. Wages are generally low, he said, and visual arts "are at the bottom of the heap."
Students agree that facilities are less than adequate.
Marcia Orlowski, Kansas City, Kan., senior and design major, said Strong Hall had dull surroundings that did little to inspire design. There are no facilities for students often would rather work outside the classroom, she said.
"IT'S NOT REALLY walking all over to classes that I mind, but it's the lack of facilities and the uninspiring places we have classes," Orloski said.
(Continued from Page 1)
Besides discussing Kissinger's trip, his own meeting with Thieu and his hopes for a permanent peace, Nixon said he had received every assurance that China would release two American flies held since their planes were shot down in the mid-1960s.
Nixon Plans . . .
"IT'S SO OLD," she said. "My grand-mother majored in art, and she had classes
She said she did not like having to carry her summits on three flights of stairs
"Said he would not personally welcome U.S. prisoners of war back to American soil because the POWS deserved privacy and a rapid return to their families and "we should not grandstand it; we should not exploit it."":
Kleth Lawton, director of planning and facilities, said that "programming" for a new visual arts center was under way. Programming consists of determining the requirement to a facility must have. After the requirement is met, he will draw up plans for the building, he said.
LAUGHED THAT he would be out of his mind to endorse anyone now for the 1978 presidential race, but repeated his high regard for former Treasury Secretary John Connally;
HE SAID, "We have every reason to believe the filers will be freed" *as the MP* said.
"Said he hoped the wounding of Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., in a robbery Tuesday night would spur Congress to adopt legislation containing a precise definition that would keep cheap handguns out of the hands of criminals.
Susie Cates, Kansas City, M., junior,
majoring in occupational therapy, said that
many classes were overcrowded and that
more sections had to be scheduled to
accommodate all the people. She said one
of her classes was taught she finally
found enough room in Bailey Hall.
—Accused Congress of failing to be responsible on money matters and said he would exercise his 'absolutely clear' responsibility to avoid appropriated funds to avoid a tax increase:
- Reported he was placing European problems "on the front burner" but he would make no overseas trips during the first half of this year:
The aftermath of the Vietnam war overshadowed questions on domestic issues in the President's first news conference since Oct. 5.
Kim Sandefur, Topeka sophomore,
completed of Strong's third florid
The aviators have been identified as Navy
Robert Ryan and Air Force Mater-
Phil Smith.
The best site for the center, Lawton said, is the location of the present Mechanical Engineering Building. It has not been determined whether the mechanical engineering building will be converted for visual arts or raced and a new building in its place. He said Fowler Schools definitely would be used as part of the center.
"Occupational therapy isn't as diverse as other departments as far as going across campus goes," she said. "But for them, we're up there like the rest of them."
A third American, John Downey, also is held in China but Nixon said his was a
THE ENGINEERING shops are to be moved into an addition to Learned Hall, which is now in the late stages of architectural planning. Lawton said.
different case because "Downey involves a CIA agent."
He said that the University had requested funds for the Learned addition from the current legislature, and that construction begin this summer if the request was granted.
Nixon said Kissinger, who negotiated the Vietnam peace accord, would discuss with top North Vietnamese leaders "the current status of compliance with the peace agreement" and the "matter of reconstruction program for all of Indochina."
Tom Powell, Kansas City, Kan., junior and chairman of the Transportation Committee, reported that the Campus Bus system cost the Senate $19,800 during the period. There were 352,000 riders during the period, which included orientation and finals.
Nixon would not put a price tag on the Indochina reconstruction program, saying he had to consult with congressional leaders first. But earlier reports focused on a figure of $7.5 billion with one-third of that amount going to North Vietnam.
cepting donations was abandoned when representatives of the Series told the Senate that to accept money from the audience in the form of donations or admissions the payment of a much larger amount to obtain the films from the distributor.
Planning for the visual arts center is continuing. Lawton said a request for planning funds was made to the Legislature, but was denied. The dental has been awarded an emergency fund for actual construction of the center will be sought from the 1974 Legislature.
The Transportation Committee will attempt to get the apartment complexes and downtown merchants who benefit from Senate-funded off-campus bus service to absorb the losses on their routes next year, Powell said.
Senate ...
(Continued from page 1)
On-campus service will continue to operate, even at a loss, Powell said, because the system is down.
12:15
The Mathematical Possibilities are Staggering!
LOVE
MAY
NEIGH
BOR
AND BE
WIKE
Firmed in a Swap-
ping Game!
IN COLOR ADULTS ONLY
PLAYBOY'S DELIGHT Friday & Saturday Night
Investigator Begins Work With County
Douglas County officially acquired the services of a full-time investigator this morning as former Patroan James and of 321 FI Frist Bristol Terrace, went to work.
Huskey described his new duties "insects as well as birds," and "ponds" with David Berkowitz.
tI²m趴掌 be intertwining wi-fi
tI²m趴掌 be intertwining wi-fi
tI²m趴掌 be intertwining wi-fi
Huskey, whose salary will be $700 a
month, was hired upon the recommendation
of his manager.
"I had been impressed with him (Huskey) when I had run into him before," Berkowitz said Tuesday. "He seemed to be a very nice man." We had a talk and I offered the job. "I him."
No one under 18 years admitted
Proof of age required
Adm. $1.50/ No refunds
No outside beverages
Hillercraft
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11246
Huskey said funding for the new position was established by the Douglas County Commission in the commission's 1973 budget.
"Sometimes the sheriff's office of the police department doesn't have a lot of time to devote to a case, and that's when I'll come in," Huskey said.
Huske emphasized that his responsibilities would be generalized.
"Whatever I can come up with—allthough I like to work on drugs, particularly hard drugs, such as heroin, cocaine, opium, and so forth," he said.
"I know that some dropouts are pushing drugs to junior high kids, though, so I'll be doing some investigative work on that," Huskey said.
the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts
TRANSFER SALE
Ali exciting fall & winter fashions from our four other stores have been transferred to YOUR Lawrence Village Set.
1/2 & more
Come in for enormous savings.
COATS
Dresses — Pants
Sweaters — Knit Tops
Skirts — Jackets
All sales final. No exchanges or refunds.
Use Kansan Classified
WINTER CLEARANCE
MISTER
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The Company Corporation
MISTER GUY MAKES
ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED
ALL SALES FINAL
FURTHER
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in our SEMI-ANNUAL SALE FOR MEN
- Men's Suits and 20% Costumes
Sport Coats
eMen's Slacks and to
Men's Slacks and Sweaters 50%
- Men's Shirts and Reductions
Ties
Charge It! Mastercharge — Bankamericard — American Express — Diners Club
— Your Misty Giver Card
- ANTIOCH CENTER * NORTH KANSAS CITY * DOWNTOWN
* BROOKSIDE * CORINTH SQUARE * LAWRENCE * ST. JOSEPH
Just how honest have we been with our speed reading claims?
There have been a lot of popular myths flying around about speed reading courses.
Especially ours.
Which is only natural when you consider the fact that Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institutes teach more people how to speed read each year than all the other speed reading courses combined.
So we analyzed all of our national student data by computer to intercept the effects of our course. And to tell us who's benefited.
We think it's about time for you to read the facts about our claims.
No matter what speed you read them
CLAIM: Our course is easy to learn
FACT. There's no note taking. No memorizing required. Students range in age from 11 to 84. The majority of them were no better at memorizing than others.
By investing the normal amount of time (class and practice), 80% achieve the minimum promised goal at least a 3-iodo
CLAIM: If you do not at least triple your reading efficiency after having correctly taken the course, you will refund your entire tuition.
FACT: 1.6% do not. And they receive a full tuition refund. In accord- dance with national policy.
CLAIM: While we guarantee that your reading efficiency will at least triple, our average graduate achieves a higher rate of improvement.
FACT. Our average graduate reads 4.7 times faster than he did when he beaten the course.
MONDAYS, 7:39 p.m., Feb. 5.
April 2 (Extra help with LAW
materials, if desired)
TUESDAYS, 7:39 p., Feb. 5.
April 3 (Extra help with WEST-
ERN CIV读ings if desired)
New Classes Begin Next Week
FACT: The national average is a 3% increase in comprehension. Most people have a comprehension rate of over 70% to begin with.
CLAIM: Not only does reading speed improve, but comprehension increases too.
CLAIM: The average Elevin Wood Reading Dynamics graduate reads in excess of 1,000 words per minute.
FACT: Measured in terms of reading speed, the average graduate reads 1,500 words per minute.
CLAIM: You'll be able to significantly reduce the amount of time it takes you to do the same amount of reading you now do.
FACT: 50% is the average reduction in study time. One hour is the average reading time per novel. 35 minutes is the average reading time for a news magazine. And technical reading time is 68%.
CLAIM: You don't have to be a student to benefit from the course.
FACIT: While students comprise 45.1% of all class enrollment, the majority of class contents are non-funded. For example, students in the engineering department (dosse) and engineers, 7.2% are educators (deans, superintendents, principals, and teachers), 34.4% are executives, stockbrokers, analysts, and managers.
We could go on and on. Claim after claim. Fact after fact.
So here's one more claim for you to think about:
If you attend one of our free, introductory speed reading lessons, we will increase your speed on the spot. It takes one hour of your time to check out the facts about the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course.
图
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
*We'll let the claims speak for themselves*
Some of our best friends were slow readers
Free Speed Reading Mini-Lesson Tonight at 7:30
Reading Dynamics Institute
Hillcrest Shopping Center
925 Iowa
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 1, 1973
3
I'll just use the image for you.
The image is blurry and lacks any distinguishable features. It appears to be a black-and-white photograph of some sort, but no text can be clearly read due to the low quality. If there were any text, it would likely be illegible or in poor condition. Therefore, I'm unable to provide transcription or analysis of this image.
Traffic and Security's Lt. Fenstemaker Joins Faculty Fitness Program . . . 120 persons were added to the program this semester . . .
Kanan Photo by JOYCE PRUESSNER
Fitness Program Popular
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
The faculty physical fitness program resumed classes Monday morning for all University of Kansas faculty and staff members are fired of that "out-of-the-fire" feeling.
The program was offered for the first time last semester and received a large response, Wayne Ossen, associate professor of physical education, said. Many persons returned this semester and 120 more persons joined the program, he said.
Lee Young, associate dean of journalism,
is returning to the program this semester.
He said he was excited about the program
because he did not have the self-discipline to
engage in regular physical activity on his own.
Because the program meets three days a week on a regular basis, Young said he felt better. "I feel like I'm doing something.
AS AN EXAMPLE of how hard it was for him to exercise on his own, Young said he did not participate in any type of physical activity during the semester break. However, he said, the program had inspired him to walk to work every morning that he does not have to be at KU early for the fitness class.
Each participant's work load is determined by his cardiovascular evaluation at the beginning of the program. One of the aims of the program is to improve the pulse rate during the exercise schedule, Osness said.
Arthur Thomas, associate professor of education, said his cardiovascular health had improved greatly during the semester last fall. His heart beat was much slower after a semester of exercising than it had been at the beginning. he said.
THE FITNESS program is non-competitive and every person progresses at his own rate according to the amount of physical activity he can and wants to handle, Martin Jones, budget officer in business affairs, said.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Stennis Serious
WASHINGTON—Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., who was shot twice during a robbery, was reported still in very serious condition Wednesday but doing excellently in view of the extensive wounds and subsequent surgery.
A spokesman at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, where Stemis was taken, told an afternoon briefing that Stemis was in critical positive and well-oriented to his surroundings.
SAIGON—Powerful North Vietnamese forces launched new attacks along the demilitarized zone Wednesday in a violation of unsupervised cease-fire, field reports said.
The fresh fighting came as the peace agreement passed its fourth day of continuing but declining violations, and officials disclosed plans for more U.S. meetings with both Vietnamese to prepare for postwar relations.
Attacks Continue
Battlefield reports reaching Saigon said North Vietnamese troops overran South Vietnamese marine positions re-established just before the cease-fire.
TOPEKA-Kansas law putting limits on campaign expenditures by candidates was declared unconstitutional Wednesday by Shawnee County District Court Judge John Kruse.
On Tuesday, District Court Judge E. Newton Vickers ruled unconstitutional Kansas laws governing reporting of campaign expenditures and dismissed actions pending against him. The law were overturned in a commotion to the Kansas Legislature in the August primary.
Law Stricken
Achieving physical fitness was not such a great problem for Jones, who said he be joined by the team.
Each of the three scheduled classes is divided into a fast group and a slow group. Those in the fast group run a few more laps than those in the slow group, the persons in the slow group, Osssa said.
Victor Judge rulcd the law was so vague that it would not be interpreted by persons of the jury.
"I am in the slow group and it taking it easy," Jones said. "I am interested only in getting a moderate amount of exercise on a day that doesn't haven't been trying to break any records."
Because members in the program work gradually, few receive the aches and pains one would expect in a physical activities program, Thomas said. He said he noticed only a few minor aches after returning to the program this semester.
THOMAS SAID the program was relaxing for him. He had been bothered by what he called tension headaches before he started the program, but the headaches had
Others are not so fortunate. Young started last semester in the fast group and strained some tendons in his ankle which caused him to be on crutches for several months.
decreased greatly since participation, he said.
"I guess I thought I was young enough to keep up with them all," Young said. "But I continued to go to classes every day and did not participate." He could not participate in the wooing he did.
Two Students Elected To Recreation Board
By GARY ISAACSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Two University of Kansas students were elected to the executive committee of the student branch of the Kansas Recreation Department, and the association's annual meeting Jan. 25-26.
Bill Vestle, Wichita senior, was elected secretary-treasurer and Steve Rickett, Osawatomie junior, was elected as a chairman. Both are physical education majors. Both are physical education majors.
Rickettis said the purpose of the meetings was to get members of the association together to relate ideas and to promote recreation and park management.
"The association is trying to get recreation recognized as a profession,"
VESTLE SAIED KU did not offer recreation as a major course of study. At present, he said, people interested in the field as a profession could take recreation emphasis courses as part of physical education study.
Ricketts and Vestle both said they thought that recreation and park management as a profession was gaining interest in the country.
Lawrence Heeb, associate professor of physical education at KU and recreation consultant for the state of Kansas, said the recreation profession stretched into many
Heb said, "Representatives from the military, state hospitals, and federal and state rehabilitation institutions are invited to Kansas Recreation and Parks Association.
"Washburn and Pittsburg, in this state, and Indiana and Illinois all have good courses of study in recreation," Ricketts said.
RICKETTS SAID that to qualify for a professional post in recreation, a person must have a bachelor's or sometimes a master's degree. The most important qualification was experience.
industrial schools use recreation for rehabilitation and the hospitals are interested in the therapeutic value of recreation."
Concerning the curriculum needed for a recreation major, Heeb said course in the social sciences, the humanities and the field of communications would be essential.
"A liberal education with some emphasis on sociology and psychology must be required because the product we are dealing with is the human being," he said.
Ventle said that he became interested in the recreation and parks association when he was a child.
GM Recall Scheduled For 3.7 Million Autos
"I just went to see what it was all about and ended up in," he said.
Ricketts said he had some experience with summer recreation programs before he decided on physical education as a major.
Many Lawrence residents will soon be receiving registered letters informing them that they should take their General Motors vehicle for installation of a protective steering device.
General Motors recently announced that it was recalling 3.7 million mil1971 and 1792 full-sized Chevrolet, Buicks, Oldsmobiles and Pontiac to install a shield that would prevent stones or other objects from lodging in the steering mechanism.
"So when I came into the program I leaned toward recreation," Rickett said.
Dale Willey, owner of the Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac dealership in Lawrence, said there had been a problem in some cars that needed an anti-shock linkage and causing sleeper problems.
"in order for this to happen," Wiley said,
"the car must be driven on rocky roads, with the front end dipping and diving in and out of holes."
Although there have been 96 national reports of incidents caused by steering problems, Willey knew of no similar accidents in this area.
"its very unlikely to occur," Wiley said, "haven't heard of any injuries because of the stabbing."
Campus Bulletin
Each car owner will receive a registered letter from the factory that describes the
Jim Elimba, general manager of Jack Ellenba Buck and Oldmobile in Lawrence, said that the factory would bear the cost of the parts and labor.
SUA Travel: noon, Alonee A. Kannas Udon
Room History: noon, Carryo Room,
Music History: noon, Room Music
History: noon, Room Music
Scenic Committee Faculty: 3:00 p.m., International Room.
Bed: Sokey 7:30 p.m., Woodford Auditorium.
Lab: Sokey 7:30 p.m., Woodford Auditorium.
Make Education: 3:00 p.m., Acleve C
SCHD Graduate: 7:30 p.m., International Room.
LCB Graduate: 7:30 p.m., International Room.
LDB Institute: 7:30 p.m., Oral Reasoning
Room. Sailing Club: 7:30 p.m., Jayawat Room.
Sailing Club: 7:30 p.m., Jayawat Room.
SUA University: 7:30 p.m., Council Room.
SAUA University: 7:30 p.m., Council Room.
Complaint Committee: 7:30 p.m., Room 308I
Complaint Committee: 7:30 p.m., Room 308I
problem and tells the owner where to have
their product, so it's no charge to the owner,
and the project's cost.
The "dealer will not be charged for the parts," Ellena said. "The factory will send the parts and we will send them back an adjusted adjustment price for the remailer."
Willey estimated that 200 cars would be recalled to his dealership, but said the exact number is unknown.
"We don't know as yet how many letters have been sent to this area." Willey said. "But the people should not bring their cars and they have received the registered letter."
N. D. Guthre, manager of Turner Chevrolet, said that his dealership had not yet received the parts, and that they did not need filling of the cars to be returned to this area.
directed by Sergie Eisenstein and D. I. Nassilieu
Costa Gavras who gave us "Z" now gives us
SUA Popular Films
Willey estimated that the part would cost about 20 cents, but when multiplied by the number of cars being recalled, "The cost will be quite high."
Woodruff Wednesday, Feb. 7
SUA Classical Films presents
7:30 & 9:30
60c
Alexander Neusky
SUA Film Society
"The Confession"
WWW.BUYHATTER.COM
Wild Rip Off Sale
Everything in our Store is now
20% to 75% off!
Woodruff 7:00 & 9:30
Fob. 2 & 3 $60^{\circ}$
Were here at 24th Iowa til nine nightly
by Orson Welles Music by Henry Mancini Woodruff Monday, Feb. 12
Orson Welles
Directed and Produced
The Trial
Woodruff
3:30, 7:30, 9:30
Thurs., Feb. 1 75'
SUA Special Films presents TOUCH OF EVIL
Wednesday thru Saturday only
by David L. Hewitt and Episode 2 of Phantom Empire.
SUA Science Fiction Journey to the Center of Time
Woodruff Tuesday, Feb. 6
Lucus Megoes faces &trees
7:30
75c
10.25m²
10.25m²
MOVING SALE SUNFLOWER SURPLUS Is Moving to 804 MASS
and we don't want to take
our inventory with us.
CHECK
THESE SAVINGS
50%
500
398
198
Navy Wool
Sweaters
Reg. 7.00
Men's Cotton Thermal Underwear Reg.2.98
Army Tunics
50 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $
Men's Dacron 88 Insulated Underwear Reg. 9.00
Hooded Sweatshirts Reg. 5.98
698
379
995
Ladies*
Hiking Boots
Reg. 19.95
Heavy 15x20
Vinyl Tarps
Reg. 12.95
5$ ^ {00} $
Remaining Stock of Lee Clothing Reduced
50%
SUNFLOWER
SURPLUS
817 VERMONT
843-5000
Use Kansan Classified
BE A PLAYER IT'S A SUPER SUMMER JOB.
CAROLINA TRIBAL
WORLDS OF FUN, Kansas City's fabulous new 20.5 million dollar theme park is now auditing for singers, dancers, magicians, gunfighters, barbershoppers, comics and variety acts. If you've got talent, why not combine it with good times and good friends in a full theatre production, on a showbowl, or in a good old fashioned gunlight at WORLDS OF FUN this summer?
The WORLDS OF FUN entertainment staff will hold auditions for you on Thursday, February 15, 1973. Beginning at 10 p.m. in the Big Eight Room, Kansas Union.
Summer positions for over 1,200 students will be available in the many different areas of Worlds of Fun. If you are interested in working as an ambassador in areas other than the shows, please contact Us at us@worldsoffun.org, UM, 4954, Worlds of Fun Ave, Kansas City, Missouri 64161
Worlds of Fun
Worlds of Fun is an equal opportunity employer
333
KANSAS CITY'S FAMILY FUN ADVENTURE
(U. OF K.)
39734
4
Thursday, February 1, 1973
University Daily Kansam
KANSAN comment
tatorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
An Honorable End
During the past four years, President Nixon has been the object of a considerable amount of vituperation concerning his handling of the Vietnam War. To believe some accounts of the President's actions would be to believe that the White House was occupied by Mephistopheles himself. The President has been asailed as being unethical, immoral and inhuman, but the pinnacle of this idiocy was reached during the past few weeks when my myopic colleagues leveled their vitriolic pens in assaults upon the President's conception of honor with respect to the December bombing of North Vietnam.
These assaults seem to be based on the conception that the United States can do no right and North Vietnam can do no wrong. This is ludicrous. The United States has made more progress in restraint in dealing with North Vietnam than could ever be deemed reasonable.
Bombing that small country brought her back to the negotiating table in Paris. The strong indications that President Nixon would not hesitate to escalate the war brought about the cease-fire.
During 13 days of around-the-clock attacks, more than 80 per cent of North Vietnam's electrical-power capacity was destroyed. Approximately 25 per cent of her petroleum and gasoline supply was wiped out. Virtually all military installation was hit at least once.
Her industrial capacity being systematically destroyed, Hanoi had
little choice but to return to the peace tables to negotiate seriously and sign a peace agreement. The armistice has been signed and the United States is now withdrawing her forces. Whether Saigon can cope with its new independence will depend on how much she values it.
Why wasn't this done years ago?
One, because delicate negotiations with the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China had to be completed so that these allies of North Vietnam would help, rather than hinder, our attempts to disengage from this conflict. And, two, previous administrations had failed to accurately assess the determination of the North Vietnamese to win.
As it stands now, the United States and North Vietnam are on the threshold of a new era of productivity. President Nixon should be congratulated for holding his position when there was tremendous pressure from the public to abandon it. He has done a splendid job.
The purpose of bombing military installations in North Vietnam was to destroy the enemy's capacity to wage war, thus forcing his return to negotiations. President Nixon, being a careful, calculating man, weighed the possible courses of action and concluded that peace could not be accomplished through strength, but through the willingness to use it. The signatories of representatives of both the United States and North Vietnam stand as the proof that Nixon's actions were the correct ones.
John P. Bailey
Induction Ifs
On the heels of the signing of a Vietnam peace accord, Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird announced that the military draft had ended. He said that the United States' announcement contained almost as many as ifs as did the peace accord.
Laird attributed the feasibility of ending the draft to reduced manpower needs in Indochina, and to a Defense Department evaluation that volunteers could man the military at an acceptable level.
My hope is that the Defense Department evaluation was correct. The termination of the draft, five months ahead of schedule, ends the uncertainty of thousands who are now in the lottery, and thousands of others who still hold 2-S deferments. In Kansas induction of an estimated 50 persons this year was canceled. The monumental lurp
But the ifs of the proposal still lurk in the background.
One if is the continuation of the lottery for men who turn 19 this year. Selective Service officials
announced that a stand-by lottery would be conducted. In case the draft is reinstated because of a lack of funds, it could be in the lottery could then be drafted.
A second if is the President's ability to reinstate the draft at any time under current law. In July Congress will vote to determine whether this presidential power will be renewed.
World conditions don't seem to warrant renewal, for the era of national emergencies, requiring instantaneous increases in the size and intensity of military forces by the President, has passed. Congress can act swiftly enough.
The end of the draft, even though tempered with its is still preferable to continuous induction and the uncertainty that accompanies it. A final end to the draft can be best guaranteed by avoidance of military commitment, such as our protracted commitment in Vietnam.
Steven Riel
WASHINGTON—Until the man got on the air and said the words, until he made the announcement that on the 19th hour of Jan. 27, the planes carrying him was a black, joking suspicion that he might have one more doublecross in him. He could have gotten on the tube to tell us North Vietnamese torpedo boats destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin.
Part of it is him, Nikon. After what he and Henry Kissinger have done, there are some who retch at the notion that they should be thought of as peacemakers. It will take time for us to learn to moderate our feelings toward our officials. For the better part of a generation now, many millions of Americans have been taught anything connected with the White House, as war criminals.
He didn't, so take the peace and run. He said it is peace with honor, but by this time the rest of us know that peace is honor. Yet, for men who hate this war, the most the great and green fact that the war has stopped doesn't elicit joy. Partly this is so because after the blood bath of the last four years, relief and thankfulness are as happy an action as a same person can feel.
But more than that, for many who found war and the men who made it despicable, the smugness of the enemy that he was ending the war—must have been infuriating. In truth, he was forced out because he had next to nothing left to fight with. And if the enemy was sitting on a side, it once sidowed on top of us.
Nixon Forced from Vietnam
The Army had quit on him a couple of years ago. He claims he
Nicholas von Hoffman
This war should not vanish on us without it being written somewhere that the real American heroes were not the ones decorated by this government but the ones detested by it.
The last to crack is the Air Force. They're the moral robots, but they're not all the same -- don't kill anybody. All I do is read these little dials and put numbers in this little book." It finally got around. We had cash in their milts' wings.
in his speech the other night, when Nixon was thanking people for being patriotic and sacrificing, he didn't mention the doctors, the refusers, the defiers and the disobeyers served their country better than those of us who got drafted and went overseas and fought or who stayed home and paid our taxes. It also takes more guts. A man who was doctoral and a doctor who was courtmurdered for refusing an order to train Green Berets, as has much going for him as any POW. More, maybe, because when Levy went to his federal prison camp here in North Carolina States swearing he'd move heaven and earth to get him out. He was alone.
next came the fleet. Sabatage, race riots and desertion. The Pacific fleet was beginning to resemble the last days of the Imperial Russian Navy, with the carrier Kitty Hawk as the American version of the cruiser Potemkin. A seagoing Watts.
D. W.
pulled half a million troops out—as though he had a choice. He had left them there, by now they would have been in an open state of opium addiction and naked mutiny.
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON — America's most notorious hate-monger, Gerald L. K. Smith, was featured in the armed forces radio network.
For 50 years, the old rabble-rouser has been preaching hatred against Jews and blacks. However, his "Cross and Flag" largely unread, and his sermons have gone largely unheard.
Now the Pentagon has put him on its overseas network for two weeks, so he can listen to listeners to learn the moderator. Bill Bertenshaw, gave the address where listener could get Smith's literature no fewer than 20.
The old bigot watched his tongue on the military show. Instead of his usual hate-thy-neighbor doctrine, he told in saccharine tones how love would solve the world's woes.
Smith got on the armed forces network through the New Jersey Council of Churches, which had shown it called "Suggested Solutions." The council, apparently, was impressed with a "religious" complex that Smith built in Eureka Springs, Ark.
'Old Bigot'on Military Network
"Let's hope your words of wisdom are overheard by our congressmen," purred the moderator.
- WHEN JOHNNY COMBS MARBORG HOME AGAIN, HURRAB, HURRAB—"
This features a seven-story "Christ of the Ozars" shrine, a "Passion Play" and other Biblical attractions. On the show,
Smith boomed his projects as "the most visited Christian shrine in America" and "the holy Spirit and established these shrines."
His won't be the only investigation. Sen. Jacob Javits, R.N.Y., has learned about the broadcast and has demanded an explanation. And in New York the mayor is also asking Defense Secretary Melvin Laird "how come?"
He had broadcast the program over his own and the Voice of America, but it didn't suffice in samiters, he said, without monitoring it. "We will investigate this," the Broger promised. "It won't happen."
He neglected to mention that a federal road project to the shrine was blocked after the government discovered a weapon. Anti-Defamion League also has reported that his "Passion Play" is anti-Semitic.
Morton's Forked Tongue Documents taken from government files dispute Interior Secretary Rogers Morton's testimony the other day in praise of the Administration's efforts to
Armed forces radio director John Broger, an evangelical fundamentalist, was taken with the religious series and authorized it to be broadcast to the troops overseas. He told us, however, he was warned that the preacher had been included in the series.
But a memo from former Indian Commissioner Louis Bruce suggests a completely different story. "Despite the expenditure of $10 million, no memo," 40 per cent remain in the repositions.
boost Indian employment. He told Congress happily that the number of Indians in industrial sector is one of the recent years from 2000 to 2,500.
statement on Capitol Hill. Not only does the memo show that Indian unemployment is rising at a dangerous rate but also that the government is wasting money on Indian training programs.
The memo is dated October 17, scarcely two months before Morton made his reassuring
On one $3 million contract, for instance, the contractor pocketed a generous $198,000, ada-
tive to the contractor's $274,000 and taxes took $7,000.
Another wasteful project, intended to train Indian police, cost $104 per week for each trainee— almost twice the $3.85 per week
Jan. 29 I took my dog to my night Western Civilization class for protection because of incidents that have been occurring on campus. As I was entering my class in Fraser Hall, a junior teacher instructed the rules to have dogs in the building. Because many people take dogs to class, and I the dog went into the class, with the permission of my instructor. About 10 minutes later the campus police appeared and told me that I was to remove my dog immediately. But the police my dog would not wait for me outside (he is still fairly young and has a tendency to run off) and my class was about to begin.
it costs to train New York City trainees.
President Nixon's firing of top aides has stimulated not only growls but poetry. A "New 23rd Psalm" is now making the rounds of the sub-cabinet. It begins: "Nixon is my shepherd. I shall always want; He makes me happy." He leadeth me beside the still factories. He restores my doubts in the Republican Party . . .
Readers Respond
To the Editor:
Man's Best Friend Ousted
Ode to Nixon
The marchers, the protesters that rabble, they're the ones who served honorably. It will be a long time before you hear anyone else speak to them, and they will continue to repeat that the Movement had no effect on them, that while the peacenets marched they watched the Washington Redskins, but don't you believe it. They were peeking through the curtains.
I asked if the rules could be waived in this instance. The officer was adamant and insisted the dog would have to go. Fortunately a classmate offered to bring my dog home at that time, and consequently the class had to wait for us and stav longer.
Copyright, 1973 hy United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
The officer also suggested that I use the escort service. Although I have nothing against it and think it is a good idea, if the weather is nice at night, I enjoy walking.
Likewise, the late-joinning,
more conventional anti-war sorts
will say that it was your Eugene
McCarthys and George
McGoverns who made the dife-
ference. McCarthy lent the
Movement respectability, is how
the thought is usually phrased.
In this case, the word arround.
The only respectability
in politics is power, and men like
McCarthy got it by hitching on to
the peace movement.
I asked the officer why all dogs weren't ordered to leave. The excuse that was given to me was that our coaches could not check every building they visit a dog to class, he is responsible for what that dog does. So long as
Nothing wrong with that so long as some of us remember that you don't need a U.S. Senator or any sort of official approval to work political miracles. The peace movement showed the power of government even in the bloody foam of a war frenzy.
the instructor does not object and the dog does not disrupt the class, it should be permissible to bring him.
That may be the only useful lesson Vietnam has to teach. Certainly there are millions of us who will be just as marked by it
I do not understand why the law is enforced only part of the time, and if it actually is a law, it will be made up of the time or not at all. Not that many people would bring their dogs to class if it was "officially" permissible on campus or on campus police are, I would think that they would encourage people to take dogs to night classes. If someone has a better suggestion, and a woman of women of this campus in on it.
Karen B. Purre
Lawrence Sophomore
as men like Nixon were marked by Munich and appeasement. Vietnam has gone on for so long that we have come to regard the war there as a species of normality. The thought of an American peace is almost impossible, and the life of people whose adult lives have been taken up with the fury and weeping of Vietnam. How much easier it is for them to see "another Vietnam" everywhere
than for the Nixon crowd to be seeing new Munichs.
A better moral to extract is that as long as you have your A. J. Mustes, your Dave Dellings, Paul Goodmans, Martin Luther Kings, joan Beazes, and all the rest on the enlistment registers of the government can make war, but finally, we can make peace.
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
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Chosen was a peninsula straddled by the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan, jutting from the Asian mainland. The country bordered China and Russia on the north and was but 100 miles from Japan across the Korean Strait. Mountainous in relief, the small country had brief experiences of flood or drought. Its location between China, Russia and Japan, the three major powers of Asia, made it a likely target for imperialism.
Korea's belated introduction to the world was a fitting one. For centuries Korea had been an unwilling participant in belligerence. Before the birth of Christ, China forcibly annexed Korea. In the centuries that followed China and Japan fought for possession of the country. The Sino-Japanese War in 1894 was a result. Russia joined this tug-of-war in the 19th century, and in 1904 the designs of Russia and Japan on Korea precipitated the Russo-Japanese War. Japan defeated Russia and Korea became the spoils of war. From 1910 until 1945, Korea was a territory of Japan, named Chosen by the conquerors.
When five years had elapsed, instead of union of the two sectors of Korea, separation was a fact. The southern zone, South Korea, was headed by the right-wing nationalist Syngman Rhee. The northern zone, North Korea, was headed by the Soviet-trained Communist, Kim II顺序 sovereignty over the entirety of Korea and each remained uncompromising on a settlement of the separation.
The release from Japanese domination that accompanied an Allied victory in World War II did not bring peace to Korea. To the contrary, peace stopped at the Korean borders. The United States and the Soviet Union shared joint trusteeship of Korea at the end of the war, a trusteeship that was designed to last for a maximum of five years. But trusteeship by the two nations only served to generate a schism between the northern and southern zones of occupation.
The border between the North and South had been arbitrarily drawn along the 38th parallel at the conclusion of World War II. Korea was divided almost in half in the trusteeship agreement. The partition established an artificial division of the Korean economy. There were two-thirds of the population and most of the arable land in the country. The North, on the other hand, contained most Korean industry. Steel factories and hydroelectric plants built by the
Korea, Like Vietnam, Bears Scars of Continuing Conflict
Bv STEVEN RIEL
Until 1950 Korea was cloaked in anonymity, a small Asian country out of sight and mind. But in 1950 war came and U.S. troops were rushed to Korea to avert a Communist takeover. Soon Korea lingered on American lips and came into American homes each day with the newspaper. Like Belleau Wood, Saipan and Corregidor before, and, later, Viteman, Korea captured attention as a battlefield.
Japanese were concentrated in the North, which also contained the predominance of the country's natural resources. Timber, mineral deposits and hydroelectric power, abundant in the North, were relatively scarce in South Korea. At the same time, only one-fourth of the railroad mileage in the country was in North Korea.
Because of partition, both halves of the country have suffered. South Korea's economy has incurred huge trade deficits because it has been forced to import large quantities of manufactured products. The North has been hard-pressed to raise enough food for its 15 million people.
But partition was destined to have more dire consequences than economic problems. On June 25, 1950, North Korea invaded the South. Each country had been an armed camp for some time, as if in foreknowledge of things to come. In the bitter and bloody war begun in June both South and North Korea were devastated. The South and North were alternately overrun by opposing armies. Seoul, the capital of South Korea, changed hands three times in the fighting. When an uneasy cease-fire ended the conflict, virtually every town, village and city in both countries had been destroyed.
The cease-fire brought little peace to the country. Since large-scale hostilities ceased in 1953, conflict, on a lesser scale, has plagued Korea. The North has continually sent its agents into the South to foment violence. Several groups of the infiltrators have been captured in assassination attempts on Chung Hee Park, South Korean president since 1962. Park also has faced difficulty from internal sources. Student riots, which forced Syngman Rhee to flee into exile in 1960, have been a continuing problem in the South. Park and Rhee before him adopted near-dictatorial policies, leading to office in South Korea. Park declared martial law in the South in 1964 when particularly severe roiding accompanied Korean negotiations for a return to normal relations with Japan. Martial law was declared again in late 1972 pending the revision of the South Korean constitution and reunification talks with North Korea. Park has relentlessly crushed his opposition in the South and has consistently increased the power of his office.
The Korean reunification talks offer hope for the people of Korea. If reunification becomes a reality, the Koreans, for the first time in their recent history, may enjoy a degree of peace that has eluded them for so long. Success of the talks seems to be problematic for the time being, given the history of disagreement between the two halves of the country. Pending progress toward unification among others, when they hear the name Korea, will remember the bloody events of the early 1950s that brought Korea to the world's attention. They may also wonder why such a conflict-ridden country should have borne the name Chosen.
Thursday, February 1, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
'1776' Tells It Like It Wasn't -- Or Was It?
By BOB GILLUM Kansan Reviewer
Benjamin Franklin turnus to John Adams and says, "Don't worry, John, the history of America is very long."
Sure enough, there are incidents about the drafting of the Declaration of Independence that nobody learns in history class, and about which few people care.
The film version of "1776" is a light-hearted musical which characterizes the Second Continental Congress from May, 1776, to the signing of the Declaration of Independence and 43 years later clarified now that two centuries have passed. This musical version is straining humorous, and not nearly serious enough.
The story centers on Adams, leader of the effort to free the colonies; Franklin, his guiding light, and Jefferson, author of the document. Virginian Richard Henry Lee moves that Congress debate the matter of declaring freedom. Congress stands
divided, Adams takes charge and the debate follows.
Sherman Edwards' score is musically fulfilling, but songs pop up at the wrong times. The picture a powder-wigged Congress breaking out in a rousing chorus. The only effective numbers occur as an army messenger thinks about his dead friends, and during a debate over a deleted slavery clause.
Peter Scott's script doesn't focus on the declaration, but on the trivial matters surrounding it. Jefferson's wife goes to Philadelphia, then the task of composing the document comes easy. There's no spirit of freedom, just the trappings.
Characters are stereotyped and their actions are distracting.y predictable. Franklin (Howard da Silva) is a gray blade, Adams (William Daniels) is overshadowed by the daydreamer Jefferson (Ken Howard).
As the 200th anniversary of the United States approaches, we can expect more major productions like this. Hopefully, they won't be so fluffy.
"Jeremiah Johnson" in a word is Robert Redford. The entire film, centered on his exploits in the Rocky Mountain wilderness, has very little plot with even less dialogue.
Uah's naturally beautiful setting is the one saving grace for a film with very little to offer. Duke Callaghan's filming techniques almost seem to rob the true mountain beauty. Callaghan drys up many otherwise dazzling scenes with unnecessary repetition which sometimes becomes boring.
Redford, playing a mediocre strong silent type, presents a rather inept mountain man. Leaving the problems of early 19th century civilization, Redford gathers supplies and heads up in the mountains in search of furs and adventure.
Furs he is eventually able to trap, but only after nearly starving to death. The fact that
Redford's Latest Lacks Plot, Depth
The University of Kansas has received an $8,000 gift from the Cities Service Foundation for use in 1973. The KU minor engineering program will receive one-fourth of the gift. The use of the balance will be unrestricted.
he doesn't perish within a month in the wilderness is covered up by more fat extinct.
Redford's savior turns out to be an old grizzly bear hunter who supposedly teaches the young "plimprin" the mountain ways. Reddent enters the old hunter's camp and trains the young to numerous events becomes a seasoned hunter, trapper, and general adventure seeker.
Refford's adventurous undertakings, though, turn out to be almost as exciting as an old Audie Murphy western. Throughout the entire film he is continuously attacked
ATTEND
MAHARISHI
INTERNATIONAL
UNIVERSITY
- and study - Science of
Creative Intelligence
Meet Feb. 1 7:30
Meet Feb. 1, 7:30 Pine Room, Union
Spheeris' Sound Mellow, Sensuous in 'Isle of View'
At a time when hotshot smoothies are a dime a dideperful, all we need is yet another fingering pickup, right? Well, Jimmie Spheres' ISLE OF VIEW (Columbia) puts him a lid above the others, for here is music that is sensuous as slowpoured honey and almost as physically relaxing without being as sleep-inducing.
By TIM BRADLEY Kansan Reviewer
All the songs but one ("Seven Virgins" is sadly out of place), flow together to Spleener's first vinyl visitation an eerie surprise. "The Moon," "I Am the Mercury," and "Emaria."
The lyrics are just nice words that go by without much notice, and deservedly so, as the actual sound of the words is more important than their meaning. I am generally
However, on this LP the strings work actively with singer and song to create a mood of autumnal airness and tone color. Speers' voice and violins go together like dew on a dungheep, and it is difficult to sound this good without those fiddles.
wary of orchestrated pop music, because at the hands of an insensitive mass producer, stringed songs can end up as so much saccharine slop.
Hopefully he'll bring them along when he appears here in April, but in the meantime, buy this album. Put it on while you're writing home or something, and no matter how bleak the week, the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the songs were way up; the song's title over a few times and see what you get.
Since the plot lacks any semblance of adventure, the viewer must look other places. Redford's intense gazes and thoughtful trances provide a vague feeling of excitement, but after about thirty minutes this gets boring too.
by wild Indians seeking revenge for their lost comrades.
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One final comment on filming. Little subtleties, such as an opening scene slightly out of focus, ruined what could have been a technically well done film. Panavision helps by adding depth to the open spaces actually found in the mountains. The deep color found only in high elevations also comes across well.
'Antelope Boy,' A Story Of Indians Sans Cowboys
WEATHER REPORT
is:
Friday
Feb. 9, 8 p.m.
Moch Aud.
Admission - $300
No Reserved Seats
Tickets available at
SUA office, and in K.C.
at Home Radio & T.V.
Allied Radio Shack, and
the Choosey Beggar (Over-
land Park)
Joseph Zawinul
electric acoustic keyboard
Wayne Shorter
reeds
Miroslav Vitous
bass
Eric Gravatt
drums
Dom Um Romao
percussion
a human being instead of performing as an Indian. The latter is the tokenism that pervades all race relations and the former is the only way for any man to face the world with pride and say, "Look at me. I am noble. I am honorable. I am one of you."
Since the play does produce this empathy, it would be extremely effective performed by real Indians. The illusion is fine, but it is not quite as convincing and is often European deception and kills the empathy.
"Antelope Boy" is one of those rare plays about the American Indian which does not cater to the settlers or to the Indians and denies any controversy between the two. Instead, the play tells a story of people, their beliefs, legends and lives.
The only drawback of "Antelope Boy," the spring production of the University of Kansas Theatre for Young People, is that it is not comprised of American Indians.
"Antelope Boy" approaches the Navajo and Pueblo as if no conquering or colonizing force in history has ever approached them. The play shows the humanity of the Navajo and Pueblo and the audience can empathize with them.
By DAVID HEALY Kansan Reviewer
The cast is very energetic and realistic. Special laudles go to Nancy Walker, who is too young to portray a grandmother so well, but her skills and grace must be an Indian with an Irish name.
Disregarding the ancestry of the cast, the KU production is superb. The costumes, set and lighting all catch the color spectrum of the American Southwest—the yellows, browns, purple and pinks of Arizona and New Mexico's "Land of Enchantment."
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For too many years the native residents of this continent and settlers from Europe and elsewhere have not been able to live here. They are still possible or in some sort of tolerance.
The company has plans to give 19 performances on tour, "Antelope Boy" will be presented in Topeka, Smith Center and Colby, at the Kansas City Music Hall, and in Manhattan, at the Regional Children's Theatre Performance in May.
1973-Year of the Taco
The only University performance of Joy Harvey's "Antelope Boy" will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre. It is so emotionally powerful that one should approach it with all the reverence of a convent of nuns awaiting an audience with the Pope.
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6
Thursday, February 1, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KING GEORGE'S BIG EAGLE
Soaring High
Kensan Staff Photo by DAN LAUING
The new mosaic tile Jayhawk watches with an open eye to KU diver Scott Davies. The mosaics are created by Dana Rutherford.
backdive off the three meter spring board in the Robinson Natatorium. Watching is coach Chuck McHeerry who makes two trips each week from Kansas City to help in the diving training. A daily workout in the 24-foot trampoline and 75 dives off the boards.
Mental Frame Critical To Diver's Consistency
Standing alone at the edge of the springboard, his back toward the water, University of Kansas diver Scott Davies is the focus of the spectators' attention as he prepares to execute his dive. The crowd and judges have been told which dive he is planning to do. Now he must do it—and do it well.
Davies springs from the board and his body becomes a blur as it spins through 2% somersaults before entering the water. Davies looks at the scores, scores are being displayed on flash cards by the five judges who watch his approach and execution. Davies looks at the scores and returns to the praise or consolation of his opponent in the final fleeting. Only the next dive is on his mind.
"In a meet, you have a certain number of dives to do," Davies said. "You get psyched up for your first dive and then there's a mental ledown when you watch everybody else go. When it's your turn again, youre mentally after you've finished, mentally, after youre finished, you can't dive anymore. You have to stay away from it for a day or so."
Despite the preparation the sport demands, Davies and his fellow diver Steve King enjoy its challenge. Both sophomores, Davies, Wichita, and King, Overland Park, develop their skills to develop to each other's talents and to prepare themselves for the competition.
"I've learned more from diving with Steve King than I did all through high school," said DAVIES, "I think Steve is the most consistent diver in the Bie Eight."
The two young men once were rivals. As a junior at Shawnee Mission West, King won the Kansas high school diving title. Competing for Wichita Southeast, Davies, placed second, just a point behind. But Davies turned the tables on King the following year by winning the 1971 state meet. King finished second.
As freshman Davies and King were KU's top divers, King took a pair of third place finishes in the 1972 Big Eight meet and Davies finished with a fifth on the three
Davies and King will continue their intense afternoon workouts in which they execute about 75 dives, and for the next two weeks they also will use a videotape playback camera. Assistant coach Chuck McHenry, an Amateur Athletic Union coach from Kansas City, Mo., also coaches the divers.
meter board and a 10th on the one meter board.
Defense Suttle's Primary Concern; Forward Confident'Hawks in Race
The goal of the daily, two-hour practice sessions is consistency.
"You work hard toward doing the dive so that you do it automatically in a meet," Davies said. "That's when you become confident enough to blow dives. You must be consistent."
The 6'9" Suttle was switched from center to a forward spot this year and he likes the change. He said, "If I'm going to make it in the pros, it'll have to be as a forward. I don't think he's going to play more than 220 or 225 pounds, and that's not big enough to be a center in the pros."
Suttle said, "When you're a center, you
How do you convince a prep-All-American averaging 26.6 points and 15 rebounds a game to come to your university? According to Rick Suttle, the University of Kansas sophomore basketball ace, you must be persistent.
Suttle said, "The K.U. coaches were nice. They kept coming around, calling and writing letters. They really made an impression."
Suttle, who set a career scoring record of 2,045 at Assumption High School, St. Louis, Mo., has been impressing Jayhawk opponents ever since. Suttle averaged 22.3 points and 12.5 rebounds a game while shooting with 55 per cent accuracy as a KU freshman. So far this year he has tallied 18.2 points in his last 27 games, maintained a 51 per cent shooting average. He is the fourth leading score in the Big Eight Conference.
'Hawk Women Begin Rounds At Nationals
The University of Kansas Women's Volleyball team, which was undefeated in state competition, begins tournament action today in the National Volleyball Championship Tournament at Brigham Young University.
The winners and runners-up from each of the four groups will go to on the elimination round.
"I think we have a good chance," Mawson said. "The girls have played in two of the three national championships and shouldn't have any jitters about playing."
The Southwest Missouri State College and KU squads will represent Region VI at the national contest. The Jayhawks were the winners of the Missouri squad in the regional competition.
"Competition shouldn't be too tough in the first four games of the round," said Marlene Mawson, KU volleyball coach. "The toughest game in the early play will be Southwest Texas State University, the last game in the first round."
National play begins with 24 teams from over the nation. Competing in four groups of six teams. Each team in each group will play every other team in that group.
The 'Hawks will meet Western Georgia University and Southwest Texas State University in the preliminary rounds which end Friday.
The KU women will begin play this morning against the squad from Brigham Young University and will face the New York State University team in the afternoon.
A diver's repertoire comprises about 80 possible dives. Before each meet, he lists on a diveing sheet the maneuvers he will perform and the basic types: forward, back, reverse, inward and twist. Each variation is assigned a degree of difficulty. The diver's score is determined by multiplying the sum of the scores by the dive's degree of difficulty.
The Jayhawk squad, made up of seven juniors and one senior, finished in the top 12 of the NCAA Tournament. They played in Miami. Mawson said the girls had a strong chance to finish in the top eight this year.
The pressure of meets is nothing new to King, who has dived competitively for 12 of them. His team's record is not begin divining until his sophomore year in high school. No matter the length of time they've participated in the sport, both think it is the psychological aspect of diving that makes it a challenge.
get tired of having your back to the basket
you're facing the bucket. As a forward
you're facing the bucket.
The hardest adjustment, Suttle said, was the running. "A forward has to move around more, especially on defense. You have to be in better physical condition."
He is optimistic about the future, but realizes he still has a long way to go to reach his goal. He is not afraid to say, "I'm trying to become a better defensive player. I have to concentrate more on my rebounding, shooting range and passing accuracy," as he develops a hook shot this summer."
Suttle also feels good about the prospects for the remainder of the Jayhawks' 72-73 season. He said, "I though we'd peak after the Jayhawk Classic, but we didn't. It all wasn't there all time. We're coming around now. We're beginning to gel as a team."
Suttle said he thought the team's biggest weakness was a lack of dominance
throughout the game. "We play our best ball in the first ten minutes of the first half. Once we get a bad, instead of keeping after it, we make sure the other team get their confidence back."
According to Suttle, confidence is the name of the game and be said he thought the Missouri game would prove to be the turkey down there. He went down there thinking how good Missouri was supposed to be. Everybody was saying how they were going to wipe us. Then they had us down and we came back in. Then we had us down and we came back in the conference we couldn't beat."
"Your biggest enemy is yourself," said king. "The most important thing in diving is to be calm."
Suttle said the first half of the K-State game in Lawrence was also a morale booster. He said, “I went to Iowa State with my sister who would win, than in any game this year.”
f
Suttle said that the Jayhawks are still very much in the big flight title race. He
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"Several days before a meet, I start thinking about what I'm going to do," said Davies. "The day before, I work on the dives I'm going to do. Then at the meet, I sit down and think of each of my dives. If you hit the first dive right, then you're on your way. But if you blow it, you have to psych yourself up even more."
1st Kansas Appearance
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According to Davies, some divers play on the up-built emotions of their competitors.
"In the warm-ups, some divers will get up on the board and just bounce on the end of the board and not go off," he said. "The others have to sit and watch and wonder, gee, I hope I have time to do my practice dives. You get real tight. This won't happen too often, but if you let another diver psych out, you'll beat you."
In his brief varsity career King holds an edge over Davies in dual and championship meets. Last week at the Oklahoma State game, King and Davies finished 1-2 on both boards.
CELEBRATION
8 p.m. Feb. 1-10
864-3982 KU Experimental Theatre
Cal Phillips, junior, felt threatened when his parents suggested he work. "They called me a bum and said they weren't sending any more money."
Cal held out as long as possible. "Two days after they stopped sending bread, I got into a Provident Mutual Campus Internship Program. Now I have my own clients. Can make my own hours. Can make good money. I got a job waiting for me when I graduate. My parents said they were proud of me. So I told them an insurance policy."
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate.
To become a candidate:
1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
On March 14 and 15,new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected.
Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 14.
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OF- FICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 1, 1973
7
Welfare Reform Debated
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
A proposed reorganization of the state welfare system will not have much effect on Douglas County, according to Douglas County Welfare director, John Derrick.
Derrick said the proposed plan would establish 10 welfare administrative areas in the state instead of the current 105. The proposal by Dr. Robert Harder, head of the state Division of Social Welfare, would use the state's four most populous counties,INDIANA, Johnson, Shawnea and Sedgwick, as individual administrative units.
The rest of the state would be divided into six large regions. Lawrence would be included in a region that runs from near Atchison, south to Franklin County.
DERRICK SAID that he didn't know where the regional office would be located, but that the local county offices could possibly be used as satellite offices.
He didn't know, Derrick said, how this would affect the personnel in Douglas
Derrick said the four largest and most populous counties, scheduled to become the new states, will be among them.
Derrick said he saw many good points in the team organization and a few negative ones.
welfare clients or over half of the state's total of 41,000.
"I think there will be less contact with other local agencies," he said.
The local welfare agency, Derrick said,
has always worked well with other local nal-
terns.
Derrick said he saw an advantage in administration with the proposed system, but he wasn't sure if the problems before adopting the proposal. Derrick is not alone in his questions about
Derrick is not alone in his questions about the prooosal.
ALTHOUGH THE local welfare office is not housed in the county courthouse, in many other counties the offices are in county owned buildings. Derrick said that in a state controlled system, these offices have to move or pay rent for their space.
PASKE SAID the welfare directors thought the people could best be served on them.
In testimony Jan. 23 before the House Public Health and Welfare Committee, Bill Paske, Reno County welfare director and president of the Kansas County Welfare Directors Association, said the association had voted 35 to 20 to oppose the proposal.
Also testifying before the House committee, Carlos Jaramillo of Leodi, a representative of the Kansas Council of Agricultural Workers and Low Income Families, questioned the legality and effectiveness of the proposal. His organization represents 16 southwestern Kansas counties.
In a hearing held before the House committees on John, 23. Harder explained that Mr. Obama was not aware of the
THE PROPOSAL would offer permanent property tax relief, he said, and would remove layers of bureaucracy from the welfare system. This would allow better utilization of staff and a more economical expenditure of the welfare tax dollar.
Nichols Sees Merger Of KU, Religion School
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
Harder said in some counties social workers had only 25 clients and in other counties they had as many as 250 clients. Under the present organization, he said, communications have to go through five levels of bureaucracy to reach the state staff.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Wednesday that he expected the Kansas School of religion to become a part of the University of Kansas in a few years.
Nichols made the comment in a question- and answer session following the Faculty luncheon, attended by 40 persons, at the United Ministry Center.
"Even though the School of Religion is partially funded by the Endowment Association, I believe, to keep in line with the times, the Religion School must become a part of the University, and not be privately funded," Nichols said.
Nichols was asked several questions concerning the stature of the University of Kansas within the state and the nation. His comments were made in response to a speech made Nov. 2 by Jess Stewart, a former president of the American Association of University Professors (AUAP).
Stewart said KU had fallen down in explaining the innovations it had made to the people of the state of Kansas, or at least in properly publicizing the innovations.
CPA Interviews
Campus Briefs
Dance at Union
The February Sisters will sponsor an all-women's dance at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Big Eight hoorn of the Kansas Union. Their kids are 75 cents. Child care will be provided.
The Consumer Protection Association will be interviewing for board members from 7-10 p.m. Feb. 7 in room 299 in the Kansas Union. Any student, faculty member, or staff person wishing to apply should submit his name, address, phone number, and a description of his reasons for wanting to become a member of the CPA. Applications may be sent to the office in room 299 of the Union, or may be submitted at the interview time.
The February Sisters will also hold a Feminist Film Festival at 8 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 5 and 6. Admission is free, and the children, and child care will be provided.
The philosophy department is sponsoring the First Annual Student-Faculty Get-Together at 8 p.m. Friday. Feb. 2 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. All students and faculty of the philosophy department are invited.
Philosophy Affair
Banquet Set
Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, will have its annual initiation banquet at 6 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4, in the Centennial Room of the Kansas University. John G. Brown, a member of the chemistry department, will be the guest speaker. All members are urged to attend.
Sailing Club
The University of Kansas Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Coalition Meets
The Women's Coalition will hold a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Student Activity Center (Hilltop Day Care Center). The program will be devoted to legal remedies for discrimination against women.
As a result of Stewart's remarks, Chancellor Nichols requested each student to submit a list of innovative ideas to him for evaluation. The goals, objectives, costs and benefits of the projects to the University were reviewed and submitted to the department heads and school deans.
Nichols said that he was satisfied with most of the reports he had received concerning department innovations, but that those reports listed weren't really innovations at all.
"I haven't read all the reports, but I am forwarding them to John Conard for his in publicizing KU events," Nichols said. Conard is director of University relation
Stewart also referred to Continuing Education as the "dinosaur of education" in his November speech, but Nichols disagreed with Stewart.
"I believe Continuing Education has a great future in Kansas if all of the institutions of higher learning will cooperate," Nichols said. "I think many of the members of the Board of Regents agree with me."
"I think the Concerned Students for Higher Education have made a significant contribution in informing legislators and the funding shortage at KU." Nichols said.
Nichols said there was a funding shortage at KU and that this could be a result of a reduction in the number year compared to last year. He said there was an increase in in-state students, though, to lessen the deficit. Nichols said out-of-State funding could be increased $125 for the fall semester.
In a few remarks concerning the fiscal 1974 budget to be submitted June 1, Nichols laid out his suggestions for funding for counseling and financial aid to Mexican-Americans and Indians enrolled at KU. He said the Endowment Association already providing funds for aiding blacks.
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Floor Sample 50 watt Magnavox component system (SkyBox) with a 299.99 air Pressure Adsorption sealed cabinets sold for $739.99 now just $299.99 with new warmer and Air suspension sealed Stone's Backpack! Stereo Room Rero $689.99 - B-12
WIVESOF
P.O.W.'S & M.I.A.'S
Zenith circle of sound stereo for sale. AM-FM
864-6033. 100 watts peak power Call AT-
864-6033
New Sony Quad Systems now in stock at al-
Stoneback's 929 Mass. 2-12
1988 Cullan Supreme. Very fine condition. Call Stephen at 843-6776. 2-6
Panasonic AM- FM receiver with consecutive recoil capability. Panasonic FM receiver with 24-bit resolution. Yamaha FD600 is less than a year old - the older model has a similar power output.
1967 CHYLSER NEWPORT CUSTOM New tires & battery. Genuine transmission $53.00 or less.
Weekdays—2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Sat.Sun.—3:00, 5:05, 7:30
& 9:30
"WOMEN IN LIMBO"
For sale, Sony Stereo Tape recorder, Model TC353
for personal use only. Please contact us for
features. Also record change with damped tape
options. No cash offers. Free shipping.
Realistic LAB 24A - automatic manual turntable
cartridge cartridges included. Almost 82, 3433
3433
Sound Scenar System Systems 6102-HL tape deck.
Soundscenar amplifier. like new! **790** Call 841-353-
receiver amplifier. like new! **790** Call 841-353-
64, VW, needs a little work–make offer, will sell cheap. 832-337 four.
2-6
air sale--ampg SVT 200 watt RMS, like new,
air sale--ampg SVT 200 watt S15 watt, like new,
BJ-406. 842-1110.
SONY T. reel-to-reel tape deck model TC-250.
SONY T. reel-to-reel tape deck model TC-350.
saving machine w tape, $60; or
machine w saving machine w tape, $40; or
machine w saving machine w tape, $20.
SONY
Schwinn 5-speed, reliable lifelong transportation,
excellent condition. See at 1131 Ilioh, #2 (#upstarts) evening, leave number on pad on door 2
if the bell is ringing @4634-333 W. Friday, 1 p.m.
5 p.m. or best offer
wilight Hour at 5:05
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V1 3-1065
2 month old Black & White 10" TV, Must sell.
call 843-5816. 2-6
Stereo Systems Available
SKI OUTFTTS-Men's 18cm Heads z 9% boots.
SKI OUTFTTS-Men's 20cm Heads, sz. 7 boots. Volg-
nage - 2370.
SKI OUTFTTS-Men's 30cm Heads, sz. 12 boots. Volg-
At A 30% Discount
64 VW-runs good; needs body work. Cheap.
2-7
BMI: 864-6309
P-A Blownalmed Alice-Laaning, Voice of the
Piano. A warm and soulful arrangement
amps and modified custom 20 "brattle"
tracks.
Women's clothes sale -dresses, pants, bibs,
pumps, socks, shoes. Incl. standard cotton
estimate of 1023 Ketucky, 12-90 at 6:45 a.m.
www.ketsky.com
Western Civilization Notes- Now on sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
RAY AUDIO STREEO WARNHOUSE - The finest
RAY AUDIO STREEO WARNHOUSE
6000-849-2847
www.rayaudio.com
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization. Available now."
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: 5.02
1. If you use them You're at an advantage
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
2. If you don't.
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS.
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP CLIMBER *CARPING IN FAR-PLANT LOTS* GUILD from stadium. Easy walking distance of master campus buildings, parking lot parked. Free: Cabin accommodates rateable rates; furniture available. Ideal roommates. Saturdays: Sapta Es, 1123 Ind, Ap. 9 ballroom 843-2116.
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to walk
up; laundry room; kitchen; garage; street,
street, parking; Homes R.U., and near town
shops.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. New leasing and a kitchen, furnished and unified with tile and granite floors, heating and air pool and laundry. Most utilities are on-site. Call 843-8230 or see at lt. w. 19th, apt. 18
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the MALE
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
ADAPTMENTS
These three beautiful apartment surround a quiet
parking lot. You can only buy 18 blocks--only the ones
play by play. The apartment is located on the
north side of the street.
Bellage Clinic No. 863-5521
2411 Louisiana 842-5522
Come up and see these apartment apartments. Henderson Falls water bills are $162 per month; water bills are $145 per month. Leaves of various lengths are present on the roofs.
ROOM*: single or double for KU nom. New KU ng.
Np refer. Reference required. K4122 after 4123.
Sleeping room, single and double, furnished for two adults. Wi-Fi access. 1 and 2 beds from Union. Phone MS-578-7342.
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean furnished, wall-to-wall configuration. One-car parking, 2 parking spaces, no pets. Phone: 518-490-2630.
Nice air one bedroom farm studio and Bal-
den campus one bedroom farm Union at 120M. Mr
Gerald camp
Large older furn. 3 bedroom apt. Good value at
$154,929 all utilities and kitts. 185 MHR. 862-
1998.
Large furn. efficiency appl. located close to campain,
829 - 1958. Heat, water pad availability 2-4.
829 - 1958.
Available Now—one bedroom apt. utilities paid
except electricity, one block from Union 1203
and 1205.
PRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and winter sessions in 2 bedrooms, 2 bedrooms w/Study, Quiet cabin; landocation; Pool and gas-lighted, landed courtyard. Excellent development. 2500 West 4th Avenue.
2 bedroom carpeted duplex, Draps, electric
insulation, attached furniture. Available 10,
25 JUN 2015
Two houses. Two bedroom house and a three-
room house. Accepts girls. No poo. Will
eat oil to students. Code 27188
Ready to make a move? Furnished room for rent
with 3 bedrooms. Rentals available for engagement with 6 others. For information call 1-800-725-9447.
Nicely furn. arm, for 1 or 2 students in campus parking Utilities paid 943-834 2-14
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
furniture. 842-7098
tt
Need a couple of people who are interested in
teaching English to people. Roomy, close to KYU.
485-293-1467. People Roaney close to KYU.
485-293-1467.
1 2 females to 3 bedroom house 3 blocks
4 09 841-2915. moir.plus. Call Off-
1 609-841-2915
One female roomseman needed to share apart-
ment with other girls. He was 86, unites护阶-
府 B2-1472-4872
FEMALE ROOMMATE FOR J-HAWK TOWERS
641-2817 2-5
Riders to take expenses or car pool from Topeka 354-7137. 2-1
Wanted: Roommates. 4 Bdmn, modern duplex.
Rent $750 & utilities. Btu 624-664. 2-6
POETRY WANTED FOR possible inclusion in co-
nference program. Box 444C, McGraw-Hill,
New York, NY 10026. 906-573-8200.
Two girls need a third roommate to share a really nice three-bedroom, two-bathroom fireplace.
Instructor to teach 3-finger style on 5-sling
Call 842-7310 after 6.00. 2-6
Female or male roommate needed. Large, beau-
tiful bedroom to campus, quiet atmosphere.
1847 Room 203.
Need roommate to share house with two other humans. Ullities paid. 842-1110. 2-6
Want to move into China? Need people to move
from Canada to about $70, bikes from 2-4
come by 1321 Tern.
Wanted: quiet female to share 2 BRT apt. ram
turned. bm8 $35, call m84 $124-1004. 2-7
Would like one two-year-old to share his week:
Berkshire Children Center, 185-2033
Berkshire Children Center, 185-2033
NOTICE
1515 Michigan St. Bar-B Q. We Bar-B Qu in an
open rack with 80'x16'x12' shelves.
A slab to abate $20.40, large rib plate
$15.50, small rib plate $6.60, large rib plate
$15.50, large
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
for compartmental information call 842-720-9361.
www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com
Private parking stalls adjacent to campus. Phone 843-8534
2-7
Casa de Taco
Eat with us—
We try to please.
1105 Mass. 843-9880
Five Days
25 words or additional word: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
PEUGECT
Peugeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
Pougeot vo-s $117.50
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
843-8484
Why buy a Landlord's property for him with a lawyer? For the same price, Lawrence along with your diploma, 36 to 40 per month can amount to $5,000. 0 or more you never again pay. People & costs C&r. Wheel Wheels.
ATTENTION KU women. A *plyp* now for the Delta Delta Delta security annual scholarship office is available at the Financial Office in State Street and the Dean of Women-Office through Feb. 10.
Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco Concert Guitar for Beginners—Advanced-Concert Guitar learn progressive and new techniques selected student material interpretation and playing. Telephone 841-310-
ART SALE and open house Sunday. Feb. the 4th
1:30 p.m. h. Permanent, 1333 New Hampton Ave.
ALL WOMEN *DANCE THIS SATURDAY-Bus*
*On Saturday at 2pm*
*For ages 18 and up for age: Child care provided 75% donation
for age; Adult care provided 75% donation
ATTENTION RENTERS
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
House apartments, duplexes, all areas
all rooms, apartment or two difficult Home Lo-
ans,公寓贷款 difficult
No charge, lay your humans, apprentices, duplexes
and classrooms. No charges for waiting. For more info call Home Locator,
TYPING
Warded. Any kind of tying-sees, these term papers are in tying manuscripts West of campus near big campus buildings.
Experienced in typing, these, dissertations, term papers, other misc. types. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Scanned paper scanned correctly. Pleas. 843-8544. Mrs. Wright.
STRANGER IN TOWN? As an Anv representat-
sive Selling Agent in your year house, Call
Anv at (212) 437-5000 or visit www.anv.com.
Employment Opportunities
TUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yellowouts and
I U. N. States. Parks book tells where
to apply to. Send $2. Arnaldo B, D-260
Littleton; Textburg, Idaho 81400. Monkey-
quake guarantee.
FOUND
REWARD for return of one black wallet lost to
unauthorized person. Identification used:
Need Identification bad card collection 1-223
At Red Baron, Sat, Jan 27, double treated nivex long tail topcoat. Subtle reward. nivex short tail coat.
Very friendly gray and white male eat with a
friendly smile. Please reclaim him after 6-
calling 814-2344. Please
Beautiful black cat; on campus early morning
Approximately to 1½ years old (Q-25)
842-0138.
PERSONAL
WINTER IS STILL HERE--geneine surpure arbuta
parties grape Bargain prized 95 $9.50 Surfur
Sunburst.
SERVICES OFFERED
Bank with your University State Bank. Closest to 2-2
applicants. 955 illinois-443-4706.
WANT IT TO START? CALL PERFORMANCE
imported, we will fix it!
imported, we will fix it!
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks. $287 inclusive. London departures. Small international group campuses in Europe, Africa, India, China 3-11 weeks. Write *Whole Travel*, Land, Lift, Box 1497, K.C., Mo.
Tony's 66 Service
tune-ups starting service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
VI 2-1008
YARN-PATTERNS
NEEDLEPOINT-RUGS
CANVAS-CREWEL
'We'll keep you
We'll keep you in stitches"
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2654
10:5 Mon.-Sat.
3
USE
KANSAN
WANT
ADS
8
Thursday, February 1, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Battle Tough for Coed Hall
A three-year battle for a coed scholarship hall at the University of Kansas could be lost because of a shortage of three women applicants.
Frank Benciverg, assistant to the dean of men and adviser to the four men's scholarship halls, said Wednesday that the University Housing Committee would review late this week for an app to All-Scholarship Hall (ASCH) to create a coed hall.
Bencivengo said the proposal, to be presented to the housing committee, was to establish a coed scholarship hall for 49 students in Scholarship Hall. Pow a men's hall.
The coed hall can house 52 persons, but only 49 persons, 19 women and 30 men, were selected by a subcommittee of the ASHC.
Bencivengo said the ASH6 had originally planned to accept 22 women, but only 19 qualified for the coed hall. He said 41 men had qualified for the 30 positions.
Applicants for the coed hall were required to be either present residents of any of the eight scholarship halls or to have previously lived in a scholarship hall.
The housing committee might reject the application by ASHC for the coed hall, because it is not on the schedule.
City-County Teamwork For Ambulance Sought
Douglas County Commissioner Walter R. Craagan said Wednesday that the Lawrence City Commission was "rather promissible" with its statements Tuesday about the county's financial responsibility for the city-county ambulance service.
The city commission began seeking applications for a new private ambulance service, servicing Lawrence only, after Larry Marcum, owner of Citizens Ambulance, said both the city and county, announced he would discontinue service March 25.
"We'll have to sit down with the city commission in the near future and try to understand what happens."
"I'm optimistic," County Commissioner I. J. Stoneback said. "I think we can still cooperate with the city as we've done in the past."
The past Stoneback said the county commission
had not been told the ambulance service would be discontinued. He first heard about it on television, he added.
"Ambulance services have been sponsored by cities, counties, and in some cases, a hybrid, like in Douglas County," County Commissioner Arthur A. Heck said.
"In Douglas County," he added, "the city has taken the lead and the county has subsidized the operation. We contribute what we consider a proper share."
"One thing's for certain." he continued, "it would be too bad if the city and county go their separate ways. We've generally seen it first time and I see no reason why we won't this time."
However, Heck said, "perhaps it should become totally a county service."
If the application for the coed hall is accepted by the housing committee, about half of the residents of Stephen will be admitted. Another type of housing, Bovencivo said,
The establishment of a coed scholarship hall still seems controversial to some, Bencivengo said, and three vacancies could place the whole project in jeopardy.
vacancies might create a deficit for funding the hall.
Bencivengo said none of the Stephenson residents seemed to mind having to leave the town. A deposition must be reached so that other plans could be made if Stephenson remains
FEBRUARY SISTERS
FEMINIST FILM FESTIVAL February 5-6 Monday & Tuesday Kansas Union 7:30 p.m.
FREEI Everyone Welcomel Child Care Provided PLUS This SATURDAY! All-Women's Dance
8:00 p.m. in Big Eight Room
Heater said the subcommittee screened all applicants for the coall bed. The proctors for the men's halls were also consulted and were as well women's halls house managers.
75' Donation Good Times! Child Care
The selection process was completed by a subcommittee chaired by Mike Glish, Overland Park sophomore, and Rex Heater, Florissant, Mc.no., senior and president of the
The University housing committee comprises William Balfour, vice-chancellor for student affairs; Emily Taylor, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; J. W. Lison, director of University housing.
Three men charged with the theft and concealment of explosives found Jan. 2 in Learned Hall were granted a preliminary hearing continuance Tuesday in Topkaka.
Defense Gains Continuance In Theft Case
The three men are Ronald Johnson, 25,
London, Neb., senior; David Akin, 24,
former; student from Shawnee, and Jack
Baker, former. All of the three has been freed on $1,000 bounty.
They are charged with stealing,
possessing, concealing and illegally
storing about 32 pounds of explosives
in the abandoned Flower Ammonium
Plant near De Soto.
U. S. Magistrate Robert H. Miller continued the hearing until 10 a.m. Fri, 13 after attorneys for the three men asked for more time to prepare their cases.
The 1973 Hilltopters have been notified of their selection by the Jayhawker staff, according to John Bailey, Whitewater senior and yearbook editor.
The awards, which recognize outstanding individuals on campus, were given by the yearbooks staff and reflect only the opinions of the staff members, Bailey said.
Hilltoppers Notified
DON'T FORGET DON'T FORGET
JANUARY CLEARANCE
SALE
COATS
DRESSES
SPORTWEAR
1/2 OFF
ALL SALES FINAL
ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED
the VILLAGE SET
ON the Plaza—Prairie Village—Metcalf South
Blue Ridge—Lawrence, Kansas
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Skiing
SENIORS Are You Interested in a SKI TRIP?
Class of 1973 is organizing a trip for spring break, March 17-25
Would you be interested in . . . 5 days of meals & lodging for $55 at either Breckenridge, Aspen, Steamboat or Vail?
Clip & Mail before Feb. 5
inexpensive dormitory arrangement, attractive to student budget. In order to make more definite plans we need to know if you're interested
Mail to: Class of '73 Yes, I'm interested in a ski trip.
103 Union Name Lawrence, Kan.
66044 Address ...
CLIP OUT THIS COUPON - GOOD FOR ONE TRYOUT
CUM WON, CUM AWL TWO THEE RAWK CHOCK REVIEW INN-B'TWENE AX TRIOUTS TOONITE, FEBRUARY 1 5:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
Room 123 & 124 Robinson
Your Ticket to Fame & Fortune
CHILLY
KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 82
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Doctors Evaluate Contraception For Males See story page 2
Friday, February 2, 1973
A woman pouring rice into a bowl. In the background, several people are sitting on couches in a room with large windows.
Kansan Staff Photo by PRES BRANDSTED
Grub
At last, a cure for the munchies. Residents of Elsworth Hall were treated to a quickie-class Thursday night on the fine art of
preparing, for their late night enjoyment, an impropnt cuisine. Michael Healy, Lincoln junior and Roselyn Van Benschoten, Topka, junior, demonstrate the preparation of one such delicacy informing their fellow students of the necessary ingredients as they proceeded. Healy and Vau Benschoten have developed an original use for the popcorn popper and the iron. See story page 3.
Tax Time Again: Problems
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Staff Writer
As regular as the flooding of the Nile, income tax season is once more approaching. This year, the event has been carried out with warnings, hints and reminders.
Lance Burr, director of the consumer protection division of the attorney general's office, gave three general guidelines to use in selecting a tax return preparer.
Atty. Gen. Vern Miller recently warned Kansans to be careful in selecting professional income tax preparers. He said that although many were qualified and reputable, some were inept, fraudulent or both.
Burr said first to be wary of promises for refunds. He said some preparers led people to believe that they could get refunds that the clients could not get for themselves.
Burr said a preparer could get a tax refund only if the client was entitled to a refund, whether he prepared his own income tax or not.
The second guideline was to be wary of promises that a tax preparer could do special things to save a client money. A lawyer should also inform a client could do for himself, Burr said.
The third guideline was to make sure one knew whom he was dealing with. Burr said the person who signed the income tax form, or the person whose form, was legally responsible for its contents.
A new aspect of the federal income tax form this year is that besides stating his principal place of residence by state, county and locality (city or town), one must also
state the township in which he resides. This requirement enables revenue sharing money to be distributed equitably among the states, cities and townships.
A problem arises because some people do not live in townships, and others do not know they live in townships. According to the Douglas County Clerk's office, people living in Lawrence do not live in a township, and people living outside of Lawrence do.
Voter registration cards often list townships or one can call the county clerk.
Residents of Lawrence who itemize their deductions instead of taking the standard deduction are reminded that they are allowed credit not only for the state sales tax but also for the city sales tax of one-half per cent.
The city sales tax deduction is figured by taking one-sixth of the applicable figure for
Al Park, a former Internal Revenue Service agent now of Business Services Inc., said Wednesday that students who did not claim Lawrence as their principal place of residence were eligible for the city sales law also if they did their trading in Lawrence.
However, he said, the amount of the deduction would depend upon the amount of interest paid.
For example, a student who lived in Lawrence for nine months is eligible for only three-fourths of the deduction. He would figure his deduction by taking three-fourths of one-sixth of the applicable state sales tax.
'Bingo Rebellion' Fails To Influence Leaders
Park said that with a month off for winter break, a student probably should only figure out how to get on campus.
TOPEKA (AP)—A miniature "bingo rebellion" erupted in the legislative halls here Thursday, but when the estimated 100 demonstrators left the statehouse their protest obviously had failed to dent the leadership's adamant stand.
Neither Sen. Robert F. Bennett, president pro tem, nor Rep. Dune "Pete" McGill. House speaker, was prepared to flatly declare that a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize bingo in Kansas was dead.
Both said however that it was extinct "for all intents and purposes." They said there are still legal grounds for Monday, which is the deadline for the preparation of legal notices to place the issue on the April 3 municipal election by February 16, as was set by the secretary of state's office.
Gambling on bingo became a hot issue in this session after the Kansas Supreme Court threw out a 1971 law last fall which attempted to legalize bingo for nonprofit organizations without removing the ban on lotteries contained in the state's Concessions Act. The court, the constitutional ban prevented any legalization of bingo by statute.
chiding the Republican leadership for not pushing through a bingo-only amendment. The Senate Democratic leader, Sen. Jack Reed, said he would "beckon" to "children" in refuting to consider it.
For those who have questions concerning their federal tax form or who do not wish to be guided solely by their consciences, the assistance service will free information and assistance service.
"Let your conscience be your guide," he said.
By calling 800-383-2190, anyone can get immediate answers from Internal Revenue Bureau.
THE SENATE Judiciary Committee last week approved an amendment to take the lottery ban out of the Constitution. It lost on the Senate floor Monday, falling two votes sy of gaining the required two-thirds majority to send it to the House.
BINGO BECAME a partisan issue Thursday, with Gov. Robert Docking
John Roeder, an IRS agent, said the agents would deal with anything that could compromise their privacy.
Bennett and McGill said later that they
see PBGC. Page 2.
See BINGO Page 3
Vietnam Peace Frail; Forces Clash Again
SAIGON (AP)—Fighting ebed across South Vietnam Thursday amid glimmers of hope that peacekeeping commissiones were able their way toward policing the frail cease-fire.
Another 70 North Vietnamese delegates to the four-party Joint Military Commission were to arrive in Saigon during the next few days. Sunday was reported as the target date for the Communist representatives to be sent to seven region-1 field headquarters.
The timetable for the start of field operations by the Joint Military Commission hinges on agreement among its four members, the United States, North and South Vietnam and the Viet Cong. American commission members are in place, drawn for the most part from U.S. advisory teams already operating in the regions.
The commission itself has been bogged down by diplomatic haggling and charges of cease-fire violations and has been meeting only at the deputy chief level.
But the way was cleared for the first meeting of the four chief delegates with Thursday's arrival in Salagon of Lt. Gen. Traa. The head of the Viet Cong trai
U. S. helicopter crewmen picked up the Viet Cong general and 22 other delegates in the Communist district stronghold of Loc Anh province north of Saigon. Tra's return to Saigon came five years almost to the day after he led the 1968 Tet offensive against Saigon. Tra, a 54-year-old Southerner, is deputy commander of the Communist's Central Office for South Vietnam.
Seven American helicopters marked with white stripes to signify they are supporting the Joint Military Commission returned to the air base under unusually heavy security.
They were housed in Camp Davis, a
Signal Corps installation on the
Tam Sand Nuclear.
Tru's absence has prevented the military commission from carrying out its responsibilities, including preparing for prisoner exchanges and assuring the security of the International Commission of Control and Supervision.
The international body, made up of representatives from Canada, Indonesia, Hungary and Poland, said it had been unable to begin field operations because the military commission had not provided the required security and support. The
agreement called for international field teams to be coerced as of last Tuesday.
The military commission also has responsibility for agreeing on the spots of prisoners to be exchanged and intends to personal engaged in the reception of the POWs.
The Saigon command claimed that 188 more cease-fire violations by the Comt muniist side in the past 24 hours pushed the Paris office to fire a truce officially began at 8 a.m. Sunday.
South Vietnamese military headquarters claimed that 2,777 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have been killed since the deadline for halt in hostilities. South Vietnamese losses were reported as 491 killed, 1,977 wounded and 180 missing.
Saigon military spokesman said Communist-led forces asked 121 hambres across South Vietnam during a cease-fire land operation that troops regained control of 177 of them.
The Communist side, in radio broadcasts,
accused the Salgo government of comp-
lying with its demands.
The U.S. Command closed out its weekly casualty summaries, listing 45,941 American servicemen killed in action in Indochina between Jan. 1, 1961, and the start of the cease-fire Sunday. In addition, 10,303 American servicemen died from war-related injuries in the battlefield and 1,811 were captured or are missing in action, the summary said.
The summary did not include one American who died and five others who were wounded after the truce began. It said four U.S. servicemen were killed in action during the war, seven missing or captured, all within the two days immediately preceding the cease-fire.
The South Vietnamese military command did not issue an official weekly casualty summary Thursday for the first time there. There was no immediate explanation.
★★
9 American Prisoners Named by Pathet Lao
Pentagon spokesman Jerry Friedhelm refused to speculate on whether the North Vietnamese might be deliberately holding back more names because U.S. warplanes have continued to bomb the trail and other target in Vietnam cease-fire began last Saturday.
Some veterans of the air war over Laos have said privately they thought as many as 65 or 70 U.S. fliers might have been captured there in nearly nine years of American bombing raids against the He Chi Minh Trail network.
WASHINGTON (AP)—North Vietnam Thursday gave the United States the names of seven American servicemen, a civilian pilot and two missionaries who were listed as captured in Laos. One of the missionaries was not American but Canadian.
The new lists left in grave doubt the fate of 308 servicemen and four civilians previously listed by U.S. officials as either prisoners or missing in Laos.
Friedheim said he could not go beyond an
official statement that "the U.S. government will continue its efforts to account for all U.S. military personnel who have been captured in the United States as captured and missing."
The seven servicemen's names furnished by the North Vietnamese in Paris after five years of war, are L. Stascher, Muj, Edward W. Leonard Jr., Marl, Norbert A.G. Gotten, Stephen G. Long, Cap. Jack M. Butcher and Capt. John E. Browning, the Air Force, and Nina Lt. Jay, H. Beddingwell.
The State Department identified the civilians listed as Ernest Cary Brace, 41, captured May 21, 1985; Samuel Allen Matrix, 36, captured May 20, 1985; both 20, and both captured last Oct. 27.
Stitcher, Long and Bedinger previously were carried as prisoners and the other four were taken.
Men Await Groundhogs At Crowfoot
Today marks the 65th annual observance of Groundhog Day by the Slumbering Groundhog Lodge, Quarryville, an unofficial U.S. groundhog watching station.
Robert Herr, chairman of the board of hibernating governors of the lodge, said this week that observation squads have been brought to CST at Squeakind, Crowfoot, Pudduckdick and Baldy's Boot holes with fiddles, drums, mouth organs, jeans' harps and other instruments to observe the coming-out of the groundhog.
As legend has it, if the groundbnd sees his shadow after emerging from a long winter's sleep today, six weeks of winter weather will follow. If the groundbnd doesn't see his shadow, it is an indication that there will be an early spring.
Herr said that the grounddog's uncanny power to forecast the weather was absolutely accurate.
New members will be initiated into the lodge today, Herr, said, including an honorary member, Gov. John Haydon of American Samoa.
Herr said that Haydon was to make a proclamation telling the entire population of 28,000 American Samoa to be exceptionally alert today.
Haydon was going to send out the best Samanute hunters, Herr said, three bush doctors, the government ecologist and the director of agriculture, in search of the groundhog, which Herr said had not been sighted there in 15 million years.
Herr said that one would be spotted and unholed this year, even if they had to send one by cable or radio.
HAPPY
GROUNDHOG
DAY!!!
HAPPY
GROUNDHOG
DAY!!!
BOOKS
COONIES
ESTEVE
MARGHERY
PONK
CENTER
ASSELE
MARKER
TOPEKA (AIP) - A bill to provide about $2.98 million to the University of Kansas Medical Center for construction of two new medical facilities was approved unanimously Thursday in the Kansas Senate and sent to the House.
Senate OKs Appropriation For KUMC
The appropriation to the Kansas City, Kan., institution, which was included in an overall appropriation to bill for supplemental funds in 2016, includes the remainder of the current fiscal year, includes a $1.2 million grant to match about $5 million in funds for construction education colleges.
Another grant of $1.35 million could be used for final planning of a massive new clinical facility that would nearly double the medical center's present space.
The grant also would support the parts of the fees for financial advisers and accounting firms, according to Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Kansas Board of Regents.
The Senate also approved $210,000 to be used for the purchase of land for the clinical laboratories.
The appropriations for the medical center approved Thursday now go to the House and, if approved there, would provide all of the funds necessary for construction of the basic science facility, and for final planning of the clinical facility. Bickford said.
A recommendation of Gov. Robert Docking that $2 million in additional general revenue funds be appropriated for the state's education program is introduced in the Senate today. Bickford said.
The $23 million appropriation and a $22 million revenue bond issue are being recommended by the governor to replace a previous plan of issuing about $46 million in bonds to finance what would be one of the construction projects in state history.
Other appropriations included in the bill include the University of Kansas, *T98,230; Wichita State*, *S290,710; the medical center, *B33,000; Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia*, *I29,580; Kansas State University* *I04,339; and Fort Hays State*, *K96,872*.
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Fridav. February 2. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Doctors Evaluate Male Contraception
By MYLA STARR
Kansan Staff Writer
More men than ever before are accepting the responsibility for birth control. Changing attitudes toward male contraception have contributed to a sharp increase in the number of American men seeking vasectomies in recent years.
The Association for Voluntary Sterilization (AVS) has reported that three million vasectomies have been performed in the United States in the last decade.
Four Lawrence physicians interviewed this week agreed that the operation was an economical, safe and highly effective method of sterilization. Their opinions about whether this form of male condom replacement replace female birth control differed.
DR. RAYMOND SCHWEGLER, director of the KU Student Health Service, said he thought both the Pill and the vasectomy would sometime be replaced by a method that was less formidable to either the male or the female.
"Some preliminary studies have shown that male hormones do change as a result of a vasectomy-perhaps unfavorably," he said. "The Pill would be better if it didn't."
upset the endocrine system of the female, but that's how it works."
Dr. Howard Joseph, Lawrence urologist, said that the limited success of vasectomy reversals was a major deterrent to the use of vasectomy as a birth control method.
Lawrence physician H. Penfield Jones said he brought the responsibility for birth control to his wife, who is a graduate of law.
"Vasectomies will not replace female birth control methods because men don't give a damn. Men think it is up to the woman to protect herself," he said.
"I DO NOT think that male contraceptive methods will replace female contraception, because not all women are eligible for the same male sterility for a temporary period of time and be successfully reversed," he said. Joseph added that if a safe Pill for men were ever developed, it would have been more useful.
Dr. A. C. Mitchell said he thought the reason for continued dominance of female birth control methods was obvious: "Men don't get pregnant."
VASECTOMY IS a simple operation that causes minor, if any, discomfort to the chest.
Motorcycle Crash Kills Coffeyville Freshman
Paul Funk, 18, Coffeyville freshman, was killed late Wednesday afternoon when his motorcycle collided with a pickup truck at the intersection of Iowa and 23rd streets. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Funk was wearing a helmet, but the left side of the helmet was shattered from the impact of a wooden tool box excused by the coach. He was driven by Glenn I. Steele. 2014 Alabama St.
According to the police report, Steele was going north on Iowa Street and was making a left turn onto west 23rd Street when he saw Funk's motorcycle enter the right lane from behind three cars heading south on Iowa Street.
No citations have been issued.
The report says Funk was thrown from the motorcycle and landed in the roadway. His motorcycle came to a rest beneath the front bumper of a Westernest Bell truck driven by Otis Crowe, 814 Crawford ST. The truck also was going north on Iowa Street.
Funk is survived by his widow, Jane; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Funk of Coffeyville; three brothers, David, Larry and Lloyd, all of Lawrence; a sister, Mrs. Jerry Gorrell, of Lawrence; and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leander Miller of Sidell, La.
Funk attended McKinley Elementary School, Rossevelt Junior High School in Cefeyville and was a 1972 graduate of Field Memorial Historical High School of Cefeyville.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Fine Ordered
RICHMOND, Va.—A federal judge or dered the head of Virginia's penal system, W.K. Cunningham, Thursday to pay $21,265 in damages to three former prisoners who saw them with their unusual punishment at the Virginia state penitentiary. In the ruling, U. S. D. District Court Judge Robert Merhige said Cunningham had personal knowledge of and had reason to believe in the formation action' the unconstitutional mistreatment of the former penitentiary inmates.
Smog Control
WASHINGTON - A federal appeals court has required nationwide compliance with clear air standards by mid 1975, wiping out the two-year delays previously granted 18 states. The court allowed for eventual reinstatement of the extensions, but it inferred that the measures of control" That seemed to me inadequate; areas would have to impose some transportation controls to reduce smog, while working toward a more complete clean-up.
Bond Requests
WASHINGTON-Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica will hear oral arguments today on applications of two men convicted in the Watergate political scandal. The two men, G. Gordon Liddy and James W. McCord, former officials of President Nixon's reelection committee, have been in jail since their conviction Tuesday for conspiracy, fraud and wiretapping. They face sentences up to 50 and 50 years, respectively.
Sex Reform
BONN—West German lawmakers are debating a package of legal reforms that would liberalize outdated sex laws but not the minimums. Provisions of the bill include lowering the permissible age limit for homosexual acts between consenting males and females, raising the sale of pornography and lifting an outright ban on such activities as wife-swapping.
Funk, a pre-med major, was in his second semester at KU. He had planned to go into
He married Jane Parker in December. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Saturday in the First United Presbyterian Church of Coffeville. The Rev. William J. Nelson will officiate. Burial will be at the Restlawn Cemetery in Coffeville.
The family has established a memorial tund with the KU Endowment Association. The KU Endowment Association is a non-profit organization.
During the operation, approximately three-fourths of an inch of the tube is exposed to saline. The surgically tipped to prevent regrowth. As an extra precaution against the tube's rejoining, an electric needles may be applied at the ends to encourage the growth of clear tissue.
The basis of the operation is the removal or blockage of a small section of the vass deferens, the tube that carries the sperm found in male ejaculate.
Less than a half-hour is normally required for the procedure, which usually is performed in a doctor's office under local anesthetic.
The average price for a vasectomy in Lawrence is $100, or the approximate cost of an open pit ablation is $250.
THE DOCTORS interviewed said that a man who was considering a vasectomy told the story that his doctor
The vas deferens can be rejoined successfully only about 50 per cent of the time. Joseph said. The reason for this is that the vas deferens is small and delicate, he said.
"I CALL a reversal successful when ejaculation of a normal amount of normal sperm is resumed," he said. "Just because the sperm was resumed, it doesn't mean the reversal has been a success."
"We are dealing with a tube that has an inside diameter of one to one and a half millimeters, so reconnecting the tissue successfully isn't always possible." he said.
"If a man thinks he might want to have the operation reversed later, he should hire a surgeon."
Mitchall had a narrow definition of "successful" vasectomy reversal.
"About one or two per cent of the men who have vasectomies will have the vas defers grow back together in spite of our best efforts," he said. "I warn my patients that I am not going to until I have microscopically examined their semen for the presence of sperm."
Mitchell also recommends that his vasectomy patients return for a sperm count one year later because regrowth of the tube normally takes place in this period.
discomfort from the operation was normal, but they questioned the validity of recent "scare reports" warning of severe side effects from vasectomies.
Mittell added that the vasectomy itself did not have a 100 per cent rate of success.
A REPORT by a Florida doctor pointing to serious medical problems such as blood-clotting, lung congestion and rheumatoid arthritis and caseonemies was disgraced by Mitchell.
The physicians agreed that mild
Mitchell said, however, that infections sometimes occurred and that mild bleeding caused "something resembling a bruise" develop in almost all of his vasectomy cases, resulting in bleeding occurs in only about one in 80 persons who undergo the operation, he said.
MITCHEL SAID be thought most of the objections to vasectomies had come from persons who were ethically opposed to any kind of birth control.
"There are many men and women who think that sex is only for procreation," he said. "They are afraid that making effeminate babies available will make people enjoy sex."
"I have never seen any exotic complications from a vasectomy," he said.
A report issued by a New York physician suggested that unlaceted sperm that are absorbed into the system following a vasectomy could cause the production of harmful antibodies. Schweger said this was a possibility.
"We know that sperm can cause allergic reactions, or the production of antibodies, in the male, whereas sterilization of a woman does not cause this." he said.
"SEVEN BILLION cells die and are absorbed into your body every day with no trouble," he said. "A few million more aren't going to hurt you."
Mitchell contended that the absorption of unused sperm was part of a normal process.
Joseph and Mitchell, who each perform about six vaseformets a month, said that their most important criteria for agreeing to perform a vaseformet were that the person must be available for operation and that, if he were married, his wife consented to the operation.
"I anticipate no problem in confirmation of IFC as a member of the Chamber." Gauti said. "There is much more merce has more university professors and administrators as members than any Big One."
Chinese to Celebrate Year of Ox
Mitchell said that he required the written consent of both husband and wife as a consenting agent.
Kansan Staff Writer
By LINDA DOHERTY
Although 1973 is already a month old, the Year of the Ox is just beginning.
The naming of each year follows a cycle, he said.
William Gaut, manager of the Chamber of Commerce, said IFC's application for membership would have to be approved by the board of directors at its Feb. 13 meeting.
The Chinese Lunar New Year starts Saturday. This year is the Year of the Ox, according to Robert Burton, lecturer in Civilization and oriental languages.
Frazyet told the IFC that a $50 membership fee would be charged to join the Chamber of Commerce, but he said some additional fees might be assessed.
See DOCTORS Next Page
Keith Chui, Hong Kong graduate student and president of the Chinese Students Association, said the cycle was made of 12 different animals: the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, rooster, dog and hen.
"The tradition of the 12 year cycle is an old one," said Chui. "China is an agricultural state and the people get the most help from animals."
"The ox is fast but the rat is faster," said Chui.
According to legend, the order of the animals in the cycle was determined. Chui said that after all the animals to him. Because the rat was the best runners and reached the god first, it was chosen as the king.
LAST YEAR WAS the Year of the Rat.
Chuai said that celebrations of the Lunar
"The time is right to join the Chamber of Commerce and it would be a good opportunity for the IFC to converge with the difference business community." Frazey said.
Fraternities Vote to Join Businessmen
Bruce Frazey, Hill City senior and president of IFC, said the Chamber of Commerce had been encouraging IFC to join the group for two years.
The Interfraternity Council (IFC) voted Thursday night to become the first KU group to join the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Even though IPC is the first KU program, it wasn't until any organization was encouraged to join. In other business, Evan Olson, Salina senior, told IPC that the overall fraternity grade point average last semester was over 80%, the overall man's grade average.
Frazey said the Chamber of Commerce could be instrumental in helping with the development of their business.
New Year did not vary much from one year to the next. "The symbols on paper lanters in the celebration may be different, but that is about all." said Chui.
A lunar calendar divides the year into 12 months of 29 or 30 days, each beginning when the new moon appears, Chui said. The Lunar New Year traditionally is observed from the 16th of the 12th month until the 15th of the new year.
Part of the traditional celebration prior to New Year's honors the Kitchen God, Chui said. The god's image usually is drawn on a paper that is burned, and, according to legend, the god ascends to heaven with the smoke.
When the god returns to heaven every year, he makes a report on the family.
THE GOD'S MOUTH may be smeared with a special candy so he will say only sweet things, or wine may be offered to them. The singer can relate into relational reporting, according to Chau.
"It is the custom to make sure that he tells as little as possible or reports only good advice."
To celebrate the New Year, the Chinese Student Association will have a dinner and meeting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the building of the University State Bank, Chai said.
Before the god's return on Lunar New Year's Eve, the kitchen is cleaned and scrubbed, a new image of the god is placed there, and a rich feast awaits him Chui said.
Because of limited space, the celebration is open only to members of the Chinese State.
"There are a lot of different ways to celebrate, but we usually get together and cook armenian
Yun Kuan Huang, president of the Formed Corp., said his organization was the first to implement the new system.
The Formosa Club will have a traditional dinner party at 8 p.m. Friday in the American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19, Huang said.
"We are not too publicly known so members can bring friends and families," he said. "We expect around 60 families to come."
FEBRUARY SISTERS
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Students in Night Classes Use New Escort Service
INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
Students at the University of Kansas are using an escort service by the Perishing Rifles mostly for trips to and from night classes, David O'Rourke, Overland Park senior and member of the Perishing Rifles, said Thursday.
"Operation Escort," a service to escort men and women to and from the campus between 6 p.m. and midnight, so far has served only women, O'Rourke said.
Most of the women have called for trips from Corbin and Lewis Halls to the campus to attend night classes on Mondays and Wednesdays, O'Rourke said.
The service made 50 calls during the first week of classes; 29 during the second week through Wednesday. O'Rourke said the average number of calls each night had increased from four or five the first week to 10 this week.
The 25 members of the Pershing Rifles initiated the service this semester. Anyone can call the service after 6 p.m. seven days or send a report to any location on or near the campus.
"Operation Escort" was begun in an attempt to curb the number of attacks on campus. O'Rukeur said. Escorts either walk with the caller or give him a ride in a car identified with a sign on its side reading, "catching Rifles, Operation Escort", 842-7894.
About 150 signs with the phone number of the service have been posted on the campus, O'Rourke said. The number is for a phone in the Military Science Building.
On nights of home basketball games,
students should call university Ins-
titute for registration.
Board to Rule On SES Status
The future of Supportive Educational Service (SES) will be decided at a meeting of the University of Kansas Memorial Corp. and of Directors Saturday in the Kansas Union.
A report on the policies and procedures of SES was given to the fiscal and finance committee of the corporation this month. In the report, SES promised to include all minirates in its program by the fall semester of 1973.
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Similar escort services have been started at Kansas State University and Pennsylvania State University. O'Rourke said he began to organize the service after he read his book, *Last November about the number of assassins on women on the campus after dark.*
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University Daily Kansom
Friday, February 2, 1973
3
BROOKLYN VILLAGE
Kansan Photo hv RARRARA KE1.1.9
Parking
Some Printing Service employees park their cars on Crestline Road to avoid buying a $25 permit to park in one of two Printing Service lots. This is the first year
that employees have been required to buy University parking permits, and they say the permits are outrageously high-priced. They say that the parking lots were built too small, and that the lots are too far removed from the main campus to be used by others.
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
considered the issue dead. However, two rapid-fire developments Thursday temporarily buoyed bungo supporters' hopes.
'Bingo Rebellion'
The Senate Committee on 7 Menal
or K-LEwennworth, approve a resolution calling
30 Now Vie For Position Of KU Boss
The Campus Advisory Committee for the selection of a new chancellor has narrowed its list of candidates to 30, according to the board's report. The university and executive secretary of the University.
Von Ende said that he had spent the last few days in Chicago interviewing candidates. Other committee members are visiting Dallas, Kansas City, San Francisco and Washington, D.C., in the initial phase of interviewing, he said.
"These cities all were picked for their regionalism," Von Ende said. "Chicago, for instance, serves as a center for the northern midwest section of the country."
All funds for the committee's activities come from the KU Endowment Association,
"It is a very expensive procedure when you consider that we fly committee members to a city and also transport a candidate and spouse in for the interview," he said. "It comes to several hundred dollars a person."
On Wednesday, the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee added $10,000 to a supplemental appropriations bill to give the State Board of Regents a travel fund for conducting interviews. The regents will be on board in session on the selection of a new chancellor.
1 expect that the money will become a kind of revolving account to be used for future search committees," Von Ende said. The second round of interviews will start in late February and probably continue until the end of March, Von Ende said.
for a bingo-only constitutional amendment,
plan to introduce it in the Senate
that would abolish bingo.
ABOUT 100 demonstrators showed up in the late morning, making their presence very visible. They carried signs which read, Legalize Bingo, "Keep Grandma off the street," and Parlorers, "and 'Abortion for Teen-Agers,' but senior Citizens Can't Play Bingo."
However, the enthusiasm, which appea-
pealed building at noon for getting Senate
consideration of a bingo-oo amendment,
was the same afternoon and was
stone cold by nightfall.
Bennett doused cold water on the idea immediately, saying there were not 27 votes in the Senate to pass any resolution, but they took time to get the issue on the April 3 ballot.
Then the House Federal and State Affairs Committee killed its bingo-only resolution with only one dissenting vote—a clear signal from the House to the Senate.
Novel Dorm Recipes Stir Student Stomachs
All that was missing was the white dinner wine when the trotting epicureans, only surviving offspring of the Galloping Mole, attended students at Ewells Hall Thursday night.
By KEVIN SHAFER
Kansan Staff Writer
The theme of the show was, of course, how to cook in your room and keep within the kitchen.
Sales of popcorn poppers and irons probably will increase for Lawrence merchants in the coming weeks. These items seemed to be the essential equipment for cooking a between-meal snacks in the confines of a cozy residence hall room.
Michael Healy, Lincoln junior, and Roselyn V. Benschoten, Teopka junior, hosted the informative session, which included instructions for cooking everything from Krispie Kritters to Pop 'n Fresh Douhnhuts.
The Kritters appeared to be the most difficult dish to prepare. Essentials for the project included one popcorn popper, several pats of butter (from the hall cafeteria, naturally), eight miniature boxes of crispies and many, many marshmallows.
The instructors advise that if at all possible a poporn copper with a regulator should be used. However, if such a utensil were not available, then one may use a regular poporn and simply keep pulling the plug to regulate the temperature.
Doctors...
(Continued from page 2)
charging him with conspiring to deprive the wife of her natural right to bear children. Joseph said he required written consent in addition to the informed consent" of the couple.
SCHWEGLER SAID that only one vasectomy had been performed at Watkins University, but a graduate student in his 20s. Although he said he did not know the exact circumstances of the case, he thought that performance on operation on a man that age was unlikely.
This operation is normally reserved for men in their 40s after all of their children are born, he said. Schwegler added that there was not a significant demand for vasectomies from students who were treated at Watkins.
Mitchell said that age was not a governing factor in his determination of whether to簿本 (in the same way) as he did.
"I have performed a vasectomy on a man who was 20 and had five children and one on a man of 23 who had no children. I thought it would be easier for seasons for wanting the operation." he said.
Joseph said that most of his vasectomy patients were in their late 20s or 30s.
"Birth control is a highly individual matter," he said. "There are a lot of philosophical questions about a vasectomy answered only by the individual recipient."
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The recipe for the delightful delicacy is simple. Melt 40 or 50 marshmallows (grade A medium or large ~if miniature mallows are used, better go up to at least 100), add the butter, add the eight boxes of Rice Krispies and mix vigorously.
Roll up your sleeves and butter a table top using a circular motion and more pats of butter from the cafeteria. Spread the conglomeration on the buttered table top and allow to cool before consumption. Recipe makes a lot.
Simply set the iron on an temperature that seems right. Cotton is suggested, and steam is discouraged, unless, of course, you like your sandwiches soggy.
The highlight for the evening was a demonstration on how to prepare a grilled cheese sandwich (with or without butter, mind you) on an iron.
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During the non-novt off season of the U.S. Women's Alpine SKI Team members go on the 'Skis' team! Dear skiers, that's right - 20 pounds in 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action and was devised by a famous Colorado physicist especially for the sport. The diet is maintained (very important) while reducing. You keep "full" no starvation — because the diet is designed that way! It's a diet that you work or travel at home.
Armed Bandit Robs Seven Eleven Store
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About $120 was taken from a Seven
St. Wellington address in 414 Massachusetts St.
Wellington, Wellington, NJ
According to the Lawrence police report, a man in his early 20s with a black scarf wrapped around his face entered the store shortly after 3 a.m. and requested the night clerk, Bill Joe Parson, Salina sophomore, to hand over the money.
As Parrison put the money in a blue bank bag, he noticed a pistol pointed at him from behind.
the report said.
After the man ordered Parrson to put the bag in a brown paper grocery sack, he also took a Republic money order machine from the counter and 10 money orders.
The man told Parson to lie down between the counters and to stay there five minutes without moving because, he said, he had a dog in the street who was watching with a 30-60 rile.
The report said Parson waited a few minutes before calling the police.
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
MARY E. BROOKS
It all began in the first grade.
lait, it was the system also has to
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But don't blame your first-grade teacher. It wasn't her fault, it was the system she had to teach.
But you couldn't do it.
You had to read it out loud. Word by word. And that's the way it was until you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still every word to yourself.
Which means you read only as fast as you talk,
About 250 to 300 words a minute.
If you're an average reader, you're probably reading that way now.
And that's not fast enough any more.
Not when the average student has approximately 8 hours of required reading for every day of classes.
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4
Friday, February 2, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Dirty Politics
A soft haze of noxious fumes has grown over the Kansas City area. This state's rivers roll sordidly in their beds; its atmosphere is beginning to conform to the industrial revolution. But the winds of environmental neglect have been clearing of Topeka, because a good number of our state officials and legislators apparently couldn't care less.
In 1971, the federal government set guidelines for state compliance with the 1970 Federal Clean Air Act. The Interior Department's legislature has yet to take seriously.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has disapproved Kansas' air conservation law because this state does not require information on air contaminant emissions on the ground. The EPA will require the air cleanliness standard here would allow the atmosphere to become dirtier than it already is.
Industries in Kansas are not required to make periodic reports to any governmental agency on the level or chemical content of air contaminants their factories emit. The state depends on such reports but seldom does, and will not willingly release what data they do have.
Health department records must remain confidential so long as they identify the owner or operator of an emission source, or if emission data are unique to the source—if the data concern trade secrets, and publication would create a competitive advantage or disadvantage. Disclosure of such records constitutes a class-C misdemeanor.
Whether such records concern unique trade processes is up to the discretion of a factory's owner or another organization exists to substantiate his claim.
But the crux of the legal confusion lies with Melville Gray, director of the Environmental Health Services division of the health department, according to Sen. Norman Gaar, R-Westwood, who favors a stringent environmental controls. Gray has interpreted the law to mean that he cannot release any emission data because he doesn't have access to the internal secrets, Gaar said. Without a court order, the senator said, information from Gray's files is closed to the public.
Gray was also responsible for Kansas's clean air standard, which
according to EPA standards, allows for degradation of the air's cleanliness and offers no effective time of compliance. Former Atty Gen. Kent Frizzell and Vern Miller both issued rulings in agreement with the EPA appraisal, but the standard hasn't changed.
The legislature has been no more responsive to EPA standards than has Gray. The Senate, by a 26-13 vote, passed a bill Tuesday that would bring Kansas into line with EPA standards, according to the bill's sponsor, Sen. Wesley Sowers, R-Wichita. But the emphasis of Sowers' bill is to amend the current law to read that nothing shall prevent making public any records, including emissions data or committing emission data for which "applicable regulations" are established. Such regulations, which would still limit the data available to the public, do not exist. The department of health would be responsible for bringing them into existence.
The legislature has fallen prey to individual interests. The three senators most adamant about pollution control are from the Kansas City area. Most rural legislators are unconcerned with pollution problems, which don't exist in their districts, and see the EPA rules as one more encroachment by the federal government. And a good many other senators and representatives seem weighted down by financial concerns of their constituents.
The federal government is not about to force this state into compliance with national antipollution regulations. EPA has made an attempt to effect their rules by offering to disseminate the kind of information that the state is required to put in federal engen just doesn't have complete records of air contaminant emissions in Kansas.
If the governor rejects Sowers' feeble attempt to solve our difficulties, which is now bound toward a House of Representatives that will improve it, we may have a chance to salvage the quality of our atmosphere.
Even so, the patry respect given this first issue of environmental-protection legislation to come before the 1973 legislature indicates a move toward a more promising optimistic future for our state's nonfinancial necessities.
—Linda Schild
Newsmen Win One, Lose One
WASHINGTON-Two cases have come along in recent weeks involving the continuing struggle American journalists to resist censorship, speech and free press. One of them, for the time being, is a victory; the other, for the time being, is defeat. Neither of them has won.
James J. Kilpatrick
The victory was recorded in New York on Jan. 23, when U.S. District Judge Charles L. Briant ruled that news analysts and commentators, engaged in the deliberate expression of opinion on public affairs, cannot be immune to recommendations of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, AFL-CIO.
The suit was brought by William F. Buckley Jr., editor of National Review, and M. Stanton Evans, editor of the Indianapolis News. Both of them work extensively in radio and TV comedians, as well as conservatives; both were dragged into AFTRA over their orts.
Briant took note of the AFTRA constitution, which permits the union to fine, suspend or expel any member who commits an act "which in the opinion of the (AFTRA) Board is prejudicial to the welfare of the association." It became evident six years ago, when the union sought to punish Chelton Huddley, that such acts were not a breach of the line. For any union to have power to stifle the expression of opinion on radio or TV, said the court, is a violation of the First
If Brient's ruling stands up — the union is appealing — it will mean that those of us who deliver it should be able to trust the protection of the chilling intimidation of AFTRA's union shop. The ruling does not apply to TV newsmen and anchormen who report such things, such, but the whole process of editorial selection is a process based on opinion, and Brient's reasoning would appear to apply because the cause of freedom gained.
The picture is quite different in Baton Rouge, La. here freedom has taken an incredible licking. The case goes back to November 2013 when a judge Gordon West conducted a hearing to determine whether an injunction should issue to halt further criminal proceedings against Frank Stewart. It appears that the defendant, a worker, had been charged with conspiracy to murder the mayor of Baton Rouge; his defense rested upon his own charge that he was the victim of a conspiracy law enforcement officers to dim him his constitutional rights.
media." His purpose was to prevent prejudicial publicity, but the order was an example, far more significant than the laws against Penguin Paper, of prior restraint censorship in the rarest form.
On Nov. 1, Stewart himself was not on trial. The question was whether he should be tried. The police delivered himself of an unbelievable order that 'no report of the testimony in this case has been filed in a newspaper or by radio or television, or by any other news
Amendment.
Larry Dickinson and Gibbs Adams, reporters for the Morning Advocate and State Times, of course reported the details of the hearing. They are newsmen. The people's right to know – in this case, the right to know what was said in open court relating to the
possible malfeasance of our own law enforcement officials. For violation of an order they knew to be invalid, the reporters were fined $300 each for contempt of court.
On appeal, the Fifth Circuit agreed that Judge West's order was clearly invalid. Indeed, when he asked to change "and" "constitutionally unacceptable." It was so patently wrong that it could not withstand even "the mildest breeze from the Constitution."
then came the incredible afterward: The Fifth Circuit held that, even so, out of respect for the court the contempt contest would be permitted to permit newsmen to be fined or imprisoned for violation of illegal injunctions. The effect is to sanction judicial prior censorship while appearing to disprove it. The Court also ordered the Committee for Freedom of the Press is pursuing this despotic and ominous judgment that cannot be permitted to stand if press freedom is to survive.
BUDGET
SACRIFICIAL ALTAR
WASHINGTON — The secret estimate of the Joint Chiefs is that the cease-fire will break down and the Communists ultimately will gain control of all Vietnam.
Analvsts Predict Viet Debacle
This would mean, if the estimate is correct, that nine years of American dying have been in vain. For the U.S. government has spilled the blood of 125 million and squandered 868 billion to prevent a Communist takeover of South Vietnam.
One intelligence analysis suggests that a sporadic ceasefire, at least, should endure for several months. This analysis, which our sources have asked us not to quote directly, cites examples of military actions for a political struggle to win the support of the South Vietnamese populace and to undermine the Saigon regime.
Political cadres have been sent
Readers Respond
The Joint Chiefs had so little faith in Saigon's survival last October that they warned the
will try to widen their spot. Then they will seek to meld the spots into ever larger Communist-controlled areas.
One wonders if this is the kind of "rhetoric" that is taught in the program and that substitutes for the two-hour speech requirements. The claim is merely rhetorical because it fails to address the question of the prival meaning on the word "choice". The Pearson program is taught by only three professors or three professors all agree on fundamental issues, on philosophy in general and in particular on the rhetoric.
They practice what they call "advocacy teaching" which amounts to inductive training of students' likelihood of disagreement on basic matters among members of the program's faculty, and there is a need for them to present their presentation and perhaps even in their understanding of the
The central argument in favor of the humanities program rests on the fact that a permanent basis, is one that the head of that program seems to have chosen. Pearson program, the claims, offers a "greater choice" to incoming freshmen than they do with the usual options, seems to me, is a typical example of sophistic rhetoric we have seen as an expect from the Pearson program.
To the Editor:
This is a letter of indignation. I was appalled Tuesday when the president of our university meeting asked how many actual members the assembly had and how many were present. It was interesting to see the percentage of the elected and constitutional members even bothered to show up. Although we have a typo for that body by no means typical issue that presently is under consideration. The issue is whether the Pearson Integrated Mathematics program will continue to substitute for the freshman-sophomore requirements of the college. What is at stake in the future of the entire university.
Pearson Program Criticized
Western tradition; (2) the program is designed as a two year, 24-hour block of courses; (3) students are required that the program are made to believe it is an elite organization by being "chosen," which accounts for the "enthusiasm" that the Pearson course demands of the program's success; and (4) for these and other reasons there seems little chance of very many students entering the program after they are well into it. What all this means is that, despite the fact that the program is one more program out of dozens to choose from, whatever advantage that single choice adds is far outweighed by the lack of experience students actually in the program.
into the South to conduct an intensive propaganda and organization drive. But once the Communist infrastructure has been unraveled, the analysis, Communists will seek to end their long struggle for
twofold. First, any students that graduate from it are likely to manifest the opinions and viewpoint of the program itself, having been indoctrinated into its ways (to this I can personally conclude) by a degree in deliberalization of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The danger inherent in letting the program substitute for freshman-sophomore requirements is
Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, the Pearson Program would be acquired prior to status, service precedent for future fragmentation of the college and the entire university into separate faculties each "advocating" its own requirement for its own form of illumination. Why shouldn't every group of like-minded professors have its own requirement-fulfilling program? If one has the right, so do
If constitutional and elected members of the College
Jack Anderson
control of all Vietnam with a final military offensive.
Assembly refuse to attend assembly meetings and refuse to vote against the Pearson program, and if the敛uiliency continues, we must continue apathy, all I can say is that we deserve whatever ilis will result from the precedent the Pearson program sets. And I believe those ilis will succeed of the intellectual environment and academic reputation of KU.
Secretly, the Joint Chiefs don't believe President Thieu can survive. He is preparing for the war against Iran, and his military control over the country. This will make his regime even more unpopular with the people and, therefore, uncomfortable to Communist agitation.
Jim K. Swindler
Lawrence Graduate Student
After Thieu has been weakened politically, Hanoi presumably will try to finish him off with a military coup de grace. The Joint Chiefs have grave doubts about the South Vietnamese army's ability to repel an offensive air attack, and artillery support. The North Vietnamese frontal assault, coordinated with Viet Cong guerrilla operations, would overwhelm Thiu's defenses.
Nor are they impressed with reminders that the Pentagon was wrong about the South Korean army's ability to stand off the Communists after the Korean truce was signed 20 years ago. The war has made it easier to defend than the spotted truce in South Vietnam. Each spot is a Communist stronghold, whose armed partisans surely
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Headlines and Footnotes
Senate Press Secretaries Association members pride themselves on the completeness with which they brief reporters about their respective senators. When they announced their nominations, they parlay; however, the printed invitations omitted the date.
The three-month delay in the cease-fire not only has given President Thieu more time to prepare for a Communist offensive, but has bolstered his chances to survive it. But the odds, in the Joint Chiefs' opinion, are against him.
News Adviser . . . Stuart Blank Joyce Neerman
already made. President Nixon finally sent a cable to North Vietnam's Premier Pham Van Dong, offering him a choice between bargaining or bombing. The ultimatum gave Hanoi 72 hours to renew serious relations with the President ordered the saturation bombing of the Hanoi environs.
swering "Helga's Massage Parlor." The tip stimulated a furry of calls into the office of none other than Vice President Spiro Agnew. Agnew's aides theorized that some visitor had been asked to the restricted telephone order to get the boa going.
Business Manager
Rep. William Stuckey, D-GA., has been lining up with the three Republican on the House Consumer Committee to block consumer legislation, including the no-fault auto insurance bill. This would benefit motorists by ending litigation over accidents and penalties, which rates. Yet Stuckey, whose family owns a chain of roadside stores, has made a fortune selling candy to motors.
regime would collapse if the cease-fire agreement was signed. They urged President Nixon to delay the signing until they could supply Saigon with enough planes, helicopters and military hardware to make up for the loss of American firepower.
The Christmas raids on North Vietnam have contributed to the nation's energy crisis. The American Friends Service Committee, using official cost estimates, figures the millions of oil-based fuel for the B-23 and B-45 bombers, the minimum of $6.5 million dollars.
As we reported on Jan. 5, the real reason for postponing the cease-fire was to give the Pentagon time to rush these supplies to Saigon. A top general acknowledged to us that more planes and helicopters were delivered to Saigon than South Vietnam has plots to fly them. The massive shipments angered me ... vese who in ... the ... A
Carol Dirks
A prankster tipped off newsmen that a restricted government number was an-
Copyright, 1973,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
WASHINGTON- Senate hearings on a bill designed to help Congress recapture control of government purse-shrubs began Tuesday with accusations by legislators and senators that President Obama is abusing his power by impounding appropriations.
By JOHN CHADWICK Associated Press Writer
But a theme also emphasized by committee members and witnesses was that Congress must reform its own procedures and show greater discipline in holding down spending.
Declining Power of Congress An Issue in Impoundment Fight
Similarly, Sen. Jacob K. Javis, R.N.Y., a government Operations Committee member participating in the hearings, said any recapture of power by Congress "must satisfy the country that it is accompanied by responsibility."
Sen. Sam J, Ervin, Jr., D-N.C., chairman of the Senate Judicial subcommittee on separation of powers, said "Compress has a possibility to bring appropriations in harmony with revenues."
The bill under consideration sponsored by Ervin and more
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
I MISS
THE BEATLES...
© Universal Press Syndicate 1973
sokoloff
music
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than 50 other senators, would require the President to notify Congress of any impoundment of appropriated funds. Unless the Senate and the President approved an impoundment with 60 days, it would have to cease.
I MISS THE BEATLES...
© Universal Press Syndicate 1973
sokooff
It is part of a series of moves aimed at overcoming what is widely regarded as the waning power of Congress and the growing branch of the executive branch of government.
Ervin said the issue at the hearings was "whether the current trend toward executive usurpation of legislative power is now being addressed we have arrived at a presidential form of government."
Ralph Nader testified that Ralph's bill 'falls far short of what is necessary to restore the balance in the spending process.'
Nader objected it would permit the President to impound funds for 60 days without congressional consent and said it might be construed as congressional approval of all past impoundments. Ervin disagreed, saying passage of the bill would no more than $20 million than a law prohibiting murder is approval of past murders.
Nader said Congress should pass legislation unquivocally forbidding all impoundments and requiring the President, if he wants to reduce an apportionment. Congress for processing just as a supplemental appropriation is handled now.
Under Nader's proposal, executive officials and even the court contempt if a court found they persisted in disbelieving the law.
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University Daily Kansan
Weekend Scene
MOVIES
Stop the World,'Celebration' Here
THE CONFESSION In Costa Gavras' first film since "Z," Yves Montant portrays a high-ranking official of a Communist terrorist, interrogated and made to confess to an imaginary, alleged crime against the State. Highly recommended, especially if you liked Z., Friday and Saturday, at University at 7 and 3:00 p.m., admission 69 cents.
JEREEMIAH JOHNSON: Robert Redford puts on his cowboy hat but again in this saga of a horseman who is always a bit foolish.
HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES:
Here we have the original 1939 version of the Sherlock Holmes class with Basil Rathbone as Sylvester Holmes and Nigel Gurley Wagon.
MEET JOHN DOE; Gary Cooper in Capra Cappas's wintime classic. This double feature will be shown Friday and Saturday at The New York City Museum Center, 1043 Oread. Admission $1.50.
BROTHER OF THE WIND: If you missed
at Hillcrest you have another chance. The
1778: Recognize the date? You got it, the Declaration of Independence complete with song and dance routines. Friday and Saturday at the Hillcrest 1.
touching story of a man and his wolves. Take your little brother to it at the Varsity Ballroom.
THE GETAWAY: If you have seen it yet, you probably don't want to, but for those of you who just moved to town All MacGraw and MacGregor will miss you. In this prison break story, Hillcrest 2.
OH CALCUTTA and FRITZ THE CAFT:
Louis, bodies and social comm-
munication. Hilleren.
ALL WOMEN DANCE: All women are welcome to a dance sponsored by the Gay Women's Caucus of the Women's Coalition of Chicago. Donations will be collected at the door. Taped
STONE WALL: This rock 'n' roll trio from Kansas City is one of the more popular groups around and have played in Lawrence many times in the past year. Show begins at 9 Friday and Saturday night. Admission $1.50, Red Baron.
LOVE THY NEIGHBOR AND HIS
WIFE: It no's it not a Bible story, it's the
Playboy's Delight Show Friday and
Saturday at 12:15 a.m., Hillcrest 1.
MUSIC
JOINT SESSION And The RHYTHM KINGS: Another boogie band at the Red Dog Inn. Continuous music beginning at 8 p.m., for $1.50.
banjip-jickin' creators of "Mr. Bajengles"
will be at Cowtown Ballroom in Kansas City
Friday and Saturday nights. Tickets are
required and $4.50 at the door. No reserved seats.
music and free child care will be provided.
Big 8 Room at the Union.
THEATER
STOP THE WORLD, I WANT TO GET OFF:
Hashinger Theater, admission 50 cents for non-residents of Hashinger.
and Saturday at 8 p.m. (See Review).
NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND: These
CELEBRATION: Experimental Theatre production. (See Review.)
Marilyn Michael is more innocence than sin as the lead singer of a bump and grind female quintet who deck themselves out as "The Devil Girls," and she sings as brightly and clearly as the angel for whom the orphan boy first mistakes her.
Play Musically 'Celebrates Simple, but Happy Life
Godly Miser of Music Losing Golden Touch
Alexander Potemkin, (the inclusion of film on the theater), a magician, concludes the play with a parody.
bamboyant leading-man style by Tom Tucker. What he lacks in the world-wise and weatherbeaten air called for by the part, Tucker makes up for by way of his contagious energy and super barton; especially in the number, "Not My Brother," but not my musical irony successfully approaching the style and theme of Brecht and Well.
Combine the fable of the king who could not laugh, the ancient rite of celebrating the winter solace and the familiar theme of the innocence abroad in the big city, and you get an idea of the basic ingredients mixed by authors Jones and Schmidt in their recent musical comedy cream puff, Celebration.
By ROBERT MILLER Kansan Staff Writer
Currently playing at KU's Experimental Theatre under the rapid-fire direction of Kathleen Rae Nicolini, Celebration's cast decidedly lives up to its title by injecting every drop of life possible into the simple but happy script. Michael C. Booker is all shyness and determination as the emperor of the garden he so loved and lost when a wealthy businessman bought and tore down the boy's orphanage home.
Virginia Kent's handling of the solidly commercial score is at all times well-controlled and appropriate, and DeDe Clark's choreography, while a bit too much of the current "pump your arms and shimmy" school, steals the show and merits the price of admission during the joyous yummies. Latin American number, which includes a line of dancers and respilient headaddresses of bananas and mixed fruit!
Star of the show for anyone's money is, however, Jeff Cyronek as the fabulously successful but unhappy king of the false-bosom business, Mr. Edgar Allen Rich. Cyronek's portraitary of the oddering old false-king is perfect, right down to that extra roll of flab above his belt and that gleam of失涣 chorey in his eye.
Park your anxieties at the door and have some fun. See Celebration. It may make the day more enjoyable.
By JOE ZANATTA
Kanean Reviewer
"IN CONCERT' DERECE AND THE
"IN CONCERT' ROSP (ASTE) RECORDS.
There once was a young Britton and he dazzled the music world with a guitar virtuosity unheard in rock circles. The applause and worship fed a fire that produced the most creative and lyrical work of the day.
The lad grew older and was rewarded for his beautiful music. Every note produced a piece of gold. He became fascinated by his ability to produce gold and began to strum wildly at his guitar. The gold continued to mutate, but, alas, the beautiful music stopped.
"In Concert" is the latest album by Derek and the Dominos. The star of the album is guitarist Eric Clapton, if star is defined as the center of attention.
but are held back by a lack of rudimentary skills. When it looks as if the band will fall apart at its solid gold hinges, Mr. Guitar plugs in and numbly trips his fingers over the six strings, much to the delight of an apparently tone-deaf audience.
A funky little number called “Get to Getter” is one of the two new songs on this double album. It features one of the most distinctive and colorful bands in the album, a sixteen-note run played on both the bass and guitar. It's near the middle of the cut, so listen for it. The boys work hard on it.
The album opens with "Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad." The song offers nothing to the listener other than an indication of the recording quality that is to follow on the remainder of the album. Are you tired of those "live" albums that sound as if they recorded in a studio? Derek Jones has announced on this album-random mixing of tracks. There's excitement in not being able to hear all the instruments.
Clapton recorded "Presence of the Lord" while playing with Blind Faith. It was one of the most brilliant efforts of his career. The duo were also an early example only a cheap reproduction of the original, its beauty reduced to mere fundamentals. The wah-wah break shows that Clapton could learn a few things from any butfowler and snare a dead hand against a guitar.
The second half of the album continues the traditions set during the first half. The performances are uninspired, lack harmony and generally act as a mild sedative.
Side two appersons with "Let It Rain," one of songs taken from Clapton's solo album. A second song, "Gone Home,"
"Tell the Truth," "Bottle of Red Wine," "Blues Power" and "Have You E loved A Woman" fall short of the original versions on either "Layla" or "Eric Capton."
"Roll It Over," the other original song on the album, blues-rock number "Rock Me Baile" and blues-rock number "Mama."
Capton sing all the cuts on the album. This is one of the basic weaknesses. His voice has a good gutsy sound but it's too weak for the material. It falls beneath the level of the loud, offensive music. It also occasionally falls off key.
A few years ago a brilliant musician was followed by fans carrying signs that announced "Clapton Is God." It was about the same time that other placards bore the saying "God Is Dead." Only recently could a syllogism be drawn.
Hashinger Premiere Is a Show Stopper
By BILL GIBSON
Kansan Reviewer
A lively and imaginative production of "Stop the World—I Want to Get Off" opens tonight at a real potential treat for theater-goers, the Hashin Circus Theatre.
This musical comedy is as mad as its title.
Playwrites Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse set their cynicism to music as they cast a skeptical eye over education, religion, marriage, politics, sex and every other human endeavor.
The Hashinger Hall lounge has been converted into a comfortable little theater accommodating about 100. The large blue mattresses and lounging chairs which are designed to "stage" encourage a casual and intimate relationship between cast and audience.
Richly convincing performances characterize the production. The enjoyment and enthusiasm of the cast easily transfers to the audience. Singing, dancing, and are are tied smoothly together by director Bruce Westcott, Westwood, N.J., freshman.
Kent Swafford, Wichita junior, credibly plays the comic protagonist Mr. Littlechap. The film's main character is a
Though continually confined by a miserable, and conventional set of circumstances, Littlechap occasionally stops the world and declares his amused and desperate vow for freedom. Along with Mr. Sullivan, he loves at various times with a prudish English girl, girl a Amazon amateur, a post-Nazi fraunel, and an all-American chorus girl.
Though most of the play is music, pantomime, and dance there is some clever dialogue. Littlechap tells his potential father-in-law of his shot-gun wedding, "You're not losing a daughter, youre not losing a son," he says, wife's third pregnancy, Littlechap declares, "Trust you to do the hatch trick. I get more production here than at the factory."
All of these aggressive lovers are hilariously portrayed by Mary Jane Robbins, Carbondale, freshman, though the characters and accents sometimes get tangled up. The chorus, a group of pixie clowns perform various pantomimes lamponing Littlechap's plight and give strong and expressive support the lead players.
Littlechap confronts the world first as a manager of the Sludephe Plant (king of heavy industry since George IV) then as an Opportunist party candidate and a member
of the Snobs club. His battle with a
man accused an amused man's search for freedom.
The orchestra at the Circus Theatre consists of a piano and a set of drums. No scenery is used and the costumes are tights, overalls and painted clown faces.
This simple yet convincing production is the result of a charming use of limited resources, the spirited good humor of its actors, and the polished incorporation of music dance and storytelling to so all adventurers in a mad world and those interested in experimental theater.
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7:30 p.m. - February 2, 1973
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Friday, February 2, 1973
University Daily Kansam
KANSAS
Hustle
Kansas Photo
Mike Fiddelke, 6-4, sophomore from
Dunlap High School. He has a
pattition肿块. Fiddelke, who has been
playing musical chairs with his competitors all season, held his own last weekend by scoring 17 points on the Iowa State Cyclones. Fideldee is hoping for a 100 per cent team effort Saturday when KU Oklahoma Sooners in Allen Field House.
Fiddelke Still Adjusting To Big 8 Basketball
By PAULSTEVENS Kansan Staff Writer
Quietly and steadily, sophomore Mike Fiddeke is developing into a valuable player. He has been blessed with an abundance of natural ability, Fiddeke is making the adjustment to Big Eight basketball the hard way—by improving his guarding and hustling for rebounds and points.
A measure of his progress comes Saturday night in Allen Field House when the Jayhaws host the University of Oklahoma in a "must-win" game for both teams. Kansas supporters can only hope that Fiddeke and his teammates duplicate the success of a weeklong State, KU shot the Cyclones out of the league lead with a 90-78 victory, and Fiddeke helped lead the way with a career-high 17 points.
"the win at Iowa State gave the whole team confidence," said Fiddelke, "but we know that one game isn't to win for the title for us. Oklahoma knows they've got to do it." We play 100 per cent like we did at Iowa State, we can beat anybody in the league."
"I know that I've got to work twice as hard at anybody else on the team," Fidelke said. "I'm nothing super like Tommy Lee." He had never played, I have to scrap and fight and kick."
Giving 100 per cent effort is a factor that has helped keep Fiddelke in the lineup ahead of other talented forwards such as Nina Wilson, Barrion and Nana Samuel.
Hustle alone does not win a player a starting position. Fidelike is a smart shooter who seldom forces his shots, and consequently he is highly accurate. Against Iowa state he made seven of 10 shots from the field.
Couch Ted Owens said Fidellle's attitude was responsible for his continuing improvement.
"Mike has good ability," said Owens, "but even more important is that he wants to improve. He has intense desire to succeed in the business or desire. That's the great thing about Mike."
When playing in the Jayhawks' front line with 6-10 points, you need a soft suture, with few teeth, less pressure to
"Rick and Danny can both shoot well," he said. "I don't think I have to score that much for us to win. Right now I'm hustling more."
Fiddeke, 6.4, is accustomed to playing in the shadow of bigger, more publicized teammates. During his sophomore and junior years of high school at Paulina, Iowa, he was a teammate of Neil Fegebank, a 6-7 center who was one of the most highly-trained preps in Iowa basketball history. The combination of Fegebank and Fiddeke
Handball Tourney Begins Tonight at 6
The first Crazy 8 Handball Tournament will begin today at the University of Kansas. The tourney starts at 6 p.m., on the handball courts in Robinson Gymnasium.
Entrants from all Big Eight conference schools will compete in three divisions—A single school will win.
sparked tiny Paulina to two consecutive state titles and a 60-zone winning streak.
Ironically, it was Fegebank's presence that helped Fiddelke land a basketball scholarship at Kansas. Fegebank, a year ahead of Fiddelke in school, was highly sought by scores of colleges in his senior year. One of them was KU assistant coach Sam Miranda.
In the summer between his junior and senior years, Fideldek and four other teammates attended the basketball camp conducted by Kansas' head coach Ted Owens. The KU coach apparently saw the potential for a scholarship the following spring. Fideldek turned down offers from the University of Iowa, Iowa State and Nebraska.
Javhawks to Test Sooners
When you're the University of Oklahoma basketball squad and you need a win to remain in contention in the Big Eight, you can go to Allen Field House is not the place to visit.
By BILL WILETS
Kansan Staff Writer
Bv BILL WILLETS
The last time a Sooner team won here was in 1983, when OU edged the University of Florida.
But this is exactly the task which coach John MacLeod of Sooners will face Saturday.
The Sooner's conference record slipped to 2-3 last Saturday when they dropped a 90-69 decision to Colorado at Boulder. A fourth round would be a blow to their title aspirations.
Unfortunately for OU, the 10-year Allen field House victory drought is not the only reason for this.
In addition, the Sooners now have injury problems. Lee Gibert, a 6-foot-1 junior guard averaging 9.5 points per game, will definitely not play against the Jayhawks. Also, Pichard, averaging 9.3 points per game, is a doubtful starter.
Perhaps the biggest factor is the recent top flight play of the Jayhawks, who have had a week to prepare for the Sooners and could benefit from the BEN league leading Iowa State.
In that victory the 'Hawks found the consistency they had been lacking as they played their best basketball of the season. After the game, Iowa State coach Maury John called the Jahayh squad the best team they had played all year.
The University of Kansas swimmers place thir uneaten Big Eight string on the line this weekend as they travel to Ames, Iowa, to face an improving Iowa State Cyclone team. The Jayhawks have not lost Big Eight dual competition since Feb. 19.
KU Swimmers Travel to ISU
The Jayhaws easily outpainted the Oklahoma tankers last weekend at Stillwater, downing Oklahoma, 100-11, and Oklahoma State, 70-43.
OU coach MacLead calls Kansas "the most physical team we've played." He said that the two keys in the game for the Sooners would be rebounding well and maintaining their composure in front of the KU fans.
After a fine outing in the Oklahoma
Jaycee Meet at Oklahoma City last
weekend the Jayhawk track squad travels
to Dallas to participate in the
Colorado in a triangular meet Saturday.
The big story this season for OU has been Alvan Adams, the 6-9 freshman from Putnam City, Olda, who leads the conference in scoring with a 21.9 average.
The mile relay team of Tom Savuccio, Doug Todd, Phil Stepp and Edwin Lewis swept to a first place finish with a time of 3:19.9. Greg Gwandaveer nailed down another first place finish, blazing to a 7.13 clocking in the 60-yard high hurdles.
The KU squad pulled in four firsts at the Oklahoma City Invittational and placed me in third.
In Adams' two games his point production has fallen to 12 against Colorado
Trackmen Set For Triangular
Jayhawk coached Ted Owens is quick to point out that Adams' reduced point average does not necessarily mean that he has been playing poorly.
Owens said that point totals did not really give the total picture. He said that much of Adams' effectiveness could stem from his experience in Afghanistan, while the defense was sagging on him.
Good Every Day Except Wednesday Offer expires Feb. 28
Owens said. "When you concentrate on one man, the others get loose and we don't want to see them."
"We'll play our standard defense."
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 TACO FREE!
Owens said that practice this week had been good for the 'Hawks. He anticipates no problems.
"I'm a believer in success breeding success," Owens said.
When asked if the Iowa State victory would provide the "Hawks with momentum, Owens said, 'Undoubtedly, the win at Iowa State will help us.'"
directed by Sergie Eisenstein and D. I. Nassilieu
WOODRUFF
Thursday, Feb. 8
Owens acknowledged that OU's recent loss at Colorado could make them more hungry for a victory against the Jayhawks. "We had a bad position in the conference," he said.
TACO GRANDE
TWO MEN and a WARDROBE, by Roman Polansky. ENTR'ACUTE by Rene Claire. THE CAGE by Belye MATHESON at THE CAGE by NOON, by Maya Deren. GHOSTS BEFORE BRAKEFAST, by Hans Richter. UN CHIEN ANDALOU, by Luis Bon-
A preliminary game, between the KU
devices Varsity and Topeka Sport, an
AMU team.
The varsity team will be broadcast over the Kansas Basketball Network, WIBW in Top 10.
Presents a program of surrealistic shorts
3:30, 7:30, 9:30
75c
SUA Classical Films presents
Wooddruff 7:30 & 9:30
Wednesday, Feb 7 40c
Alexander Neusky
SUA Film Society
1
9th and Indiana 1973-Year of the Taco
SUA Popular Films
SUA Special Films
Costa Gavras who gave us "Z" now gives us
TOUCH OF EVIL
Woodruff 7:00 & 9:30
Feb. 2 & 3 $60^{\circ}$
MARCUS BURR
"The Confession"
by Orson Welles
Auric by Henry Mancini
Monday, Feb. 12
SUA Science Fiction Journey to the Center of Time
Music by Henry Mancini
Woodruff
Monday, Feb 12
by David L. Hewitt and Episode 2 of Phantom Empire.
7:30
75c
Woodruff 7:30
Tuesday, Feb. 6 75c
ALL OF OUR PRODUCTS ARE BIODEGRADABLE
ALCOHOL...
FOR USE AS A PERFUME OR
BABI SENT LONG LASTING
FRAGRANCES CONTAINING NO
PERFUMES
COLOGNES
ALCOHOL...
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MUSK
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APRICOT
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E BIODEGRADABLE
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RENCE
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19 W. 9th St. LAWRENCE BODY BIZARRE
2
SENIORS
SENIORS Are You Interested in a SKI TRIP?
Class of 1973 is organizing a trip for spring break, March 17-25
Would you be interested in . . . 5 days of meals & lodging for $55 at either Breckenridge, Aspen, Steamboat or Vail?
Clip & Mail before Feb. 5
inexpensive dormitory arrangement, attractive to student budget. In order to make more definite plans we need to know if you're interested Mail to: Class of '73 103 Union Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Yes, I'm interested in a ski trip. Name Address
$1,000.00
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TREASURE HUNT KLWN FM Stereo 106
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 2, 1973
Five Considered As Successor To Schwegler
Final candidates for Dr. Raymond Schwegler's position as director of the student health service will be recommended to participate in student affairs, within the next two weeks.
Schwinger's appointment expires July 1 in accordance with University requirements governing the age of ad-夫 service personnel. Schwinger will be 68 on July 29.
Janet Sears, assistant to the dean of women and member of the health director search committee, said Thursday that the four candidates already have five. Three candidates already have been interviewed by the search committee, she said, and interviews with the two remaining candidates are scheduled for next week. The candidates will be recommended to Balfour, she said.
Balfour said Thursday that he thought it would be at least another month before a new director for the student health service could be names.
Schweiger will return to a position as staff physician at Watkins Hospital, a position he held for seven years prior to his appointment as director in 1965. He said he was looking forward to resuming clinical duties.
"I have always liked clinical medicine and will be happy to return to it," he said.
MOVING
SALE
SUNFLOWER
SURPLUS
804 MASS.
and we don't want to take our inventory with us.
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $ .03
THESE SAVINGS
All Winter Coats & Jackets Slashed up to
Army
Trench Coats
with Button-in
Wool Liner.
Reg. 7.95
50%
Navy Wool
Reg. 7,00
398
500
Men's Cotton Thermal Underwear Reg.2.98
Army Tunics
198
50 $ ^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $
Men's Dacron 88 Insulated Underwear Reg.9.00
Sweatshirts
Reg. 5.98
Hooded
379
698
Ladies'
Hiking Boots
Reg. 19.95
KANSAN WANT ADS
995
Heavy 15x20 5.00
Vinyl Tarps
Reg. 12.95
Remaining Stock of Lee Clothing Reduced 50%
50%
SUNFLOWER
SURPLUS
817 VERMONT
843-5000
THE HIE in the WALL
DELICATESENE G & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 1 a.m. - Phone Order
801 745 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
--three powerful pinkies around a quiet room. He throws the ball and swings it toward a player, then plays basketball with the indoor goaltender.
YARN—PATTERNS
NEEDLEPOINT—RUGS
CANVAS—CREWEL
One Day
"We'll keep you in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841:2656
10:5 Mon., Sat.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students with disabilities by LEASERING ALL CLASSIFICATIONS TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.2
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
NORTH SIDE CITY Shop - 3-bills. No of Kaw River Bridge on Hwy 199. 40-Antiques, used furniture, bicycles including 18 speedes, side, old pot bikes, baskets, backpacks, coolers and $1 in basket bags and wood cages. Fireplace wood stove, fireplace mantel price. Baked alfalfa, broome & wheat straw. home grown honey. Also fruits & vegetables. Gourmet ice cream.
ANTIQUE CLOTHES - 823 Main, Weston, Mo.
107-516-2922 or mki-823.com. Victorian mantles and bath
pieces for $149-$349.
For sale: B Flat Clarinet, very good condition,
new pads, B2. Call 842-6582. 2-2
Three Days
1970 beige WV, good condition, belts radial led,
ARM, FM PM, Best offer, 842-3456 - 2-2
www.world-metal.com
1968 W.V. WIR, SQUAREBACK. Blue with radio, white hair, armored interview, 4-speed and fuel injection. Sound body, good rubber, and recently overtoned front suspension. Needs to speeds to final test录像. #83-0023. 2-25
What better gift for Valentines day than a qualifier? Choose from the four options: each $25, each additional price. Call after your availability.
64 Jeep Jaloon Wagon, *L-wheel drive*. Excellent Warming Wagon. Backseat backrest. AM-FM radio. Bluetooth. Tailgate handle.
Magnaverse AM-MF Stirene Component with armament 1950 at 19:00 AT Rocky Mountain basement stair room.
Magnavon 160. Watt Stirrer Component System includes AMM-390 stem 2ecre Magnitite pickup in ammonia air suspension acoustically sealed cabling Hermin in air suspension acoustically sealed cabling Ray Stoneback a baseboard room. 929 Mass. RAY Stoneback a baseboard room. 929 Mass.
Our one pair used Magpul Air Sumpra aviation airtankers and Magnus Magnevac 2023 airframe. We mounted Stoneback hammertest ropes 5932 Mass
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Ray Stoneback's #292 Mass. **2-12**
Magnavox 29 watt声频 Companion System in-
novation Now $1990 or less for Rock Stoneback 329 Mac
and PC models.
Floor Sample 50 wilt Magnavax component system with mass speakers and speakers and 'speakers in front of the screen' for $79.99 now just $29.99 with new warranty. One outfit at Ray Stonehill's Bancorp one outfit at Ray Stonehill's Bancorp.
New Sony. Quad Systems now in stock at Ray
Stoneback's 928 Mass. 2-12
1968 Cullas Supreme. Very fine condition Call Stephen 834-6776. 2-6
Zemith circle of sound stereo for sale. AM-FM radio, 100 watts peak power Call AM-FM
169 CHKSSHY NEWPORT CUSTOM $2.00
Newport Newport BST $1.00 or 2-2
Chip. BHP-841-2055
Panasonic AM FM receiver with canon's record-
ing technology. Dual audio output.
640-1920, 880-1560, 1680-1440. Voucher
bounty $650 less than a year ago at
www.panasonic.com.
For sale. Sany Sterne Tape record, model TC3550
features. Also record change with damped
Realistic LAB 24A automatic/manual切换
camera included. Abnormal turn 824
343 after.
Stereo Sound System Tosca 900-715. tpu deck, desk
phone receiver, amplifier like new, $700. Call 841-682-
3280.
For sale-ampg SVT 300 watts IMS, like new.
Sale-ampg SVT 2000 150 watts IMS.
Bid. D.J.409. 842-110-6
Schwinn 5-speed, reliable liftback transportation,
excellent condition. See at 1131 Ohio, #2 (upward)
evening event; leave number on pad on door.
p.m. 8:34-9:34, Wed. 10:34-
p.m. 8:35 or best offer. F2-2
Call Bart, 843-3268
Stereo Systems Available
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
At A 30% Discount
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
At A 30% Discount
Cash & carry flowers every day
826 Iowa 842-1320
sirloin
Alexander's
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Fenix Education Place
**BONY 7:** real-tailored deck model TC-280
7-foot boat with 13-foot deck and a
swinging machine w/cases, $40; or
take-off w/jet skis.
—Wide selection of gifts
2 month old Black & White 19" TV Must sell, call
mib.5118
WV -uws-runs good, needs body work. Cheap.
Call KAye, 864-839-6089
2-7
SKI OUTFITS~Moon's Heads, crs 9; owhats
SKI OUTFITS~Moon's Hearts, crs 7; two hats
481.2370
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
P.A. Bompassil Alte-Ales-Laning, Vader of the
P.O.Box 13983, Amsterdam, The Netherlands,
phone images and modified custom 200 "brating"
tapes.
Western Civilization Notes- Now on sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
Women's clothing - sale-dress, pants, blouses,
shirts. Sale prices vary by retailer; condition
recommendation 1022 Kentucky, 1020 Kentucky 10-50 Sailor
Maryland, 1024 Maryland.
Either way it comes to the same thing—New Analysis of Western Civilization. Available now at www.worldview.org.
1. If you use them You're at an advantage.
2. You don't.
Our motto is and has always been
"There is no substitute for quality."
2. If you don't,
You're at a disadvantage
RAV Audio STEREO WARRIORKE - The FIRST
Miniature, Portable, Compact, & Powerful
Audio, Lawnwater, Kann. 6004 4198 842-0471,
www.raviaudio.com
Sirloin
Sterio components- Kernwood 5150 receiver
Miniature components- Kernwood 5150 receiver-
SL728 change, AE inputs, Woollack stacks
Panasonic with recorders, Pioneer head,
camera call after two weekdays. Some used and new
components.
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
1950 CORVETTE convertible, very good condition.
AM-FM, power steering and air conditioner.
Make a new car out of it.
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEL
FARMING? WARM-FAR FURNITURE LOTS?
To a 2-bedroom apartment from stadium, easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free Cessnell parking. Available rate, furniture available. Ideal roommates. Suitable Apts, 1123 Inf. Apt. 9 or mail 843-217-61.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APAHMENTS. Now occupying the second and unfortunate apts, for the Spring season, are heating and air, pool and handheld. Most utilities are provided. Call 843-8220 or see at 174 W. 19th, wmpt 11.
Aarparkments, furnished clean, with wall to wall windows. Bedrooms, BKK and neatly tiled baths. Bedrooms, BKK and neatly tiled baths.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE APARTMENTS
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
Come by and see these three apartments. Rent
water bills or water bills are paid. Leaves of various length are
not included.
EWilmington 842-7651
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
ROOM: single or double for KU nur. near KU.
References Required: 847245 after 74285.
ROOM: single or double for KU nur. near KU.
References Required: 847245 after 74285.
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for 2 people. One room is double, arranged by 12 and 2 beds from Union. Phone: 347-656-0879.
Open 4:30
Closed Monday
842-5552
For ap-tuble use. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall
patio with 2 doors and a street parking, 2 bows
from Union, in pet rocks. Call 800-743-1450.
www.houstonzoo.com
Available Now—one bedroom apt, utilities paid
available. One block from Union. Bldg.
Orcad Apt. 12.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and winter rooms; 1 bedroom; w/study; 2 bedrooms; 3 bedrooms; ban location; Pool and gas-light; landcapped building; Management and storage 2500 West 4th - 843-733, Libby Corp.
2 bedroom carpeted duplex. Draperies, electric furnaces. Available Feb 10, 2023 Oudh Road, B92-8425.
Two houses: two bedrooms and a three
bedroom house. Studio 1, No. 942
phone: 843-7231 Phone 843-7231
* Amps
* Recorders
* Accessorie
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass.
Fender
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Open 24 hrs.
Ready to make a move! Firmilized room for two
adults and a baby. Rent the apartment with 4 children. For information call
(212) 675-9800.
"PLEASE RENTAL SERVICED"
for the full year of rental in rental
house with a Larae LentaRental exchange,
$842.00. Call 1-800-936-7535.
Nicely mat. apt. for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-854-354
WANTED
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OIP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843.5304
Fair prices paid for good used furniture. 842-7098 tt
FEMALE ROOMMATE FOR J-HAWK TOWERS
841-2817 2-5
For 1 room requires 3 bedroom house 2 blocks
or 2 rooms plus 400 sq ft plus. Call afa
600-841-2956
www.afa.com
POETRY WANTED for possible inclusion in en-
vironment. Included: shaded envelope,
Editor Box 4494; WHITE BOX 5034.
Wanted: Roommates. 4 Bdrm. modern duplex.
Rent $750 & utilities. Call 843-684-246-2
Two girls need a third roommate to share a real nice three-bedroom, two-bathroom flat in a quiet neighborhood.
Female or male roommate needed. Large, beige
room to camp in, quiet atmosphere.
1247 Tenn. 835-649-6600
Six player wanted to join existing band. Excel-
tle financial oppounts and travel, student
and family travel. Call (800) 523-4951.
Need roommate to share house with two other
homem. Utilities paid. 842-1110.
2-6
Want to move into China? Need people to move
from China to $3, bills. Like from U.K.
to 1279. By then
Wanted: quiet female to 2. BR apt, semi-
furnish. $85 ams, call: BM2-1204enses. 2-7
Would like one two-year-old to share his week.
He would be available for a variety of
Children Center, call Christopher, 862-532-9
or Michael.
Do you make candies? We buy them. Call Dentil,
481-2088 704. W 24th. Apt. 101.
2-8
Mass
We need sculture. Any medium. Call Denis.
841-208-7904 1704 W 24th, Att. 101, 2-8
Graduate student wishing full-time employment in the field of information technology. German, some French. Willing to work hard and develop skills in MS Office. Send resume to: HR@aol.com.
Female roommate wanted to share expenses with other girls in beautiful Barker Manor. Expenses $120.00. Roommate $85.00.
NOTICE
1515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Q in queen
pill wood with plywood to lift ribs of togo to
mount a ceiling fan. $15.95 $15.85 small plate $16.00 plate of beer $19.95
$16.00 plate of ice $19.95 $16.00 platter $19.95 $16.00 platter $19.95
$16.00 platter $19.95 $16.00 platter $19.95 $16.00 platter $19.95
Lawyer: Auction Home. Sell Your house/building for compartment information call 842-700-9911 or for compartment info call 842-700-9911.
Private parking stalls adjacent to campus. Phone
843-8534 2-7
Why buy a Landlord's property for him with
his own business?
Lawrence along with your diploma, to 68 or more
rent can amount to $3,000 or more you never
have. You can also enter C&L or Wheel Wet.
C$3. 63 N 2. 94 -812. 817
Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco Concert, Guitar for Beginner's—Advanced-Professional. Learn progressive and new techniques. Interpretation and interpretation. Playing. Telephone 841-390. 2-52
Independent
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Be Prepared!
Tony's 66 Service
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
tune-ups start ing service
BUCHA DE LA MUSEO
Coin-Op
The Stereo Store
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
UDIOTRONICS
WHY RENT?
RIDGEVIEW
PERSONALIZED SERVICE
Mobile Home Sales
--days per week
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
843
843
8500
AFT SALE and open house Sunday, Feb. the 4th
from 1-9 p.m. herna. Mertia 123 New Hampshire
ALL WOMEN'S DANCE THIS SATURDAY—BIRTHDAY FOR TODAY'S FIRST BIRD. Children ages five to eight can receive the donation from Children's Aid.
GAY LIDERATION: business meeting, Monday,
7:00 p.m.,union.SOCIAL MESSING FRIDAY,
8:30 p.m.for detail.CONFERENCE,
RAP, call, b44-8643-212,
B1-112, b44-8649-301,P. Box 234, Lawrence.
ATTENTION RENTERS
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
No charge, list your business, duplicates and contact information. Send us a message waiting. For more info call Home Lecouter.
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
all prices, no situation too difficult. Home Laundry,
bathrooms, laundries, drying spaces.
HELP WANTED
STRANGER IN TOWNS? As an Avon representatives, Savignet works in your free time. Call Savignet in product in van free times. Call Savignet at 516-328-0901.
We need you to articulate abilities. If you have
the skills, call 811-2458, B141-7086, 170-8
B41-101, Apt. 101.
McDonald's needs full and part-time help for
their $125 million expansion. Apply in person at
Starting job 1 $60 per hour. Apply in person at
Starting job 2 $80 per hour.
The桑拿店 is now hiring cocktail waitresses
and servers. Please call 843-561-8600,
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 843-561-8600.
Employment Opportunities
Part time, secretary needed, must be able to type, journalism background helpful. Hours will be 8:00 to 11:30 MWF and 1:00 to 3:00 Tues. Hours will be during Yearbook Workday, Randa, 864, 847-2382
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yellowstone and all U.S. National Parks. Booklet tells where to apply to. Send $2. Arnold Agney, B-360 West Bend, Hirschburg Indiana $480. Moneypenny guarantee.
Part time assistant needed, must be neat, agreeable,
and capable of working in an office in person to Webster School 5409
Hallway, Webster High School 5409
Hallway, Webster High School 5409
LOST
At Red Baron, Sat. Jan 27, double breaded navy full length top hoodie cardigan reward. No quoition. $65-$80.
Puppy 2 mons, old, malnuate & collies, had Mont-
vanse. Skin color was brown/black, extroverted,
extremely small, white eyes & foot, hair &
eyes.
Sale every Monday Nite 7 p.m.
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
RAMADA INN
Figure Salen
842 2323
7
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
- Locally owned and operated
- 9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
FOUND
Beautiful black cat: on campus early morning
1924-08-12 to 11:15 age: 30
842-1038
If You're Planning on FLYING.
Very friendly grate and white male cat with a
very cool smile. Please reclaim him by
calling 814-244.
TYPING
PERSONAL
Wanted: Any kind of typing—the term "manipulation" is often used in typing maniacs. West of campus near big city can do it.
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other paper types. Typing. Have electric typewriter with pica type. Accurate and prompt typing. Have typed all documents corrected. Ph.D. 459-8344. Mrs. Wright.
Bank with your University State Bank. Closed.
355 Iowa 105-841-7406
2-2
SERVICES OFFERED
WINTER IS STILL HERE—genealogy arpares are
bargained prized $95.95. Sunflower Stuff,
817 VI.
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!
(NEVER an extra cost
for airline tickets)
Lenny Zerox Store is selling out of business. All credit and records in our used records rack must be collected by no later than Feb. 9. The records are the records after Feb. 9. Thanks for your business. 2-9
WANT IT TO START? Call PERFORMANCE
or import-ported, we will fix it!
Make Your Spring Break Reservations Early
MISCELLANEOUS
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
Now in StockAmerica's First Choice Ten Speed
CARS BOUGHT AND SOLD. For the best deal
CARS BUUGHT AND SOLD. G.I. Joe's Used Car
Vernor, 842-8098
5 weeks. $387 incurs. London depar-
sion. Group camp training.
Travel (ages 18-30). Africa, India. 3-11 weeks. Write Whole
Travel, Lift, Box. Letter 149, K.C., Mao.
Maupintour travel service
Peugeot vo.s $117.50
PEUGEC SYSTEMS
Peugeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
401 Mass. 845-8467
843-8484
PHONE 843-1211
NORTH SIDE
KWIKI
CAR WASH
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
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Friday, February 2, 1973
University Daily Kansan
2010
Bio Chairman Candidates Cut
The recently organized search committee to select a new chairman for the division of biological sciences reduced the number of students in the program to 10, in a meeting Thursday night.
Search committee chairman Charles Wyttenbach, associate professor of physiology and cell biology, said the eight-member committee discussed each of the 20 candidates and their qualifications before voting.
Observatory to Open For Saturn Viewing
Because cloudy skies prevented local astronomy enthusiasts from viewing Saturn last Friday, the University of Kansas Observer added another open house for 7:30 tonight.
Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes in THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES PLUS Gary Cooper in Frank Capra's MEET JOHN DOE TONITE AT 7:30 United Ministries Center 1204 Oread
The division of biological sciences is comprised of the departments of physiology and cell biology, systematics and ecology, biochemistry, entomology and botany.
Last week Wytteben said the new chairman of the division would probably be a former Ackerman.
"Two or three of the remaining candidates are from departments outside the division of biological sciences though," Wyttenbach said.
Faculty members from the School of Pharmacy and the University of Kansas Medical Center were also encouraged to apply for the position.
The search committee will meet again Monday night to "weed down the list of candidates to a more workable number," Wyttenbach said.
The search committee had originally planned to present two or three candidates to be voted on by the 70 faculty members of the division of biological sciences. Wyttenbach said that no date had yet been set for that voting session.
"We're still a long way from the final selection of a candidate," Wyttenbach said. The resignation of Ron McGregor, present chairman of the division of biological sciences, will become effective July 1.
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Sen. Robert Dole, former Republican national chairman from Kansas, will take part Sunday in a statewide Mid-Winter Forum of the American Legion.
Legionnaires Plan Forum, Dole Speech
The forum will begin with a luncheon Saturday and will continue until Sunday afternoon. Sen. Dole will speak during the program Sunday morning.
The forum will be on Saturday and Sunday. It is sponsored by Dorsey-Liberty Post No. 14, 3408 W. 8th.
The Legion's national chaplain and National Americanism Council Chairman Pat Finley also will give addresses.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 83
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Comp Center Plans for Future
Monday, February 5.1973
See Story Page 3
Tax Reform Contemplated In Congress
WASHINGTON (AP)—A Democrat-controlled Congress today begins formal consideration of tax reform, which the administration indicates as a major issue in the 1972 campaign.
The House Ways and Means Committee opens hearings that are expected to last about eight weeks and cover every aspect of the 2014 Code. The last major review was in 1969.
There was no advance outcome of the kind of bill the committee eventually may produce, but Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ak, has put a damper on hopes for a general tax cut. He also has belittled some reformers' estimates that the government could pick up large revenue increases by closing what they call loopholes.
Tax changes made to treat all taxpayers equally. Mills has said, generally tend to accept a higher tax rate.
Mills has indicated that he would consider changes in capital gains taxation. These could include lengthening the period, six months, for which an asset must be held before profit from its sale qualifies for the favorable capital gains treatment. He also suggested a slight reduction in sliding scale of taxation, so that the levy would decline on assets held many years.
Another likely candidate for changes is the minimum tax, enacted in 1989 to provide that large incomes should not entirely escape taxation regardless of the legal jurisdiction. In other words, proposals include plans to tighten the tax, and some would increase the rate.
Estate and gift taxation, not changed in 1969, is certain to be reviewed.
Mills also has said a proposal to offer states and local governments an alternative to the exemption of interest on their bonds may be considered. Instead of issuing tax-free bonds, usually bought by banks and government, they are instead taxable-interest bonds at competitive interest rates, with the government providing an interest supplement.
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Kansan Photo by TY BROWN
Dole Speaks at Lawrence American Legion
. . . Calls for investigation of Vietnam War . . .
Dole to Seek Inquiry Into Cause of War
By GARY ISAACSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Sen. Robert Dole of Kansas, former Republican national chairman, said here Sunday that he would offer a resolution in the Senate this week to call for a joint professional committee to investigate the causes and origins of U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
"A joint committee appointed by the Speaker of the House and the president of the Senate will, I believe, provide the fairest, most impartial means of providing a forum to hear what he have." Dole said at a forum of about 250 Legion members and their wives.
Dale prefaced his announcement of the resolution by saying that the United States could and must learn from the experience of other countries in discovering the "whips" of the war, he said.
"We wee it to those who died to search out those lessons," he said. "We must learn from the past if we are not to repeat it again and again.
"I can see no more clear-cut and pressing necessity than the illumination of the reasons, decisions and policies that led us to this terrible division, cost and suffering."
Dole said he considered it important to go to the beginning of the war to find answers to the U. involvement. The early events and policies of the United States, which eventually involved this country usually in the war, must be questioned, he said.
"When the battle flags are brought home and America has recovered her sons, and the question is asked, 'How did it all begin?' A people such as ours cannot simply reply with weary indifference, 'Ah, if only one knew'." he said.
Dole said that the private papers of Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Eisenhower could contribute something to answering questions left by the war. He singled out Johnson's papers as being particularly important.
POW Release to Begin This Week
nameses support personnel and return them to Tan Son Nuit Air Base, headquarters of the Air Force.
at 6 a.m., Monday, dropped to below 10 for
at 7 a.m., Eighty-nine Incidents were reported
One of the C130s carried Rear Adm. Brian McCauley, commander of the Navy task force which will conduct mine clearing operations in North Vietnamse ports, and 15 members of his staff, U.S. spokesmen said.
The Pacific Military Command in Honolulu said the first U.S.-North Vietnamese meeting on mine clearance operations would be held Monday in Haiphong. McCaulley's Task Force 78, expected to number 20 to 25 ships, has been gathered in the Gulf of Tonkin.
In other developments, two more U.S.
130 transport fleets to Hanoi on Monday
from the People's Republic of China.
"I am sure President Johnson must have felt a great concern that these lessons of the war be learned while the events of these wars were still fresh in our minds," Dole said.
an prisoner recovery teams were
seen DOW Next Page
The head of the control commission said the first prisoner releases could be expected about three months later.
See POW Next Page
Dole said he hoped Congress would approve the creation of the committee. He said that once created, the committee could perform two essential functions.
"First, it can lead us to those vital 'whys' of our involvement in Vietnam and from there to wisdom and understanding for future decisions and policies, he said.
Dole said in an interview before the luncheon that his former position as Republican national chairman would have been a major factor on his reelection campaign in Kansas.
"Second, by bringing this wisdom and understanding, it will be a means of healing some of the wounds which eleven years of war have left," he said.
"On the positive side, my chairmanship has gained me wild recognition in the school system."
Concerning his recommendation of President Nixon for the Nobel Peace Prize, which has been accepted by a committee chosen by the Norwegian parliament. Dole nominated a rival nominating Nixon earlier but he had waited until a peace had been achieved in Vietnam.
"the president, if he has no other strong points as an administrator, has great ability to understand the situation."
me from doing some things I feel are important for the state."
Dole said that future presidents could bring Nikon's trips to China and the Soviet Union.
"I believe that the President is a world leader who truly stands out as one who is an authority on the issues."
Dole, who lives in the Watergate building in Washington, said that the Watergate bugging affair did not have much effect on Mr. Clinton, and that it could have hurt other Republican.
The affair had a bad effect on
Republicans in here, who could not help
accept it and were ready to vote.
Moore Hall Dedicated; Namesake Reminisces
SAIGON (AP)—U.S. officials indicated Monday that the first group of American prisoners of war held in jungles along the South Vietnam-Cambodia border would be located in the An Loc area, 60 miles north of Saigon and the nearest point on the Cambodia border.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
The officials also indicated that the United States and the Viet Cong had tentatively agreed on at least one other site in the Saigon region and two sites in the Mekong Delta for the release of American prisoners, including the U Minh forest.
Raymond C. Moore, attending ribbon cutting ceremonies Friday afternoon at the building named for him, reminiscent about his 66 years of study and service since the day he decided to "sally forth and see what the geology of the state was like."
More taught geology at KU between 1917 and 1962 and is the former director of the Kansas State Geological Survey. Moore Hall is the new headquarters of the Survey.
Before Moore made his remarks, he and Gov. Robert Docking cut a wide, gold ribbon with a pair of scissors engraved for the occasion. The ribbon cutting originally was scheduled to take place outdoors, but cold weather forced the ceremonies inside.
When Moore made his first trips into the fields, he said, he made an effort to contact state legislators to impress upon them the importance of mineral resources for Kansas. He met Alf Landon, former Kansas governor and presidential candidate in 1936; Sen. Frank Carlson; and Sen. William Ireland.
Carlson, then a freshman in the legislature and member of the Ways and Means Committee, made the Survey "his baby." Moore said.
A U.S. Air Force C94, especially equipped to handle medical evacuation of prisoners, flew Sunday from Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines to Saigon's Tan Son Nui Airport and landed for 25 minutes and then took off again, destination and mission were not known.
CARLSON WAS primarily responsible for
the great change in the status of the Survey, Moore said that the survey's financial woes were alleviated when Carlson introduced a new database appropriating $10,000 for the Survey.
Moore said he had met Ireland in Woodson County, but had found his response to the Survey lukewarm. Ireland became friendly, however, after Moore named a scientist after the senator and discovered an outcropping which he named the Ireland Sandstone.
Moore told a trip into the Grand Canyon at a time when waters rose to unusually high levels. His party returned safely, but he found headlines about the "disaster" and read his old obituary in the University Daily Kansan.
"I've been living on borrowed time ever since." he said.
Moore said that Kanaas had been one of the first states to cooperate closely with the U.S.
Moore said he was particularly proud to direct the "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology", which involved specialists from state and federal geological surveys and from foreign countries. The project, a joint effort with the Earthborne fossils of all periods, was begun
The U.S. Command said there had been no prisoners released as of 9 a.m. Monday.
Field teams of the International Commission for Control and Supervision fanned out across South Vietnam to supervise a cease-fire after a week's delay. The number of truce violations reported by the Saigon command during the 24-hour period ending
See MOORE HALL Page 3
SES Passes Test; Fiscal Support Granted
U.S. Pushes For Shakeup In Cambodia
The proposed shakeup apparently is intended to make Lon Nol's Social Republican party regime appear more representative and therefore more acceptable to the Republicans, its agents, the Khmer Rouge, as a partner in discussions to end their three-year-old war.
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) —The United States has put pressure on President Lon Nor's government to broaden its range of policies. In the face of the opposition, it was learned Sunday.
By KATHY TUSSING Kansan Staff Writer
The message was brought to Marshal Lon Nol by Vice President Spiro Agnew during his five-hour visit here, a well-informed Western diplomat said.
The Supportive Educational Services (SES) program received financial support Saturday for the spring semester from the University of Kansas Memorial Corp. at a meeting of the corporation's board of directors.
Among the names proposed for possible inclusion were those of Sisowah Sirkik Matak, leader of the Republican party, and In Tam, head of the Democratic party.
The action followed an investigation of the SES program by the fiscal and financial officers.
It also was seen as a move to mute the widespread discontent with the party's manifesto.
The program, intended since 1989 to provide tutoring, scholarships and loans to members of racial minorities, came under the administration of many students excluded on non-blacks.
The board of directors decided that funding of the program next year would depend upon whether the SES program was made available to all minority groups and whether the SES program accepted and used University accounting procedures.
Members of the Black Student Union (BSU) waited for three hours outside the board meeting to hear the board's decision. David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and committee member, read the approved report to the students and answered questions. The president, also a vice president of the corporation, also talked to BSU members following the board meeting.
THE OFFICE OF Student Affairs will assume the administration of the SES in order to ensure that the vice chancellor for student affairs. The office will develop procedures and guidelines to be followed by the educational department and meet the means of permanently financing the program.
The Office of Student Affairs will receive $3,000 from the corporation to be used for services to minority race students not currently participating in the SES program.
At its Dec. 2 meeting, the board of directors had requested information from SES concerning the policies and procedures of the program. They had also asked for a majority intention to include all minority groups on a regular basis by the fall semester 1973.
The approved report included a recommendation that the acting director of MIMA (MAR) should
The committee received two reports from SES, both of which were released Saturday.
THE FIRST REPORT included a short history of the SES program, tracing it back to the Urban Action Council, BSU and Urban Scholars program. The report also included a financial statement for 1972 and a projection for the spring semester.
"In the opinion of the committee, although the first report was welcome it did not in any way suture to answer the questions," Dillon said.
The projection showed a total expected amount of $17,490.01 and expenditures of $19,583.02.
The report stated that there were six bases for awarding grants, scholarships and loans. These were the availability of money from such sources at the KU Endowment Association, BSU or other donations; a financial need; other avenues being exhausted; the inability of a student to remain in school without this aid; an indication of some source of repayment or loan; and payment check on time, because of procedural issues.
The second report, issued by Brenda Marzett Varn, acting director of the Office of Minority Affairs, provided more specifics about the program.
The report also listed for the fall 1972 staff one assistant director, eight counselors (a decrease of three from the previous year), ten assistants, and 16 full-time and six part-tutor units.
THESE PERSONS WERE responsible for
reserving the 165 students in the room.
The assistant director of the program received a salary of $500 a month according
to the report. The graduate assistants received a maximum salary of $300 a month; counselors, $120 a month; tutors, $3 an hour; bus drivers, $2 an hour; student assistants, $2 an hour.
In other business, the board heard a financial report prepared by Ronald Hamilton, University comproller and corporation treasurer. The report showed net income from operations for the six months ending Dec. 31 as $69,715.
The only Union department losing money, according to the report, was the food service area. It had a deficit of $10,102 so far this fiscal year. The Union management expressed the hope that a new "Dell" now in operation would increase sales in the food department.
Although sales to customers have decreased $21,702 since last year, the cost of
sales has held steady at 64 per cent. Net income is up $2,949 since last year.
THE CORPORATION APPROVED a six per cent patronage refund for bookstore customers for period 52 (July 1 through Dec. 31, 1972).
The corporation also approved Saturday and Sunday hours for the Union of 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays from June 4 to July 28.
SCHOOL
Kanaan Photo by BRAD BACHMAN
Members of the BSU Await Memorial Union Board Decision
...A long wait Saturday for SSS funding procedures ...
2
Monday, February 5, 1973
University Daily Kansan
CAMERON'S BASEBALL GAME
Escape
Kansas Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Four-year-old Mike Rowe doesn't think sitting little to watch for play tennis matches is his forte.
himself, but his mother keeps him a captive fan. The sunny weekend weather drew crowds to the tennis courts to play a friendly set. Mike is the son of Michael Rowe Sr. and his wife Sharon. Rowe is a sophomore from Bartlesville, Okla.
Journalism Profs Back Shield Bill
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN Kansan Staff Writer
When the Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee met Friday in an open hearing, lawmakers and professors were among several press and broadcasting spokesmen who testified in favor of a Senate bill that would shield them from revealing their sources of information.
Del Brinkman, associate professor of journalism and deputy regional director of Sigma Delta Chi, a national professional journalism fraternity, and David Dary, associate professor of broadcasting and president of the Topena Press Club, both said that the bill was necessary for bringing the vital flow of information in society.
THE BILL, introduced by Sen. Ted Saar Jr., R-Pittsburgh, would protect any person employed by the news media in the gathering or processing of information for his legal responsibility to disclose his sources to any governmental agency or branch.
The committee added the words "or processing" after Brinkman suggested that the working should also protect editors as well as newsmen.
At Brinkman's suggestion, the committee also agreed to consider deleting or rewriting the second section of the bill because it was uncleared. This section was intended to provide that once media representatives have invoked the protection
BRINKMAN SAID the national debate on the subject and the many jailings of newman across the country had aroused his legislators' interest in shield laws this year.
of the law in any situation, they could not later reveal those sources or any information about them.
"It's a popular issue now, and if it's ever going to pass, this is the year," he said.
Proponents of shield protection for newsmen argue that if the newsmen were not protected from revealing their sources many important ideas, movements and stories would never reach the public because potential sources would be afraid to divulge any controversial or incriminating information.
"Another of the ideas behind this is to keep newmen from doing the policeman's job," Brinkman said. "But it doesn't allow a newman from testing it he wants to."
BRINKMAN ANSWERED critics who claimed that newsmen would missuse the protection by admitting that some misuse would probably occur, but he argued that such was the price that a free society must pay the benefits that liberty of the press pushes.
"DO YOU NOT protect a newsman just because someone might misuse the protection, when protection leads to a free flow of information?" he asked.
Both Brinkman and Dary favor the Saar bill because it is an "absolute" protection,
POW...
standing by at Tan Son Nht, ready to move anywhere in Indochina for the repatriation of POWs, including 562 American servicemen and soldiers in North and South Vietnam and Laos.
Representatives of the United States, North and South Vietnam and the Viet Cong scheduled their third meeting for Monday to work out details of the prisoner exchanges.
Fighting across South Vietnam continued to ebb. The Saigon military command claimed 102 cease-fire violations during the 24-hour period ending at 6 a.m.
The organizers of Headquarters, Inc., a personal crisis and drug abuse center, are looking once more for volunteers to help break the organization is doing in Lawrence.
Calls made by people information or advice tripped recently, Rick Silber, director of Headquarters, said Thursday. Most of the people who call in for help are those from outside of Kansas or from local high schools, he said, but some of the calls are made by
adults from the community.
capacity. Volunteers are needed for clerical and office work, publicity, bookkeeping, referral updating and information collection.
Silber said that volunteers would work about 10 hours a week to help handle more than 1,200 calls received each month. The work can be divided into 2 shifts, he added.
Headquarters would be happy to find people to take care of any of these responsibilities, Silber said. Volunteers will be briefed on the program, he said, before startling staff.
He said that the organization also needed people with some background in chemistry to help in its drug analysis program. Other researchers have expressed interest in helping out in some other
Headquarters Requests Volunteers
WASHINGTON—The United States is moving too slowly in its efforts to cope with a developing energy crisis, the outgoing chairman of the congressional Joint Committee on Defense Production said Sunday. Rep. Wright Patman, D-Tex., expressed this conclusion in a statement accompanying the committee's 1972 report, which published National News reported that 49 of 56 civilian nuclear power plants under construction have slipped behind schedule an average of 14.3 months each.
BOSTON—Millions of trial documents are being gathered in the biggest action ever brought by the government against monopolies; the Justice Department's suit against the computer giant International Business Machines (IBM). The Nixon administration against IBM, filed on the last day of the late President Lyndon Johnson's term in office, would break IBM's computer operations into separate, competitive units.
WASHINGTON—Great Britain's Prime Minister Edward Heath said Sunday that unilateral U.S. troop withdrawal from Europe might push some of America's allies toward the United States with the Soviet bloc. Britain wouldn't, "others might," Heath said on the NBC broadcast "Meet the Press." He refused to name any countries. Asked if the Comoros would threat to Western Europe, he said, "I have no doubt about that at all."
News Briefs By the Associated Press Energy Crisis
IBM Law Suit
BELFAST-British troops said Sunday that they killed six gunmen in a pitched battle in Belfast while rival terrorist armies mowed down almost a score of civilians in the streets. Two men, both believed to be dead when they shot at the dead militants and at least 15 other persons were wounded Saturday night and early Sunday in one of the bloodiest nights in Northern Ireland since sectarian feuding exploded $3\frac{1}{2}$ years ago.
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"Personally, I don't think this bill would create a problem." Brinkman said, because all three conditions would have to be present at the same time.
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The court ruled in the June decision of the Earl Caldwell case that the First Amendment didn't specifically give newsmen protection from testifying but said that Congress and state legislatures were free to pass any laws to provide such protection
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"If anyone criticizes the Saar bill, they don't understand the First Amendment." Dary said. "We're trying to give newsmen something that they thought they had."
But Brinkman said that he opposed the House bill anyway because there was always the possibility that it might be too expensive to pass, so the bill was passed. He said that if the bill was passed in its present form it would be worse than no bill at all, because now there was no legalized way to force a newspaper to reveal such information. So much machinery could encourage its use.
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THE KANASA HOUSE Federal and State Affairs Committee's scheduled to conduct a bearing on a qualified shield law bill introduced by three representatives.
The House bill is similar to the Senate bill except that it allows a government representative to force a newsman to reveal information by appealing to the Kansas Supreme Court.
For the court to grant such a request, it would have to determine that there was cause to believe the newsman had information relevant to a specific crime, that the information could not be obtained by alternative means and that there was an
At the Friday hearing Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence and owner of KLWN radio station; Forrest Inks, spokesman for the Kansas Press Association; and Jesse Broadcasters Association for the Kansas Broadcasters Association, voice support for the Saar bill.
Brinkman said that no one at the hearing spoke against the bill.
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1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
On March 14 and 15, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected.
To become a candidate:
Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 14.
In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate.
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OF-
FICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information; Call 864-3710
University Daily Kansan
Monday. February 5.1973
3
Kansan Photo by PAULA CHRISTENSEN
JOHN A. HENRY
Former Geology Prof Raymond Moore at Ceremony
. . . Old friends greeted at new geology building opening . . .
Moore Hall
(Continued from page 1)
. . .
in 1948 and ultimately will consist of 24 volumes.
IRVIN YOUNGERG, director of the KU Endowment Association, announced that the building on West Campus that houses the Survey and adjums Moore Hall would be named Parker, former director of the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey.
To make cooperation easier between the federal and state surveys, the building is connected to the third floor of Moore Hall by an enclosed corridor.
Youngberg unveiled a portrait of Moore painted by one of his former students, John W. Koeenig, who had painted the portrait entirely from photographs.
Bill Barr, director of the Space Technology Center, presented Moore a picture of the earth taken from outer space by astronaut Ron Evans, a KU alumnus.
Moor and his wife, Lilian, listened as Barr read Evans' message: "We're on our way to the moon. However, our geological observations are here on earth. Best wishes, Ron Evans."
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said he received the building with a pledge to continue the high quality of research conducted at the Survey for the past 80 years.
William Hambleton, director of the William Survey, said that KU had produced more state geologists than any other university. He prompted Moore to call out, "Hear, hear!"
CLIFFORD STONE, chairman of the Geological Survey Advisory Council, said that although he was an outsider to science, Mr. Moore for Moore, "a giant, yet gentle intellect."
Frank C. Foley, director emeritus of the Survey, said that three generations of directors were present at the ceremonies, Moore, himself and Hambleton.
Bloodmobile Uses Dracula As Public Relations Man
Count Dracula will be putting the bite into KU students today and Tuesday in an effort to recruit donors for the Bloodmobile Wednesday through Friday of this week.
The Count, alias Ken Wallace, Overland University graduate students to the three-day drive as part of his new advertising program, according to Doug Spence, Shawnee Mission sophomore student.
Red Cross volunteers will be in the Kansas Union Ballroom from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday and from 11 a.m.to 3:30 o.m. on Friday, he said.
Students who miss the Count on campus will have another chance to see him in "Dracula Has Risen from the Grave." which will be show free to all donors.
11 in Dyche Auditorium. Show times will be 11 p.m., 7 p.m., and 9 p.m. also on the bill will be Abbott and Castelo Meet Dr. Jekyll and Spencer and a Road Runner cartoon, Spenger said.
Donors will also receive coupons for a free draw at the Stables and $1 off on a Shakey's pizza. Under the Red Cross Blood Entitlement program, each donor also is immediate family for year following his donation. Spencer said.
Spencer said Sunday that the Red Cross had set a minimum goal of 600 pints to be collected at KU during the three-day drive. This is approximately the amount of blood needed by the Center in Wichita sends to 110 Kansas hospitals during a three-day period, he said.
A Cavalcade of Quilts On Exhibit at Spooner
The quilts are part of a collection of more than 130 stored in the basement of the museum. They usually are not on display because they occupy too much gallery space and Gridley Smith, assistant professor of art history and a curator of the museum.
For pioneer women without the time to express creativity through painting or sketching, quiltmaking was an art form. About 30 quilts made by American women will be displayed at the Spooner Museum of Art Feb. 4 to Feb. 25.
Several quilts were exhibited last year in the Kansas Union, but many be in display there this spring.
Comp Center Prepares for Future
THE OLDEST QUILT is from the late 18th century, Smith said, and the newest was made in 1945. Most are handmade, but they were more modern quilts were sewn by machine.
Although the University of Kansas computation center recently has entered a long-term contract with Honeywell Inc., it is unclear about the future of KU's computer system.
By DAN GEORGE
Kansan Staff Writer
The contract with Honeywell expires in August 1975, but limited space conditions and projections of expanded and more varied use of the system have already sent KU planners to the boards in search of "a better mousetran."
Quitting patterns were similar in different time periods and in different regions, Smith said, so qualities other than patterns must be used in dating culfs.
Smith said the quilla came from all over the United States, and that many were well-educated.
She said textiles varied widely in technique and technology and were useful in dating. Colorfast dyes did not come into use because they were old. Some materials were used only in very old quilts.
There is no pressing problem in the system, as it presents already, at KU. But, according to Paul Wolfe, director of the system, there is a situation guaranteed not to last.
"We've made changes in computer software (instructions, programs, data). We've made small changes in computer configuration (style) and improvements in our tools. You can use that equipment only so long and then technology passes you by."
Although several other committees will be formed to aid in the study, the Task Force is the only active group at present. The Task Force, is represented by memb- nets of different schools and admi-native offices as will be the other committees.
THE KU EFFORT to plan for future computer needs began in the fall of 1971, when the University Computer Committee formed a subcommittee to study long-range needs. This subcommittee revealed its report in September 1972, and as a result the committee established this year to produce computer specifications for the future.
"We're considering what should be our configuration and ability to meet demands starting in 1975 and into the 1980s not considering not only how much it will be used but also the different ways in which it will be used," said Wolfe.
THE PURPOSE of the committees, according to Terry, is that there be the widest possible range of input.
Terry said he expected the first stage of operations, which will be to decide on the facilities and type of systems to be used, to be concluded by the end of this year. After that, final specifications, including the bidding, will begin.
the computer's use throughout the University community.
Although the Task Force group is working for future needs, it is using the current system to respond to changes.
This system, of course, has both strengths and weaknesses. One strong point, accents of this kind, is the computing system also been installed for six years. This has allowed continuous development to proceed without major interruptions for new hardware or software.
ANOTHER STRENGTH is the cooperation among different disciplines and the computation center in implementing significant education and research efforts involving different approaches to computer networking, he said.
The third strength has been the retention of a high-quality professional staff to assist on-going projects.
But there have also been drawbacks. A tightening of the computation center budget, in contrast to cutbacks in the number of computer clusters in the center. Because of this, several sections do not have adequate backup people. Other staff members are overloaded to the point where they can no longer work.
But the biggest problem, according to Wolfe, is simply a lack of space.
"We serve a variety of students," he said.
"We serve everybody from the freshman student taking a course to a Ph.D. candidate finishing his thesis.
"DURING THE LAST calendar year, something like 320 courses used the computer to teach our students. An increasing number are undergraduates, and more and more of them are using it."
One of the things that may be considered by the various committees is a new building for the computer system. Wolfe said he favored that if it's financially feasible.
KU Employes Granted Bargaining Unit Status
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
The Kansas Public Labor Relations Board (LRB) has recognized $35 University of Kansas maintenance and service personnel as a bargaining unit, Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, reported Friday.
KU employees at the Lawrence campus and at the Medical Center were formally recognized Jan. 18 by the LRB. The only other state institution whose maintenance have been recognized as a bargaining unit are Fort Hays Kansas State College.
The recognition of building and grounds, housing, and health services personnel was caused by Senate Bill 333, which became effective March 1. 1972.
The bill establishes a framework of employer-employee relations by providing training on how to handle employees and public employers. The bill prohibits strikes, but allows the bargaining unit to act as a lobby. The passage of Senate Bill 1594 restricts public Employees Labor Relations Board.
MAX PITNEY, business officer at the
Maxwell University of Kansas Medical Center, said
750 medical students attended.
the medical Center were also recognized as a bargaining unit by the LRB.
Pitney said that after the LRB recognized the 750 employees, the employees had to receive a training program from the Medical Center employees voted by a 90 per cent majority to join Public Service Employees Local Union 113, instead of the association of Public Employees (KAPE).
Pitney said many Medical Center employees had been associated with Local 1132 for about six years, but that the University, which is a nationally federally bargain with the union until now,
Nitcher said the 535 KU public employees would vote later this month or in early March to join either local 1132 or KAPE. He said many employees favored joining Local 1132, as the Medical Center employees did last week.
NITCHER SAID the bill should make bargaining with the maintenance and repairs team a possibility.
"During last spring's walkout by the B & G employees, the University had informal talks with the employees' leaders," Nitcher said. "But until the LRB had officially recognized the employees as a bargaining unit, nothing could really be decided."
Cal Phallus, junior, felt threatened when his parents suggested he work. "They called me a burn and said they wanted to get them."
Car he'd set out as long as possible. "Two days after they stopped sending bread I got into a Providence Mutual Bank where we had a credit card machine. Can make my own hours. Can make good money. I got a job waiting for me when I graduate. My parents said, 'Get yourself a job.'"
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"The computation center is located in a portion of a building (Summerfield) formerly used for business education," Wolfe said. "Clearly, we are not in an environment designed to house a computer facility and facilities question becomes very important."
Stephen H. Kraybill—Campus Representative 2401 W. 25th, Apt. 9B9 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Res. 913-841-2310 or 913-842-3146
"But I'm not for helping one thing if something else suffers. I'm not going to boost the comp center if it means the library is going all to hell."
STILL, WOLFE is aware that in recent years the computation system has been given the support of a new operating expenditure 1973 was $1,233,067. This is roughly two per cent of the operating expenditure, $853,842-$853,842.
"Our budget at the present time is lower than it was four years ago," Wolfe said. "And if you look at an diagram, you'll see that we're doing work as much as work as
at that time "
A lot of the extra wk has been a result of changes in the system since the signing of the Honeywell contract. In recent months, the computation center has added ad-hoc tasks, an improved input-output controller and an add-in printer with a high-quality printer.
But the future and the changes that come with it are the concern of the committee.
"It's a dynamic system of requirements and needs which you must respond to in a timely fashion."
"The system should be modular. You should be able to add on to it without sonderable new expense. And it should be financially supported."
"This is why it's so important that any new system be flexible. If your demands change, then your system should be able to change to meet those demands.
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University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Kansas Death Penalty
The nation's electric chairs, gallows and gas chambers, rendered obsolete by the Supreme Court's abolition of the death penalty June 29, may return to use in some states. Kansas is one of them.
Chief Justice Warren Burger, in his dissenting opinion on the abolition, provided a means for state legislatures to reinstate the death penalty by altering laws to conform to the Supreme Court ruling. He wrote that either states could specify those crimes for which the death penalty could be used under certain circumstances, or the states could enumerate very serious crimes that would violate a man's own sentence. Two bills currently proposed in the Kansas Senate represent Burger's two suggestions for making these amendments.
Senate Bill 82 seems to represent little change from Kansas' former statute providing for capital punishment. As in the former Kansas criminal code, the bill specifies crimes such as first-degree murder and first-degree punishable by death. There is, in the past, no mandatory death penalty. However, the alternative, life imprisonment, carries with it a mandatory prison term of 25 years before the prisoner becomes eligible for parole. The decision to impose the death penalty shall be determined in a separate sentencing proceeding before the court deems evidence may be presented on any matter the court deems relevant to sentencing.
One of the major objections to capital punishment made by the Supreme Court justices last summer was its arbitrary application. Justice Potter Stewart wrote, "There are other reasons and unusual in the same way that being struck by lightning is cruel and unusual."
Justice Thurgood Marshall wrote that capital punishment fell most frequently on blacks, "the poor, the slave," and privileged imprisoned members of society."
It seems that this bill would not do away with the arbitrary factor in imposing the death penalty. Although the death penalty would be determined in a special proceeding, it still would depend on the deliberations of the jury or judge, and therefore, its imposition could once again be inconsistent and unfair.
Senate Bill 88 follows Burger's second recommendation, by authorizing serious by the regulators as punishable by a mandatory death
sentence. Murder of a law enforcement officer, corrections employee, fireman, public official or a witness to prevent him from testifying is subject to the mandatory death sentence.
Death is also mandatory for murder committed in the perpetration of rape, kidnapping, aircraft piracy, aggravated burglary, aggravated robbery, aggravated battery or aggravated arson. First-degree murder alone, however, the killing of a human being "committed maliciously, willfully, intentionally, or deliberately and with premeditation," would no longer be punishable by death.
Although death sentences would be less arbitrarily imposed under this bill, the mandatory sentence is still inconsistent with another major argument for the abolition of capital punishment.
In last summer's ruling several of the Supreme Court justices said capital punishment constituted "cruel and unusual punishment." Justice William O. Douglas wrote that executions in modern-day America necessarily violated the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. William J. Brennan called capital punishment "the most serious crime" and degrading," and reasoned that it might be no better than prison as a deterrent to crime. Even dissenting Justice Harry A. Blackmun said he had a personal abhorrence of capital punishment, but felt that it was the states' responsibility to abolish it.
Some Kansas legislators now want to reverse this monumental Supreme Court decision. So far, studies to measure the effectiveness of capital punishment as a deterrent to crime have proved inconclusive. Beyond effectiveness another question exists. What judge or jury really has the right to decree life and death?
Perhaps Justice Marshall best summarized the merits of abolishing capital punishment when he wrote, "In striking down capital punishment, this court does not malign our system of government; on the contrary, it pays homage to it. Only in difficult times, in difficult times, and could civilization record its magnificent advancement."
The United States could have been the 38th country in the world to record such a "magnificent advancement." The effort by certain states to hold off a prolonged days of the death penalty is a backward step in the progress of a nation.
—Barbara Spurlock
Nicholas von Hoffman
WASHINGTON—With the gracelees and grudging American withdrawal from the war, will the Jane Fonda-Tom Hayden marriage last? The women unless she can teach him to act.
Truce to Weaken the Movement
will be in the straitened circumstances of an old revolutionary after the revolution has been won. Such people usually are looked upon with no more favor by the new revolutionary government than by the old one which they had
If he isn't now, Hayden soon
helped pull down.
Joseph Stalin had somebody put an ax through Leon Trotsky's skull. Fidel Castro probably would have shot Che Guevara if he had gone at him. Even the great ideologue and master propagandist of the
Subdued Homecoming Awaits American Prisoners of War
Editor's note: Max Desfajon,
Associated Press Asian photo
editor, was at Pamunjimun,
Korea, when U.S. prisoners of
war taken in that conflict were
caused in this article Derek Reefor,
author of the book *Ambitious* and
compares it to preparations
for the return of Vietnam POWS.
Bv MAX DESFOR
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (AP)—The most memorable part of that spring day almost 20 years ago was how the POWs just jumped out of the trucks, most shouting and cheering, happy as larks to be safe again.
In the clear, mild morning of April 20, 1953, the first truckloads of American POWs were brought to the North Korean side of the city. In another shift then shifted to U.S. Army trucks for the short ride to "Freedom
A similar name, "Operation homecoming," has been given to the organization now waiting at Dark Air Base to greet 535 returning American POWs from the nation's second Asian war in Vietnam. But the reception will be comparatively low key.
City," the name given the collection of tents that housed the OW processing center.
In Korea, there were nearly 3,500 returning American prisoners.
Some had been held as long as $2 \frac{1}{2}$ years. In Vietnam, many have been held longer. The one held longest is Lt. Cmdr. Lendr. Alvarez Jr., who was shot down and captured in the first U.S. air attack against North Vietnam in 1964.
Some looked elated, others tired and unkempt, as they
Two former Viet Cong in a group of 200 released here
CAN THO, Vietnam (AP)—Eight years a prisoner, Dang Van Hai is now free to go home. Fear keeps him locked up. He is afraid to commit snares from the Viet Comité Commandos was once a Viet Cong guerrilla.
Hai was brought here during the week from Phu Quoc Island Prison for release, along with more than 2,000 other former Viet Cong. By Thursday most had left Hai. Holo compound for home.
According to Hai and others still at the compound, scores of former Viet Cong released in the last few days plan to rejoin their province as they return to their provinces, and barass those who do not.
Hai is among 50 men here who are eligible for immediate release, but who are loath to leave the compound.
jumped from the trucks of truckson
Pannumjom. Most wore baggy
fatigue with the letters "PPW"
painted on back. A few had
donned Chinese-style blue
packed jacks.
Viet Cong Fear Release
There were also the litter cases, the men who had been wounded when they were captured.
The POWs were released in great masses, hundreds at a time, and there was much confusion as guards lined them up and started them toward the processing tents.
It was like anything else in the Army, such as lining up for chow. There was none of the almost mathematical precision with which "Operation Homecoming" is to be run, and there were a great many more opportunities there to see returning POWs soon after they were released in Korea.
★ ★ ★
"I don't know what to do," he says. "I want to go home, but I'm afraid. I'm afraid to leave here."
"Here" is a compound of the government's Hoci Hol or Open Army program, aimed for years to men over from the enemy.
Hai, 31, hard-core Viet Cong planned reprisals against all who allowed themselves to be won over to the government side. lie said punishment squads of from 100 to 150 men have been formed under ex-Viet Cong officers and lower-level leaders.
Wednesday were beaten, clubbed and stoned by a group of prison mates as they waited for tran- sitioners. The men are being treated at a hospital.
American Revolution didn't do so well after the cause was won: Tom Paine died poor and largely unillustrated, but he'd done so much to liberate it.
The press, of course, was not allowed to see Korean POWs who were seriously ill, but photographers and reporters were allowed, as a matter of course, to see consenting prisoners. The prisoner permitted it, both in Korea and at hospitals in Japan.
Hayden's prospects are bleaker in their own way. The Movement that he and his companions have a successful ceaseture. It will go down in history as having achieved some important success, but also as having looked more revolutionary, more literal in the sense of high protest when there were hundreds, even thousands of red flags of Bolshevism trooping around the White House, it did not mean they were leading a huge army of half-naked, piratical Communists.
Paine's problems were aggravated by his anti-Christian, anti-organized religion blast. Richard Nixon and Billy Graham would have hated this particular issue because that, many revolutionaries can't adjust to calmer, less turbulent times. They're born trouble-makers who even have been known, when finished with one revolution, to go off and try another. That that's how Guerra vets are held a part in the French Revolution, it was over Napoleon would have none of him. He fled back to America and a stingy death.
Now, by contrast, military officials at Clark have said reporters will not be allowed to see most POWs while they are in the Pacific area. They have said respondents should request to interview POWs, and that some limited interviews might be granted.
In fact most of them simply were very angry, but very garden-variety, liberalers. They will revert now that they haven't already. There's no call to be so noisy or to apply the tactics of the taxicabs. But Abbie Hoffman isn't funny any more; not even he thinks he is.
The New Left, then, is about to go up the flue. With its vanishing, the radical leaders of peace, who have long reservoir of much good-will and gratitude for what they've done, but no rank-and-file constituency, no significant organization, no people engaged in activity any more.
The men and women who led hundreds of thousands of people in the streets so short a time ago
might not have been so quickly reduced to being single, private citizens had been able to build some kind of radical party. There were a number of attempts, but they never took, so the Movement was never able to resist the hedge against its almost instantaneous evaporation when the enthusiasm went dry.
Something more permanent in the way of a political organization might have been erected had it been possible to piece together even a rudimentary, radical political creed. In the anarchy of the era when the government had have been, but then the conduct of the Right and the Center hasn't made it any easier for people to carve out a stable political allegiance for themselves.
Do you recall Sen. George McGovern campaigning about getting the troops home within 90 days of his inauguration, and seeming to favor abortion when he was running, Nixon goes ahead and presumably will get them home in less than 90 days, and the Supreme Court he created legalizes abortion. The times have conspired to prevent the women from themselves itself toward new purposes, as if once switched from concentration on civil rights.
For the Movement leaders, the air has a sour breath. The music has gone bad on out so that the hottest number out is Bette Midler singing old songs to aging men. She's the spirit of the moment then you can understand how Nixon gets away with playing a Sears, Rebeck imitation of the most Christian Charles de Gaulle: the repeated television vignette of the grand, silent, lonely man of religion. He prays while being praised by relays of dergium who all look as energetically sincere as the anchor men on TV news shows.
This is the time for Tom Hayden to take acting lessons.
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
Readers Respond
Not 'Fluffy'
To the Editor:
'1776' Review, Tickets on Trial
When "177" was a Broadway production, it won both the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award and the Tony Award as best musical of the 1988-69 season. Now, with the exception of a few deleted lines, it has been transferred to the screen, and is greeted with acclimation by the movie crits of the Kansan, right?
Well, wrong. The gentleman
thinks it's "fuffy". Presumably, he is ignoring as irrelevant the bittersweet of John Adams, revealed in his letters to his wife; the information that Benjamin Franklin established the first antislavery society on our continent; the Delaware delegate's all-night ride to Philadelphia, for independence, though he had been an active supporter dying of skin cancer; the Georgia delegate's struggle with himself before he could decide what "representing the people" truly meant; and Thomas Jefferson's resolution to free his slaves.
The committee was set up four years ago under crusading Rep. Claude Phelpe, D-Flat, to expose
Interests Blitz Crime Committee
WASHINGTON—The House Crime Committee is about to become the victim of its own creation, and should verge on it from all directions.
Valerie J. Meyers
So aroused are the pharmacological firms that they have to deal with the queries about Pepper's proposal. Calls even have come from stockbrokers worried about what happens to their drug investments.
precipitated the greatest revolution in the history of government.
Worst of all, Pepper stepped on
Jack Anderson
to build up his jurisdiction, even if it means gobbling up the committee of his old friend, Claude Pepper.
Overland Park Freshman
At present, Pepper's opponents plan to bury the committee's funds and authority in the Rules Committee without bringing the issue to a floor vote. A floor vote would put the law-and-order minded Republicans and their unfortunate friends at the uncomfortable position of attaching the Mafia and the drug interests by openly killing the only House committee now dealing exclusively with crime.
Coast Guard Caper The Coast Guard is charged under the new water pollution
interstate crime and drug abuse. For two years, it plugged along ineffectively.
The White House also is unhappy with the Peppar unit. if the committee gets a new lease on life, the Administration is bound to get a goering over for its failure to curtail street crime. The police insiders have badmouthed the committee for years.
Pepper then installed a vigorous new staff. Seldom has a congressional committee produced such useful testimony and challenging reports in any two-year period.
He horrified the TV industry be demanding that the pill and tonic acids, which bring in billions of dollars, be totally banned between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. to keep from becoming pill addicts.
With such a record against un- special interests, a counterattack was inevitable. About three weeks ago, minority leader Gerald Ford N.Mich. entered of office in a town where Oklaho, strongly urged him to kill the crime committee. Albert listened but made no commitment.
he toes of powerful congressmen who felt he had intruded into their urisioned
Tickets
Pepper infuired Dun & Bradstreet and the dignified accounting firm of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co., by showing unwilling, were used in a mobile phony securities scheme.
The committee exposed mob infiltration of sports, tying Frank Sinatra to a syndicate-run race. The jury of the grumbling, growling Mafia bosses Raymond Patricaire and Carneiro into the public spotlight.
Yet the Coast Guard has abolished an Industry Advisory Committee on Oil Pollution Inhabitat and environmental activistats. Adm. William "Mike" Benkert, in charge of marine environment for the Coast Guard, wanted to add environmentalists to the committee so that they could be by the oil industry which had dominated the committee.
laws with clearing our navigable waters of oil spills and sewage from ships. Its effectiveness may determine whether Americans will be able to swim at public beaches which have become increasingly contaminated by shipboard discharges.
Some of the reforms being considered are worthwhile. A fixed fee for tickets is superior to a fee for entry contrary to official belief, parking backwards and misplaced stickers don't threaten the community as much asading. The fees should reflect this.
Finally, any campus officer will tell you that some tickets blow away in bad weather. Because of this, you may receive two tickets for something you could have corrected had you not been wearing them or your right to appeal because you won't discover the violation until long after the two week grape period. The only way to protect yourself is to drop by the Traffic and Security office every week to find out what tickets you didn't get. I suggest officers either tape himself/hide or notify the student within two weeks about them.
Benkert acknowledged that his proposal to include environmentalists on the committee had met with objections. But he acknowledged the Coast Guard's statement that the committee duplicated the work of two committees to the Marine Safety Council. Benkert also said that the Coast Guard was taking strong measures to prevent oil and sewage pollution.
Adm. Chester R. Bender, the coast Guard commandant, solved the problem by petitioning Secretary of Transportation John Vope to eliminate the committee altogether.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
The stated purpose of University Traffic and Security is to protect the campus and to keep traffic orderly. Apparently, this hides their real motive of making cars come from parking violations.
Stories of Traffic and Security are beginning to sound like "The Trial." Too many reforms function only to save the ad-time time and money rather than give the student a break.
Moreover, requiring one to pay his fine before being allowed to appeal is ridiculous and unfair. To discourage those criminals who only want to delay paying tickets, Traffic and Security is willing to shaft students with which you have an issue. I appeal You may get your money back, but what if you don't have $10 or $15 to shell out you can appeal? Legitimate cases will be thrown out because one doesn't have the money to pay a ticket he doesn't deserve.
To the Editor:
"There's no spirit of freedom, just the trappings," the critic wrote. "It is a quiet despair at the wreckage, Congress was making of the Declaration, or John Adams' defiantly blaming song, 'Is it wrong to kill?"
"A cataclysmic earthquake I'd accept, with some despair. But no, You've sent us Congress; God God, Sir, was that fair?" He said of the line that rings with unmistakable echoes today. Perhaps while he was pleading, he should have asked the same thing about movie critics who are unable to believe that our heroes were real creatures, but they sometimes laughed at them oblivious and sometimes obnoxious and sometimes impossible to move—and, incidentally—they
Roger Hughes Topeka Junior
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University Daily Kansan
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Kanaan Photo by CARL G. DAYAZ JR.
Doren Metzger Prepares the Shelves of the Book Barn
... Oksalaoka book store offers discarded library books ...
Stories of Churchill, Nancy Drew Can Be Found at the Book Barn
By CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
When people visit the Book Barn in Oskalaosa, they come armed with card board boxes, pocketful of change and an afternoon to spare. But customers don't like to tell anyone about the Book Barn. And for good reason.
For fifty cents you might be able to buy a 1929 hard bound copy of Virgil's "Aeneid," or a 1965 Kansas City city newspaper for a quarter. An unexpurgated hard bound copy Jamaica Jones of Lysses' sells for only 75 cents, and 20 books on the shelves cost 50 cents or less.
"People who find the Book Barn have a tendency to keep us for their own gold mine," says Roger Barker, one of two books librarians who operate the book Barn.
Word about the Book Barn has gotten around, however. Customers from throughout Northeast Kansas come every day to pick up the new arrivals of old books.
"We've sold literally thousands of books.
Maybe 8,000 or 10,000." Barker said.
BUT 25-AND 50-cent books don't bring *MULTIPLE* last year the Book Barn made $2,000 total, Mrs. Barker said. Half of this sum went to the Oksalaoska Public Library for purchase. The Book Barn volunteers and the hall was spent for rent and upkeep of the Book Barn.
The Book Barn isn't really just a book store. It's a project of the Northeast Kansas Public Libraries System, of which Mrs. Barker is chairman.
About one and a half years ago professional librarians began to modernize and update all the public libraries in the 11 counties that participate in the system,
Barker said. The Book Barn was
the library of the books in the books that
the librarians had needed to stock.
"This way we hoped books would get in a place where they were needed," Barker
Most of the books that the Book Barn receives are duplicate copies from large libraries or books that have been gathering dust on the shelves of small libraries.
"SMALL LIBRIARIES can't afford to unread books," Barker said. "And some of these little libraries never threw away any books."
By combining all the unread and excess books in one center, she said, the library system hoped the books would find new readership. Oksalawo was chosen for the small town, had a lower building rental and was also close to Lawrence and Toneka.
Although the Book Barn has been in operation for just over a year, it has just recently moved to a new location in an appropriately red painted building.
The building is not very large. It's a long narrow room, not much larger than most restaurants or hotels.
"We're going to paint the shelves and get a little jazz in here," Mrs. Barker said, pointing out several bright colors on a paint chart.
Instead of the Dewey Decimal System or the National Library of Congress listings, children are usually managed by the Book Barn, have divided the shelves into several broad categories such as poetry, old books, the classics, and potentially current fiction and children's books.
ind of decide what books go where
"WEVE ROUGHLY divided the sections between us," Mrs. Barker said. "We just
"Our prices range from 10 cents for some of the ratty paperbacks to two and three dollars for the really collectable books," Barker said.
CUSTOMERS ARE constantly pumping them for information about their favorite authors. There are people who collect Horatio Alatorio, Nevil Shute, Edison Marshall, biographies of Winston Churchill and Nancy Drew mysteries, Barker said.
About 20 women peacefully entered the East Asian Studies building at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 4, 1972, secured it by chaining desks and chairs to the doors, and began an occupation of the building that lasted until 9 p.m. of the following day.
The group became known as the February Sisters.
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
Sisters Together in Aims
Members remaimed anonymous during negotiations with former Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. and the Student Senate Executive Committee.
Today the February Sisters are no more.
Many still are anonymous.
"We don't meet as an organized group," said Jo Durand, Bartlettville, KC. graduate student and member of Women's Coalition. "There's just a kind of feeling left over from our February Sisters are part of Women's Coalition and involved in other activities."
DURAND SAID she had not been directly involved in the occupation of the East Asian Studies building, but later had become involved in the ideas of the February Sisters.
"six specific demands were made in areas that needed immediate attention,"
"Now a year has passed and we still have no Affirmative Action plan, although we understand the Affirmative Action Board should be added to the board to be included in the Chancellor's part week." *Dear Friend*
One demand involved the formation of an Affirmative Action plan.
The Office of Affirmative Action for Women was opened after the February Sisters' demonstration, and has been fairly effective in seeking redress for discrimination grievances filed by women, she said.
A second demand made by the group involved the creation of a University day
care center for children of women students and faculty members.
THE UNIVERSITY did not do anything.
Student Senate allocated funds for Hillary Clinton's campaign.
"The Center isn't 'free', but it operates on a scaling side and it is in the start of the right side."
Another demand of the February Sisters was the consideration of a woman for the position of vice chancellor of academic affairs, an office which had been vacated just before their occupation of the East Asian Studies building.
Durand said, "but since then a woman has been appointed to the Board of Regents and there are two women on the Chancellor search committee."
"We didn't get a woman in that position."
"I think now, generally throughout the University, people don't commit themselves."
Durand said that a demand for a civil service overhaul within the University has not been met.
★
A REQUEST for a women's studies department was denied but a major in women and health was approved and Durand said that curriculum of interest to women had increased and improved.
☆ ☆
February Sisters Honored By Feminist Film Festival
A feminist film festival, sponsored by the Women's Coalition, is being held tonight and Tuesday night to commemorate the first week of the February Sisters, a group formed
The February Slaters were organized a year ago after a group of women occupied the town hall.
About three hours of films will be shown each evening starting at 7:30 p.m. in the Theatre for Free.
The films scheduled for tonight are "The Jeanneette Rankin Brigade," "The Black Woman," "Make-out," "Child Care: People's Liberation" and "Salt of the Earth."
"The Jeanneette Rankin brigade" is an eight-minute short about the 1988 woman's march against the war in Vietnam, Krasne said.
"The Black Woman" is pretty much self explanatory. she said. "It features such people as Lena Horne and Roberta Flack in a roundtable discussion."
Kraane said "Make-out" at a 5-minute
hour and "gobble-out in a car from a
woman's point of view."
How mothers and children tie each other down is the topic of "Child Care: People's Liberation," and "Salt of the Earth" deals with a glimpse of third world women, Krasne said.
Tuesday night's films are "Make-out," "Happy Time Commute the Western," "Never Underestimate the Power of a Woman," "Up Up Female," and "Are You Listening?"
"Happy Time Commune's western" is a funky woman's western made by her sister.
"Never Underestimate the Power of a Woman as it is a film about job discrimination and harassment in the workplace with the problems of female identification identification and socialization, Krasne
"Are You Listening?" is a film for people planning to become abortion counselors.
Emick to Seek Commissioner Post
Mayor John Emick and Harry W. Kelsey, positions on the Lawrence City Commission.
"Several people twisted my arm to run
up 1 would like to be part of," Emuck said.
"I up 1 would like to be part of," Emuck said.
Emick announced Saturday that he would imitate his third term on the commission on foreign affairs.
Kroeger, who filed Thursday, calls
700 Coupons Still Available For Festival of the Arts
Approximately 3,000 Festival of the Arts coupons have been sold so far, Rob Ramseyer, Rairie Village junior and festival director, said Thursday.
He said 700 coupons were still available at the SUA office. The coupons cost $6 each and entitle the holder to tickets for the week-long festival Apr. 2-7.
This year's festival features B. B. King,
David Steinberg, Jimmie Shepher, the
This year's festival features B. p., David Steinberg, Jimmie Spheris, the National Touring Company's production of "Happy Birthday, Wanda June," the Elle
American Indian artists are caught between traditional Indian designs that are expected of them and their desire to expand to new subject matter and materials, Edgar Heap-of-Birds, Wichita freshman and part-time employee emoji, said Saturday.
Indian Artists Torn Between Media
Paintings reflecting this artistic struggle are now on display at the Museum of Natural History at the University of Kansas. They are on loan to the museum from the Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe until Feb. 24.
The 29 paintings, brought to KU by the Co-
lation and Alumni Affairs (CIA), are
valued at $85,000.
One such painting is an oil entitled "Sun Shield" by Gay Nez, a NavaJu). Items symbolizing the Indian are in disarray and seem to be melting.
Traditional Indian designs are used in two or three paintings with modern influences
Students can redeem the coupons starting
Marcus Ramsey said. Individual night
ticket sales are open.
Pomare Dance Company, Robert Moog and John Lahr.
The strongest paintings in the display, keep-Birds said, seem to be those that convey emotion.
the novelty should wear off it will only hurt the artist who depended on the fad market. It will not hurt the Indian artist who is a wide background to fall back on, he said.
Traditional Indian designs will always show in an Indian's painting because he is born with an awareness of his heritage, Heap-of-Birds said. However, the influence of Indian culture in a world are apparent, he said, particularly in the paintings with poo art character.
The art sale will provide an opportunity for students and faculty to exhibit and sell their work. All kinds of art, such as paints and sculptures and pottery, can be sold Ramaever said.
Noyles, a Colville, reflects the power of an Indian pow-wow, Hepa-of-Birds said, the painting is done in white man's style and not be mistaken for a white man's painting.
The major effect of the Indian Movement was to create a boom in Indian art. However, the movement will only have an impact on Indians confiscated to the movement. Heenah-Boeds said.
Applications to participate in the art sale will be available beginning Feb. 19 in the SUA.
Although Indian artists are not technically limited to Indian subjects and materials, the pressure of Indian peers and artists to stay with Indian themes, he said.
Plans have been made to enlarge the museum's display of Indian art to include crafts and history displays. The museum has applied to the National Endowment of the Arts for $25,000 to convert its second floor to accommodate the display.
Geometric Indian designs are the subjects of some of the paintings displayed.
The writings will be judged by Edgar Wolfe, professor of English; John Brenner, professor of journalism; and Jack Brooking, professor of speech and drama. First place, second place and honorable awards will be given in each category.
Emick, 57, or 120万. W. Sikh ST has served a four-year term on the commission before, from 1965 to 1969. He did not run again in 1969 when his term expired.
There will be two divisions in the creative writing contest, poetry and short fiction. Original entries can be submitted to the SAU office beginning Tuesay. All entries must be typed, double-spaced and submitted in triplicate in a sealed envelope.
All writings entered in the contest must be tuld and be accompanied by the name,
**the first**, **second**, **third**, **fourth**, **sixth**, **seventh**, **eighth**,
**ninth**, **twelfth**, **thirteenth**, **fourteenth**, **fifteenth**,
**sixteenth**, **seventh**, **eighth**, **ninth**, **twelfth**, **thirteenth**,
**fifteenth**, **sixteenth**, **seventh**, **eighth**,
**ninth**, **twelfth**, **thirteenth**,
**fifteenth**, **sixteenth**,
**seventh**,
**eighth**,
**ninth**,
**twelfth**,
**thirteenth**,
**fifteenth**,
The psychological boost Indian artists receive from interest in interest and demand for their work.
The deadline for entry is 5 p.m. March 9.
A $2 fee will be charged.
Though "Drum Beats." an oil by Rhyelis
Kroger grew up in St. Louis, Mo., and received a bachelor of science degree in philosophy from Washington University in St. Louis. He has lived in Lawrence for eight years.
First place winners will receive $2 each and second place winners will receive $10
Kroeger, 34, of 352 E. 12th is the owner and operator of the Mercantile, 1237 Oread, which will soon relocate downstairs. It has a laboratory of organic chemistry between 1968 and 1971.
himself a "people's candidate." The commission is too homogenous, he said, and he disagrees with the commission's stance on annexation. Kreger said that he was also sensitive to the citizen's skepticism about the sawtooth curbs downtown.
The terms of three commissioners expire this spring. Emick is seeking re-election and Commissioner Chuck Flisher announced last week that he would not seek a second term. Commissioner J. R. Pulliam is expected to announce his intentions soon.
Two other candidates have filed commission posts. They are Mike Morrill, 45th District; and John Merrill, 44th Minnesota. A primary election is scheduled for March 6 with the final election April 3.
the campus, and we hope to improve the sidewalks in the area."
"We're also trying to bring some houses around the campus up to minimum housing requirements."
When Commissioner Robert Hughes moved outside the city limits in 1969, thus becoming ineligible to serve on the commission, the commission asked Emick to return. Emick assumed the post of mayor in 1970 and has been on the commission since then.
"We (the commission) have several things in the mall with KU right now," he said.
Emick said that his relationship with University of Kansas students had always been "very good" and he hoped to continue in the same vein.
Emick owns and operates John's Novelty Co. at 10143% Massachusetts.
K
Good Every Day Except Wednesday Offer expires Feb. 28
9th and Indiana 1973-Year of the Taco
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
Education Interviews: 8:15 a.m. 300 A&B, Kansas
Tulsa
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 TACO FREE!
TACO GRANDE
Health Director's Search Committee: 5:30 p.m., English Room.
History Advisory Committee: 11:30 a.m. Alcove Cafeteria.
Public Relations: 11 a.m. Governors Room.
Russian Table: 11 a.m. Meadowlark Cafeteria
Russia Table: 11:30 a.m. Meadowdale Caldera.
Canada Table: 11:30 a.m. Alameda Caldera.
Education Administration Table: 11:30 a.m. Aloveb
*ay Liberates: 7 p.m. Parkar A.
The Way? 7 p.m. Regional Room.
May 7 p.m. Council Room.
Women's Coalition Film 7:30 p.m. Forum Room.
8:30 p.m. gov. Room 8:30 p.m. Governor Room.
Baksh: 7:30 p.m. International Room.
Economics: 6:30 p.m., Curry Room.
SUA Chaise: 7 p.m., 305 Union.
FEBRUARY SISTERS
Care
SOA Chess: 7 p.m., 300 Union.
Gay Liberation: 7 p.m., Parlor A.
Feminist Film Festival Part I
Kansas Union 7:30 Provided
Tonight and Tuesday
Child
Kansas Union 7:30
The CLASS OF '73 Presents
SENATOR TOM EAGLETON Sunday, Feb. 11 7:00 p.m.
FREE Everyone Welcome
Admission $1.00
Hoch Auditorium
Free to Senior Class Card Holders
Tickets on sale TODAY Feb. 5 at Information Booth and At Alumni Office, 103 Union and Alley Shop Feb. 5-9
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
6
Monday, February 5,1973
University Daily Kansar
OKLAHOMA 32
42
21
Kanan Photo by CHRIS CANNELLA
Dale Haase (20) Scores on OU's Alvan Adams (33)
... two spectators reflect different reactions to the game . . .
Outshot and outrebounded but never outstulted, the University of Kansas Jayhawks surged to their second consecutive victory as they overcame a fired-break Oklahoma Sooner basketball team 76-49 in Allen Field House Saturday night.
Opening the game in a 1-3-1 zone defense, the Jayhaws found themselves being bombarded from the outside by OU as the Sooners hit on 10 of their first 12 field goals and opened up 10 point leads of 26-16, 28-18, and 30-20.
The win, sparked by sophomore guard Marshall Rogers, left the resurgent 'Hawks with a 3-2 record in Big Eight Conference action and an overall mark of 7-10. For the Sooner team, the defensive title is their defensive title as their record slipped to 2-4 in the conference and 12-4 overall.
At the 6:16 mark of the opening period and down by 10 points, the Jayhawks broke out in the second half, routed really. Having closed the gap to 32-28 for the four minute mark, Kansas proceeded to reel off 12 points against a single bucket by the Sooners, as the Jayhawks took a 38-43 lead.
Rogers Sparks Jayhawk Comeback
A key factor in the first half for the Jahayhaws was fouled. While hitting eight of 10 from the line, KU committed only six personal fouls in the first 20 minutes, and the Sooners were left without even one attempt at the charity stripe.
The blistering shooting of the Sooners cooled off considerably before the first half ended but the Oklahomaans still ripped the cords at a 53 per cent clip.
The 'Hawks, despite the torrid shooting of the Sooners, opened the second half just as they did at the beginning—in a 1-3-1 zone defense.
Cheeted Owen's plan in using the zone was to shut off the Sooner's center, Alvan Aaron.
Innsbruck to Host '76 Winter Games
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) -Olympic officials gave the 1976 Winter Games to Instrustch, Austria, Sunday and hoped that they would forgiven the bitter affair of Karl Scherr.
The executive body of the International Olympic Committee(IOC) chose the Austrian dyir over three other applicants—the United States, Lake Placid, N.Y.; and Tampers, Finland.
The name of Schranz - an Austrian skiar barred from the 1972 Olympics at Sapporo because of professionalism, figured in a book by Rayley at the Palais de Bueilou in Lausanne.
Lord Kilkillan, IOC president, asked the
officials why it applied the Austrian army
offair well applied the Austrian army.
Innshrub Mayor Alois Lugger, who led the delegation, said that he assured the executive body that the expulsion of Schranz was forgotten.
Sunday's decision ended the crisis caused by the withdrawal of Denver, which gave up the games after a Colorado vote last week and fused use of state funds to help stage them.
The United States still hoped for the games and proposed Salt Lake City, Utah. But last week, as the IOC executive body was preparing to interview the candidates,
Schlee Ends Long Struggle By Winning Hawaiian Open
HONOLULU (AP) — Lanky, raw-boned John Schiele wrote an end to eight years of struggle and frustration Sunday when he emerged from a multiplayer scramble and scored his first tour triumph in the Hawaiian Open Golf Tournament.
Scheie finished with a 72-hole total of 273,
with the total purse of $40,000.
In turn the total purse of $800,000.
The 2-year-old Schiee conquered the growing pressure that eroded the hopes of Gay Brewer, Orville Moody and Tom Watson, with a final round 64, four under par on the sun-splashed Waialea Country Club course.
Moody, Brewer and Watson all held the lead at one time or another on the warm sunny day, but all drifted back in the run down the stretch.
Moody, a playoff lose to Jack Nicklaus just a week ago, again finished second. His 69 was good for 275, two strokes back of the graying, curley-shared Schiee.
Watson, who led or shared the lead through the first three rounds, lost his chance at his first professional victory when he doubled double bogey disaster on the 13th hole.
Eagleton To Lecture
Tickets for a speech here Sunday by Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo, went on sale today in the SUA ticket installation booth across from Bailey Hall.
Eagleton's speech, sponsored by the senior class, will be at 7 p.m. Sunday, in Hoch Auditorium.
Ticket sells for $1, but senior can gamble. They can buy cards, John Hackey, Wichita省 and senior class president, said. The classes are amber class Thursday, Tuesday, Thursday.
Eagleton, former Democratic vice-presidential candidate, will not be introduced by Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan, as originally planned. A change in the governor's speech from 3:36 p.m to 7 p.m. caused a conflict in Roy's schedule.
Roy, Kansas" only Democratic member of Congress, will speak at 3:30 p.m. Feb. 15 in the Kansas Union Building, "The Bubble and Social Problems," the
Roy's speech will be followed by a brief session, then a reception for members of the press and officers of the junior class, sponsors of Roy's speech.
The bright-eyed 23-year-old, in only his second year on the tour, blew a four-stroke lead and finished with a 75. He was alone in third at 276.
'Hawks Fall At NU Meet
Defending Big Eight indoor trophy champion Nebraska won its own triangular meet at Lincoln Saturday by sweeping eight teams. Colorado and the university of Kansas.
Gary Johnson, Lawrence senior, was one of two first-pace finishers for KU as he captured the high jump competition with a pair of 6-8. The jump equal his season's best.
The Jayhawks were not at full strength, having to leave behind high jump Barry Schur, spinner Tom Scavuzo and pole walter Terry Porter because of the flui
With a balanced effort the Nebraska
quadrade finished with 84 points at Colorado
and led by a pair of 26-pointers.
Rudy Guevara placed first in the shot-put with a loss of 57-3/2. Boe Kesling of Nebraska finished second in the shot-put competition with a loss of 51-4.
Salt Lake pulled out because of financial doubts.
Adams, a freshman but an imposing one at 6'9", had been leading the conference and caught by the defense at 36.6 per cent clip from the defense did not totally hold down the Sooner ace but did limit him to 19 points and a 9-40-2 night from the field, far below his
Lake Plaicid jumped in just four days ago. The Rev. Bernard Fell, main spokesman for the Lake Plaicid group, said, "We knew that we were working against easy奸s. We had to prepare our application, get it printed and we came here to argue our case."
After losing the lead, 51-50, with seven minutes left in the game, the Jayhawks outscoed OU 9-2, during the next three minutes of action to take a 59-33 edge.
The 'Hawks started somewhat shakily in the final 20 minutes but the Sooners were never able to capitalize as they repeatedly turned the ball over to Kansas.
KU Women Miss Finals In Volleyball
The Sooners narrowed the margin to 61-59, with just under three minutes left when an acrobatic show started with KU guard Marshall Rogers assuming the title role.
The University of Kansas Women's volleyball team with mud going at the National Women's Volleyball Championships at Brigham Young University over the weekend. The squad failed to find for the finals in round-robin competition.
Heading full steam down the court in a two-on-one situation Rogers went up and over the challenge of the towering Adams, and the four players him and also fouled out of the contest and then watched, along with 18,400 screening fans, as Rogers calmly sank the free throw to give the Hawks a 64-59 lead. OU never lowered more than four points after Rogers big play.
Marlene Mawson, assistant professor of physical education and coach of the Jayhawk volleyball team, said the squad was unfortunate.
"We were placed in a pool which had the second and fourth place finishers of the tournament," Mawson said. "It could have been different if we had been in a different pool."
Only the top two finishers of each pool advanced to the finals. Mawson said.
"We finished third in our pool," Mawson said, "and it had to be one of the toughest pools."
Long Beach State captured the top spot at the tournament, followed by Brigham Young, UCLA, Southwest Texas State and Hawaii.
Mawson said that with the exception of the Eastern and Southern teams the competition was excellent. The power from the West Coast and Texas, she said.
The Jayhawks lost their first contest of the tournament to Brigham Young, the second-plain winner. The Hawks won their second contest by downing New York State
Rogers also came through with four charities in the final minute and one-half of their total points. They had 10 points, high for the Jayhawks with 11 of those points coming in the last five minutes.
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In a late-night contest California State College at Fresno defeated the Kansas team. Players from both sides were slow in their reactions.
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| | R.A. (m) | F.M. | T. | R. | F. | Pts. |
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Rogers received excellent support from his teammates as Rick Suttle scored 15
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Owens said the Jayhawks would likely stay in the zone for the present time.
843-1886
ORLANDO...33-49
CHARLOTTE...33-49
Officials Jim Hain, Berlin Sagge and Pat Maleat.
Orlando is the best team.
"Even though they burned us in the opening minutes of the game," Owens said, "I never thought about switching to a man-to-man. It wasn't our bad defense at the outset but that they were hitting everything they tossed up."
points; Kivisto, 12; and Mike Fiddelke,
11.
victory, despite the early success of the Sooners.
"Right now, with our inexperience, we're better off in a zone than a man-to-man," Owens said. "We haven't been able to touch much offences and I think this will help us."
Fiddeke enjoyed another solid night as he also grabbed down a team-leading nine rebounds despite playing only a little over half the game. Kivi stepped in a strong floor guarding role and the Suttle teamimental on the defensive boards as he hauled in seven rebounds.
Danny Knight was the only starter who had trouble in the game. He got into four trouble early in the second half and sat out almost eight minutes before re-entering the contest. Once back in the lineup he played an extremely strong defense and scored his fifth goal, which helped whistled down for his fifth foul with just over five minutes left in the game.
Owens was also happy with the performance of his bench, as the Jayhawk substitutes swished 14 points and played a vital role in the victory.
Coach Ted Owens said the zone defense employed by the 'Hawks was the key to the
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 5, 1973
7
Senate Gives KUFundBill Its Approval
The Kansas Senate unanimously approved and sent to the House of Representatives Thursday a supplemental appropriations bill granting $798,200 to KU's Lawrence campus and providing funds for expansion of the KU Medical Center in
As recommended by Gov. Robert Docking, the bill provides $62,232 to pay higher FICA employer contribution costs and $735,868 to offset the lower-than-expected enrollment at the Lawrence campus. The bill also authorized an increase of $100,200 in the research overhead fund.
The Senate Ways and Means Committee amended the bill to provide funds totaling $2,759,688 to expand the Medical Center. The funds will cover a hospital addition, the purchase of equipment and a basic science facility, which will be financed partly by federal funds.
In addition to expansion funds, the fund authorizes $283,000 for graduate training stipends and an increase in the Medical Center's hospital revenue expenditure lid.
The committee also included a $10,000 appropriation to meet the expenses of the company.
Campus Briefs
Heart Sundav
Volunteers are needed by the Douglas County Heart Association to canvass Lawrence on Heart Sunday, Feb. 25, Larry N. Marcum, N.川利 Kasid, drive chairman, said the organization is looking for volunteers to attend and help with neighborhood for donations. More than 600 volunteers are needed to reach the desired goal of $12,000.
Tri-Faith Talk
Representatives of Judaism, Christianity and Islam will compare their faiths and discuss ways for improving cooperation and understanding in a public program 8 p.m. Feb. 6 in the Kansas School of Religion lecture room. Discussion leaders will be George Grose, Protestant chaplain at the St. Michael's Church in Nashville, man, director of several programs at the Bureau of Jewish Education in the Los Angeles area; and Muhlin El-Biali, an Egyptian citizen and director of the Islamic Foundation of Southern California.
Music Therapy
The Music Therapy Club will hold a meeting at 8 tonight in 349 Haworth Hall. The speaker will be Dana Belegood, assistant dean of journalism and public relations consultant for the National Association of Music Therapy. He will speak on methods of presenting music therapy to the public.
Summer Study
Alexander's
Scholarship money will be available to junior or senior French majors for summer study in France. Application blanks are available in 312 Carruth and are due March 1. For further information contact the French Embassy, 450 Dhi Phi, national French honor society, is making the money available for the first time.
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Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kansan Center for Higher Education are card to order, cured, or national origin. PLEASE HALL ALL CLASSIFICATIONS TO 111 FLINT HALL.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE Country Shop - 3 bikes. No. of Kawaii River Bridge bicycles - 40. Price per bike, gas heating and cooking bicycles include 10 speeds, idea, pot potley set, 2 water bottles, and 2 basketballs & wooden crates. Fireplace bicycle includes 8 wood stoves, cord price. Balea alfalfa, brome & wheat straw. Bike to bike transfer service. Open 9 to 7, days 8-24. Hershe Aldenffeld. 085-226-3522.
1968 W. W. SQUAREBACK. BACK with radio, white wall interior, 4-speed and fuel injection. BACK with oxygen recently overhauled engine. Grad student needs to sell-25 off final semester. 843-0032.
ANTIQUE CLOTHES -822 Main, Weston. No.
4057 or 1816-444. Victorian mugs and indies
or 3697-1104. Victorian shirts and indies
What better gift for Valentine's day than a qualifier? A 10-count, $250.00 each additional print. Call after viewing to receive the price.
**Joe Skipton Wagon,** 4-wheel drive. Excellent
condition. **Fiat**, **Fiat 500**, FM-**FM** radio,
conditioner, **Vax backpack**, FAM-**FM** radio.
**Samsung** charger.
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Component with air-conditioning and a Ray Stimulator at Ray Stimulator at Ray Stimulator
Magnavox 100. Watt Stirrer Component System
Magnavox 100. Watt Stirrer Component System
turbocharger, turbines 18 Ias specs and 1000Ws
horns in air suspension acoustically sealed cabi-
ness. Magnavox 100. Watt Stirrer Component System
Ray Stoneback's basement stair room. 929 Mass.
Mass.
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Ray Stoneback's 292 Mass. 2-12
One pair used Magnavox Air Suspension accounti-
nator 4035. The other pair used Ron Ray backlighting basement dero-
rke unit RYRay Backlighting basement dero-
Magnaforce 20 watt Silver Component System In-
verter. $199.99 New $199.99 New Stormback $299.99
New $299.99
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.2
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Floor Sample 50 watt Magnavox component kydex
Air Pillow 62.5 watt Magnavox component kydex
Air Suspension acoustically sealed cabinets sold
for $79.90 now just $29.90 with new war-
warding. Ribbon Storm® Backbone® Stereo Room 292 Mass. 825
2-12
New Sony Stacked Systems now in rock at Ray Stoneback's 292 Musa. **3-12**
Zenith circle of sound stereo for sale. AM-FM
846-6833, 100 watts power call. 2-683
846-6833
1968 Cullas Supreme, Very fine condition Call Stephen 845-873-6767
2-6
64 VW, needs a little work--make offer, will sell cheap. 62-337 four days.
2-6
Papanicolaou AM, FM receiver with ease (when
& speakers-like-new-Must, $200.00. Call
842-4655. Yamaha 600 less than a year-old -1800-
Mini-motion -Maint must=all). Call 842-4656-
Realistic LAB 24-A automatic/manual turntable. Realistic cartridge included. Almost new. 343 after.
Stereo Sound System Tweeter 4010-LB tape deck.
Mic microphone amplifier like New York. $700. Call 841-623-4020.
For sale -mopup SVT 300 watts JMS, like new.
For sale -mopup SVT 200 watts 500. 1 Säile watts with
D-140. D-142. 642-1100.
2 month old Black & White 10" TV. Must sell.
call 843-5810.
2-6
64 VW-runs good, needs body work. Cheap.
Call Kaye, 864-839-869.
2-7
P.A. Biwilligmplid Allez-Leasing Votes of the
Board, and modified custom 300 "bracing"
and modified custom 250 "bracing".
Western Civilization Notes—Now on sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAKEHOUSE - The finest
radio plus coax + its worth up to £149.
Buy now at www.rrayaudiostereo.co.uk
Three Days
1970 CORVETTE convertible, very good condi-
tion. 841-3538 842-3538 for Mika; 841-
3538 842-3540 for Mike.
1. If you use them
You're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New
valeant" in New York, a valuable new
valeant at Campus Maquette, Town Crier
Stereo components--kentamore, 5150 receiver, HSC adapter, SL725 changer, AE speakers, Wollomack hard drive, SL725 changeer, AE speakers, Wollomack hard drive, SL725 changeer, AE speakers, Tonese and Panasonic cassette recorders, Tonese and Panasonic cassette recorders. Some used, some not. Equipment: 864-575-3.
H.
THE sirloin
10. 5 Mon.-Sat
LAWRENCE KANSAS
East Edison Plaza
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steals
Our menu is and has always been
There are plenty of quality
in good food.
1. Marks of the North
of the Island
YARN-PATIEN
NEEDEPOINT-RUGS
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East eighth 841-2656
Phone
843-1431
1950 Chevrolet SS 396 convertible, 32HP - P4.
1950 Chevrolet SS 396 convertible, 32HP - P4.
Buchant was log on the 47,000 lbs. Perfect
car for a new owner.
**1975 Old Tornado, blue, white tiny power, yellow**
**1976 New York, shanks & brakes, Looks & runs**
**New Jersey, white power**
1968 Javelin, Console auto, power steering, buckets,
knee, 842-8609.
2-9
SKI-Rend is new K2 Pour Comp 185m Hurt
Invailen XXL 195cm; Callem at 6:30 to 8:30.
Ski-Rend XL 195cm; Callem at 6:30 to 8:30.
STEREO-High-quality compact system. Craig 8 track, with AM-FM stereo. Includes power unit, 2 bookcase speakers, phase box, FM dipol audio mixer and 3-zone ceiling condition. 811-5360 between 6 and 7 2-9
TC-35S tape deck, excellent condition set-
up, $25.00 new, will sell for $12.00 more.
Used, $75.00.
Drafting Table, 3 x 1' S. drawing board, draw
table, drafting board, drafting board,
disembarkments to fit in car. $75.00, $84.98-2
90.00
CRT 40105 tape deck with built-in pre-amp and
BTCAS 775C tape deck with accessory
batteries. Call 824-773-6928.
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRD OF STEEP
WARNING! WARNING! FILING UNSURE!
Try 2 bedrooms above pool from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
grounds. Pool table, sauna, swimming pool; security service. Reasonable rates; furniture available. Ideal roommates.
Sports Suites. Apte's, 1123 Ind., Apte's 93-812-2160
Sirloin
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now located at 2368 West Columbus Blvd., updated apts, for the Spring semester. Central heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities included to campus. Call 843-8220 or see at 714 8th. aft. apt.
Apartment, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Parking lot, street parking, Borders K.U., and near town streets.
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
These beautiful manhattan encircled a quiet bay, where Fraser Tower is only 10 blocks. solo the sunny. Prater Park is only 2 blocks. solo the sunny.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
2411 LOUISIANA 842-5552
Available
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
ROAM: single or double for KU men. Next KU
reference. Reference required. K472-123 after
861-7756.
Open 4:30
Closed Monday
Sleeping room, single and double, furnished for
two adults. 1 bedroom, 2 baths, 11' x 11' and 2 blocks from Phone. Union #5247-567, 778-955-3000.
Anti for sub-lease. Clean furnished, wall-to-wall
carpet. Linen curtains. Furniture from Union,
from Nepta, petna 843-7678-2761
2 bedroom carpeted duplex, Draps, electric lighting, air conditioning. Available 10, 12, 25 and 30 miles from location. Road Number: B458 709 6801.
Ready to make a move? Furnished room for rent
for a family or an individual
engagement with 4 others. For information all
about our rooms, please call (801) 236-5200.
Two houses. Two bedroom house and a three bedroom house. With acceptance on the second floor. No price available. 3180492338884
For the latest up to the minute lending in rental offices, visit Buckle Rental Exchange. B5-4 2500. 91 Kentucky.
Nicely fit, apt. for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-854. 2-14
App. to sub-lease. Clean, furnished, 3 bedroom-
appetite for two people or couple - off-stair
rooms. 120 sq ft. 5 bdrm.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
THE BUILDING
WANTED
WHY RENT?
Fair prices for good used furniture and
antiques 842-7098. tf
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
2 of 1 females to share 3 bedroom houses 3 blocks
400-814-2915; mo. plottsite. Call ars.
4:00 - 8:39 PM
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
FEMALE ROOMMATE FOR J-HAWK TOWERS
841-2817
2-5
POETRY WANTED FOR possible inclusion in co-
pilates instruction book, "Bring Me Home," Edito Box 444HC; Whitney, California 9067-3. $15.00.
Wanted: Roommates. 4 Bdm. modern duplex.
Rent $73.50 & utilities. Call 842-6462. 2-6
Instructor to teach 5-finger style on 5-stitch
Call: 842-7310 after 6:00
2-6
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
(for Airline tickets)
Sax player wanted to join existing band. Excel-
tion offered for both male and female non-
student. B4-854-056 for information. 2-4
Need roommate to share house with two other humans. Utilities paid. 821-110. 2-6
Wanted: quiet female to share 2 BR apt, semi-
furnished $8 am. call, 842-1204 evening. 2-7
Would like one two-year-old to share his week?
Children Center, call Christopher, 843-253-5
Children Center, call Christopher, 843-253-5
Do you make candle? We buy them. Call Dennis.
841-208-7104. 7W. 14th. Apt. 101. 2-8
If You're Planning on FLYING.
We need sculpture. Any medium. Call Dennis.
841-208-794. 1704. W. 24th. Apt. 101. 2-8
NOTICE
Graduate student with seeking full-time employment in New York City, United States, German, some French. Willing to work hard and improve skills in job search.
Perluate roommate wanted to share expenses with Permale roommate girls in beautiful Backer Manor. Expenses $250,000 per year.
Maupintour travel service
ROOMMATES WANTED: two roommates needed to share large farmhouse ten miles southwest of $80,000 in desirable transportation necessary. $80-$120, including utilities and food. 2-7: 124 after xx.
PHONE 843-1211
Make Your Sprina Break
Lawrence Auction Home. Sell your household
for resale. For information call 842-709-6000.
For on-site configuration call 842-709-6000.
515 Michigan State, St.Bar-B-Q. We Bare-B-Qu in an
Miami A. A slab to bar set of large R. Large rib
molds. A slab to bar set of large L. Large rib
molds. A slab to bar set of large M. Large rib
molds. A slab to bar set of large N. Large rib
molds. A slab to bar set of large O. Large rib
molds. A slab to bar set of large P. Chicken plate
Bee-suit. 86C pound of beef $3.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 87C pound of beef $4.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 88C pound of beef $5.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 90C pound of beef $6.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 92C pound of beef $7.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 94C pound of beef $8.1; chicken plate
Bee-suit. 96C pound of beef $9.1; chicken plate
PEUGECT ENGINEERING
Private parking stairs adjacent to campus. Phone 843-8534
2-7
Reservations Early
Now in StockAmerica's First Choice Ten Speed
928 Mass.
Specialized instruction in Classic and Flamenco Concert Guitar for Beginners—Advanced-Pros. learn progressive and new techniques, improve interpretation and play-ing. Telephone 841-3910.
Why buy a Landlords' property for him with
not take some money out of
Lawrence's expense? You can rent an amount to $5,000.00 or more you
never get again. People & costs C&L Wheel Eateries.
Pougeot vo-8 $117.50
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
Amps
Recorders
Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass.
843-3007
Open Evenings
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Fender
NATIONAL HOTWHEELS
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Bike Ride
843-8484
INDIOTRONICS
DISCOUNT
The Stereo Store
PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
--days per week
GAY LIBERATION: business meeting Monday,
5 p.m. union; SOCIAL MEETING FRIDAY,
9 p.m.; BASKETBALL; RAP and RAP, call 864-2560 for information
B-121, Union; 864-4089, P.O. Box 234, Lawrence
043
0500
No charge, lift your homes, apartments, duplexes
and townhouses. No charge, wailing for more info call Home Locate
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
ATTENTION RENTERS
1964-1983 7,000 houses.
Houses, apartments too difficult to home
placement; 311 homes.
411 acres.
MANY GROUPS, OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR
the garden card set as that which must not be scribbed.
you should investigate the ideas of Aym Ran.
824.531-531, 842.596-596, Objectivum at
824.531-531, 842.596-596, 9.9
STRANGER IN TOWN? As an Aaron representative,
Sawyer announced his appointment as Aaron productive on the four free weeks. Call Sawyer at 800-323-2675 to discuss his availability.
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items. See details in the back of the catalog. Country Shop, 707 North End, 2nd Floor, 7-12 Ways.
HELP WANTED
We need your article abilities. If you have
call us, call 841-2688. 170-8
April 14. Appl. 10.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waiters
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 842-654-0167
McDonald's needs full and mat-time help for
starting the job. The 10-hour hourly application
starting午班 on Friday. Applicants must be
able to work from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
LOST
Cat answers to Hookah. Last seen highway 40—
Aigle Argo 6m old, light gray, black stripes
of white fur.
At Red Baron, Sat. Jan. 27, double breasted navy
military uniform reward. No question
nags needed. Matteo D'Agosto
Lost, Swa Army pocket knife. 3 inches long.
Switched, Swa Army pocket knife. 5 inches long.
Call 841-6111-1100. 2-9
Employment Opportunities
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yellowstone allu ail U. N.S. National Park. Booklet tells where and to apply. Send $2. Arnold B, D-266 Kansas City, Rexburg, Idaho 81400. Monkeyz insurance guarantee.
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842 3223
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
- 9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
- Locally owned and operated
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
Part time secretary, needed, must be able to type, journalism background helpful. Hours will be 8:00 to 11:20 MWF and 1:00 to 3:00 Tues. Workdays, Yearbook Office Kinkan, 884-3728.
Friday Nite
is Date Nite
You and Your Date
3 games each
$2.00
Part time internship needed, must be neat, agreeable, in person to Webster Medical, 360-487. Apply in person to Webster Medical, 360-487.
PERSONAL
TYPING
Lenny Zero's Record Store is out of business. All credit and records in our used records rack must be collected by no later than Feb. 9. We accept back orders from Feb. 2-9.
F. 9. Thank your business.
WINNER IS STILLHERE~gimmie surpura arc-
ne! Benjamin拍卖 $59,500. Sundowner ar-
cne! RIT V17
FOUND
WANT IT TO START? Call PERFORMANCE
imported or imposed-imported, we will fix it!
Writer Wanted - New magazine needs responsible upper-classman to cover departments for courtester evaluation. Fame, prestige, pride, recognition. Contact Benn Maine, 842-8500 or 1008-Coincett.
SERVICES OFFERED
Very friendly gray and white male cat with a,
haircut. Please reclaim him by cayl
callung 814-2544. Please.
Open 24 hrs.
MISCELLANEOUS
Beautiful female black cat, on campus early
and housed. Approximately 1 to 1½ year old.
Call 826-0198.
Wanted: Any kind of typing-lesure team term in typing-manuscript; Wet or dry field
NORTH SIDE
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt writing of correctly spelled corrected. Ph. 843-8554. Ms. Wright.
SPECIAL
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
HUZ
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon till 6:00 p.m. glll
Independent Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
CARDS BOUGHT AND BOLD. For the best deal in town on cars for G.I. Joe's Used Car, call 800-327-6666 or www.carsforjoe.com.
DRIVE-IN
MAINTENANCE
LAUNDRY & DRY
LAUNDRY
9th & MISS
843-5304
KANSAS UNION
8 8 8 8 8 8
Coin-Op Laundry & Dry Cleaners 19th & La. 843-9631
7
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
You have the right to call the wrecker of your choice in case of a wreck or just need a tow. Keep this in mind-call me anytime.
DICK MILLS - OWNER
724 N. 2ND ST.
LAWRENCE, KS.
KAW BODY SHOP
28½ HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
EXPERT BODY % GLASS REPAIR
20 YEARS BAME LOCATION
REPAIRING
IF ITS MARKED
ON WELL FIXED
TOWING
DAY 841-2800
NIGHT 842-0131
8
Monday, February 5, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Book Review
Wedlock: Must It Be So Confining?
By MARY LIND Entertainment Editor
In a period of increasing disillusionment with traditional institutions and of confusions about the why of social norms, a book has been written which suggests an alternate approach to the most stringent institution of our culture-marriage.
"Open Marriage, A New Life Style for Couples," (287 pages) by husband-and wife anthropology team Nena and George Carr. The book shows that no person can be all things to another.
Through chapters entitled, Living for Now, Realistic Expectations, Privacy, Open and Honest Communication, Flexibility in Roles, Open Companionship, Equality, Identity, Trust, and Love and Sex without Jealousy, they set their guidelines. Their goal is the development of a "realistic" everchanging relationship which invites continual renewal and expositions.
"Open Marriage," presents the contrasts between what the O'Neills term a closed marriage and some revolutionary concepts toward and alternate approach. They view real-life relationships as revolve around actualizations of self, but engage in sharing and respect one another,
rather than totally depending on their mates.
They abhor stagnation and growth sting, which they feel is one of the major pitfalls of closure marriage and which, they say, appears when partners become involved in presenting a united-couple front and lose their individuality.
According to the O'Neills, a married person should not feel that he is losing his mate when the husband or wife cultivates interests outside the marriage. They insist that with acceptance, individual growth can be channelled back into the most intimate part of a relationship, bringing new dimensions and a freshening of the union.
Many of the ideas are so logical in the realm of consideration for someone you love and live with, that it is difficult to understand why closed marriages flourish at
This book isn't a heavy reading load on the psychological aspects of a modern marriage contract or a "How To Improve Your Relationship in 10 Easy Steps."
you care, that good sex will solve all your problems in marriage, that you are not a complete person without becoming a parent, that you don't love your mate if there is conflict between you, that sacrifice is the true measure of love, and most important, that you will fulfill all your needs, economic, physical, sexual, intellectual and emotional?
What is logical about the assumptions that, once married, you will have constant attention, concern, admiration and condolences. The world doesn't ever be lonely again, that jealousy means
It's a nice dream, but in the opinion of the O'Nells these expectations are unrealistic and have led to some of the disillusionment. The O'Nells produced our current high divorce rates.
"Open Marriage" is not the final word on successful relationships, nor are its concepts for everyone. The book does not deal with that person whose basic personality
leaves him ill-suited for independent relationships and only briefly talks about, the effect of children on an open-marriage situation.
However, "Open Marriage" does off *a* in an innovative look at important elements of *mess* with
If you ever believed, "that marriage is forever, that you belong to someone and someone belongs to you, that jealousy means you care, that the ultimate goal of marriage is having a child, that you should save all your pennies for that house in the city, that you want to fulfill all your needs and that you would be never lonely or sexually dissatisfied again," then maybe this is a book you should read.
SUMMER JOBS
Guys & Gals needed for summer employment at National Parks, the Army, the Air Force and Resorts throughout the nation Over 35,000 students aided last year. For Free Learning programs self-addressed STAMPED envelopes to Opportunity Research, Guild Drive, Armstrong Drive, Kaiselpill, MT 59010.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
YOU MUST APPLY EARLY ...
Fully accredited, 20-year UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Guadalajara Summer School offers July 2-august 11, anthroponomy, art, education, forks, geography, history, government Tuition 165; board room and room 211. Write: International Programs, University of Arizona, U.S.A. 85721
Summer Law Studies Open to Disadvantaged
Disadvantaged or minority students who wish to attend law school may obtain application materials for a federal summer program offered by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
in 206 Strong Hall.
Only students who will have completed their undergraduate course work by June 1973 are eligible for the 1973 summer program.
--publishing what soon became, and still is,
and parody magazine on the news stand.
TACO GRANDE
1
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE!
Except on Wednesdays.
(National Taco Day)
Offer expires Feb. 28
1720 West 23rd Street 1973-Year of the Taco
'Last of Fat Eccentrics' Describes 'Mad' Publisher
To those of us who have grown up choring at the idiosyncrasies placed in Mad magazine, "The Mad World of William M. Gaines" by Frank Jacobs (268 pp.), a book written by Bill Gates and his father–figure and publisher would not expectedly be dry and humourless.
Jacobs wastes no time in assuring us that it will not be. Immediately after the title card, he states that "the book are real, and any resemblance to fictitious characters is purely coincidental." If he has truly written an account of what he was doing, people, his statement is indeed applicable.
By ROGER OELSCHLAEGER Kansan Reviewer
There are quite a few bizarre and often amusing anecdotes recounted in the book. "Mad" fans will be happy to know that 43 man Squamish is still alive and kicking (fruilipping, perhaps) in Berea, Ohio. One of the most uprappent incidents is the murder of the Unarmed Party" which a Mad staff threw for 100 people whom he thought unpleasant.
He is a man who hates exercise and loves food, and has more cases of Burgundies than he does pairs of trousers. He is the man with the most serious comings with the horror comics of the 1950's, began
Jacobs refers to the book as a biography of William M. Gaines, but it is more succinctly described as a writer's bird*e-view of a "Mad"场, Gaines, who is portrayed as the "Last of the Great Fat Ecentrics", is the king of this world.
Surprisingly enough, however, it is revealed that Don Martin, the maddest of the Mad artists, is really just a normal-appearing, non-s psychotic individual whose insanity only emerges when pen meets paper.
Although Jacob's book is a trifle too unorganized at times, it nevertheless is interesting reading and a must for anyone interested in it. A must for a comic book or a satire magazine.
The people characterized do at times resemble fictitious persons, but only if they are removed from the context of their Mad world. It is questionable whether Alfred E. Neuman himself could have described the situation more faithfully.
A Visual Radio Show Aired by Cablevision
By DEBBY CONNOR
Kansan Staff Writer
For the insomniacs in town, a new dimension has been added to late night TV. Sunflower Cablevision's 'Are We On Yet?' hosted by 21-year-old Tim Bradley, presents a revolutionary format: it's a radio show you can watch.
"Are We On Yet?" is aired from 10:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. on Monday through Saturday on Channel 6. The program often includes live acts, vintage and experimental films and various visual effects, but the main thrust of the show is playing of rock music from the mid-1970s. Bradley, as he is still in front of the camera while the music is playing.
"It is a tricky program to do," Bradley said. "On the radio, as soon as the music starts, the disc jockey is forgotten. On this program, I'm still there during the music. I sometimes feel compelled to carry on in my head and it makes me feel very awkward."
Bradley says the success of the show can be gauged by the number of calls he makes, from 30 on a week night and often as many as 150 to 200 on Friday and Saturday. According to Bradley, the calls come from people of all ages. Callers from 10 to 16 years old are callers from 10 to 16 years old.
"Most callers seem fascinated with the idea of seeing the person to whom they are speaking on the phone. Many call just to chat. I wonder what the psychological implications are of talking to your TV set or seeing it talk back to you," Bradley said.
Bradley admits that "Are We On Yet?" still is a dull show visual. The different format requires the viewer to rearrange his ideas about TV. According to Bradley, the idea is to have music to listen to and then, when there is something to be seen, to watch it.
Several solutions to this problem are being worked out by the "Are We On Yet?" staff. Bradley says he has been trying to contact local student film makers and musicians to appear on the show. Another effort is the Community by providing information and discussions about various service organizations in Lawrence.
"People feel that when the TV is on, they can watch to watch and add to their. The idea of just having a video is very new."
Bradley says he is also interested in making several technical improvements in the show. One of these would be to go to FM stereo. In this way the listener could receive the show on his stereo and then tune in on the TV when there is something to watch.
Both Bradley and Dave Stringer, director of the show, say that "Are We On Yet?" a lot of potential, but that it is often difficult to discern because of the newness of the format.
"As far as we can tell, we are the only TV disc jockey show in the country," Bradley said. "We don't have anything to go by, one to call up for advice. The possibilities are unbounded and it's very frustrating to know at times what could be done if we had access to lots of money or the Beatles or something."
give yourself
♥ to someone
A VALENTINE PORTRAIT from Shooting Gallery
We specialize in creative photography taken in natural surroundings.
118 E. 8 VI 1-2369
---
LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS
Send A Valentine In Print This Year
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
This Year Will
Have A Special
Valentine
Classified
Section on Monday February 14th
Send A Message to Your
Special Friend.
IF SHE’S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS
or
TOO FAT FOR CANDY
a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY
Let Someone
Know How
You Feel
About
Them.
ONLY
$1.50
for
25 Words
Bring Your
Special Message to
111 Flint by 5:00 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 12
Your Message Will
Appear Wednesday
February 14.
IF SHE'S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY
Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them.
ONLY $1.50 for 25 Words
Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m. Monday, Feb. 12 Your Message Will Appear Wednesday February 14.
Abortion Opponents Push for Constitutional Amendment
By CAROLYN OLSON
Korean Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
Abortion opponents resurrected their cause in the Kansas Legislature Monday by calling for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would prohibit abortions.
The move was made in response to a recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that states could not outlaw abortions during the first six months of pregnancy.
The anti-abortion proposal will come before a joint House and Senate hearing Thursday morning at the same time as a bill designed to make Kansas law comply with the court's ruling.
Rep. John Sutton, D-Kansas City, and Sen. Dan Bromley, D-Actchison, introduced in both houses a resolution asking Congress to call a constitutional convention to consider a proposed anti-abortion amendment or submit such an amendment to the states for ratification.
MEMBERS OF the Kansas Right to Life
organization appeared at the Statehouse Monday to support the proposed amendment. John Senior, professor of composition and literature at the University of Kansas, appeared at a press conference outside the Senate chamber as a member of the executive board of the Right to Life group.
The proposed constitutional amendment would define life as beginning "at the moment of conception." Abortion opponents say the bill is the only way to circumvent the Supreme Court's 7-2 decision.
Senior said Monday night that the court was trying to define who was and who wasn't a person.
"That could be disastrous," he said, "because the word 'person' is un for grabs.
"The Supreme Court has declared that unborn children are nonpersons. This is the first time this has been done since the Dred Scott case, when slaves were declared to be nonpersons."
Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackman rejected the idea that a fetus had legal rights that must be protected by the state. He said that there was no basis for that theory in the U.S. Constitution and that "the unborn have never been recognized in the law as percans in the whole sense."
SENIOR SAID he was afraid the Supreme Court might soon decide whether retarded or deformed
persons should live, because they might be called non-
members, in light of the Supreme Court ruling on
the Affordable Care Act.
Senior said he disagreed with Justice Blackman. He said that in the phrase, "all men are created equal," "men" could mean unborn persons, Sutton said the Supreme Court ruling was in violation of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which guarantees each person due process of law.
"A fetus is certainly considered a person," Senior said.
SENIOR SAID Kansas was one of the first states to introduce a resolution in support of the constitution.
Senior said the national Right to Life organization was encouraging legislators in each state to introduce resolutions to call a constitutional convention to consider the proposed amendment.
"The only way to strike down the Supreme Court ruling is to get the states behind the constitutional amendment," Senior said. "It will be an uphill battle to get the amendment ratified."
Senior said people no longer seem to be afraid of a population explosion.
"They're not in favor of abortions now as much as they once were," he said.
THE OTHER BILL to be discussed in Thursday's hearing would remove virtually all restrictions on abortions during the first six months of pregnancy and would leave the decision to have an abortion to a
The bill also would require that the abortion be performed by a licensed physician during the first trimester.
an abortion could only be performed to protect the life or physical or mental health of the mother.
No restrictions on places where abortions could be performed are included in the bill before the Kansas House of Representatives. The Supreme Court stated that abortions must be performed by a hospital or an abortion clinic by a licensed physician.
Sen. Bromley said that he wasn't entirely against abortion but that he and other legislators were get-
A 1972 FEDERAL district court decision held that only one doctor need approve the abortion.
Kansas law originally required three physicians to concur in an opinion that an abortion was needed to protect the mental or physical health of the mother or child, or if the pregnancy resulted from rape or incarceration.
DREARY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 84
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
less estimated that if there were a smaller number of legislators with the same legislative allocation of funds, there would be more money for enlarging staffs and raising wages, thus increasing efficiency and the quality of men who would run for
Kensan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Tuesday. February 6, 1973
Hoagland said that the only people who could afford to be legislators were farmers
"If the number of people were reduced," Hess said, "the tendency would be toward greater efficiency, and it wouldn't deprive people of representation."
Joseph Hoagland and Richard Hoagland Serve in Kansas House of Representatives
Politics Lure Law Students
for legislative operation and the large number of legislators, there weren't sufficient staffs to effectively cop with the demands of each legislative session brought
Hess agreed.
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN Kansan Staff Writer
"RIGHT NOW, the legislature has done all it can in the way of reform with the current number of members," said Hoakland.
Hoagland and Walker are freshman representatives, and Hess is a freshman senator. Hess previously served in the House two years. He now heads the Claims and Accounts Committee, the only freshman to serve as a committee chairman this term.
Because they are relatively new at the job, the law students are interested in the mechanics of legislating and some potential reforms to oil the rusty bureaucracy.
Three University of Kansas law students took the paternal admonition "Get into politics if you want to change the system." The student was sent to the Kansas Legislature last November.
While Walker is dubious about what effect the ratification of that amendment might have, Hess and Hoagland are convinced that it would increase efficiency and the quality of the legislature.
Both Hess and Hoagland said they were particularly interested in a proposed constitutional amendment now in committee that would reduce the number of representatives from 125 to 105 and the number of senators from 40 to 35.
In a recent interview, Sen. Paul Hess, R-Wichita; Rep. Joseph Hoagland, R-Overland Park; and Rep. Richard Walker, R-Newton, gave some of the insights they have gained into the workings of state in the first few weeks of the 1973 session.
See Story Page 5
'Godspell' Actress Returns to KU
who had time in the off season, students and other young people without financial roots and responsibilities, older retired men and those who were independently wealthy.
"THE GUY who works for a living can't exist on that (the present pay), and that's not representative government," Hoagland said.
Hess said, “On the present salary, to devote yourself to this kind of work is like a limitation, something has to give.”
All three legislators said they would have to eschew the legislative way of life sometime in the future to get their feet on the ground economically.
Hoagland and Hess said that without larger staffs they found it difficult to be informed on all the measures on which they bad to vote.
There is at least one attempt under way to remedy the information lag, he suggested. AAVD's initial response was a
"The name of the game is being informed, and under the present conditions it's not possible to make a decision."
Hoagland said he wanted the purposes stated on each bill so that the old legislative trick of "looking for the peanut in the bill" would be unnecessary. That trick, he said, is the practice of looking for loopholes for the bill. The people are sometimes hidden in the bulk of bills.
me meet whenever possible in a study group. The group assigns each member one bill for extensive study, then they all report their findings and discuss them.
All three legislators said they didn't think their ages were a hindrance in dealing with the older legislators. They said hard work is required to keep up with the efforts of the other members regardless of age.
He said that he wanted to propose a bill this term that would require that all legislative bills contain a synopsis of the details and a purpose.
BUT HOAGLAND NOTED that this was only a stopwatch measure.
Walker spoke about the necessity for selective endorsement of bills, especially
See POLITICS Page 2
3 Recovery Teams For POWs Alerted
He said the four-party Joint Military Commission made up of representatives of the provinces and the Viet Cong requested the control commission at 9 a.m. Tuesday (Salign time) to have three prisoner recovery teams ready to move to prison release
SAIGON (AP)—Three prisoner recovery teams of the International Commission for Control and Supervision (ICCS) of the Vietnam peace agreement were placed on alert Tuesday. One commission official said the arrests were a release of prisoners of war was imminent.
OFFICIALS SAID the order of release would be American prisoners first, then Viet Cong followed by South Vietnamese and North Vietnamese.
The official said he could not give a specific day or time.
The control commission has seven prisoner recovery teams. Each comprises eight men, two each from the participating countries of Canada, Indonesia, Poland and Hungary.
Under terms of the peace agreement, the commission 'shall have the responsibility to control and supervise the observance' of the return of prisoners. An annex to the agreement says that the control command shall be given the last detention places where the prisoners were held and accompany them to the release points.
Any prisoners picked up in Hanoi will be
sent to Fahai prison. Base at the
Philippines, the official said.
"RUMORS ARE circulating that someone wants to sell the house he'd said
They said that only photographs of the prisoners were allowed and that there were no witnesses.
The meeting is scheduled for tonight, Dahlem said. The bingo issue will be the main concern.
VIET CONG peacekeeping teams, meanwhile, joined North Vietnamese, South Vietnamese and American observers of the military site at regional field sites for the first time.
representatives of the four parties in the peace agreement met in three cities Monday in quickening diplomatic steps toward getting American prisoners back home, where mine trains from North and conducting top-level political talks on the South.
'No Bingo' Ruling Affects Clubs
As dispositions for peace accelerated, the fighting slowed.
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
The issue of a constitutional amendment to legalize only gambling bingo was dropped Monday in the Kansas Legislature after Sen. Ed Rellly, R-Leavenworth, announced that the issue would not receive the necessary two-thirds majority vote.
Spokesman from the Knights of Columbus, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Dorsey-Liberty American Legion Post No. 14 said Monday night that the loss of bingo income could seriously cut down on some of their activities.
The defeat of a possible constitutional amendment to legalize bingo will cause hardships for fraternal and charitable organizations. At least one may be forced to close.
"This bingo issue will have a considerable effect on the club, said Le Dahlem, post commander for the American Legion Post No. 14.
Sponsorship of a little league football team, work at the Veterans Administration Hospital and donations to needy families at the hospital. Get hurt from the lack of bingo income, he said.
Dahlem had bingo played a large part in activities sponsored throughout the year and was important in absorbing some of the organization's overhead.
Alan Fisher, former post commander,
said he thought the sale of the post home
was a good idea.
"I'm not sure this is the time to do anything that drastic," he said.
"THERE HAVE ALSO been rumors that we may not be able to sponsor both of our baseball teams this year either," Dahlem said.
One possibility for raising the money previously provided by bingo games would be special assessments of each member, according to Dahlem.
Fisher said he was not pleased with the defeat of the bingo issue because the Post depended upon bingo to a great extent when it was legal.
"I don't have all the facts at hand to at the current financial situation," he said, "but I can tell you what happened."
The Knights of Columbus sponsored bingo games twice a week before a Supreme Court decision last fall made the games the official subject of Eugene Rinke, a member of the organization.
three or four months already has cut the Post deeply."
HE SAID THE LOSS of bingo would
affect the activities of the Knights of
Columbia.
"For one thing, the decision will sharply curtail any charitable things we'll do," said Rinke, "if not cut them out all together. Everything is soiling to suffer."
A few ideas have been suggested for alternative sources of income, Rikke said, but nothing has been named that provides as substantial an income as bingo had.
Rinke said he thought bingo provided a good outlet for older people.
"Our crowds were usually 50 to 60 per cent senior citizens," he said.
Jim Pringle, commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said that the loss of bingo tables is one reason.
See 'NO BINGO' Page 2
"WEVE HAD to cut out certain charities sponsored by the money," he said, "such as
Before the Tuesday alert, U.S. officials in Washington and Saigon said the first group of American prisoners would be released this week, but declined to give a specific reason.
Ambassador Michel Gauvin of Canada, chairman of the ICCS, said Monday release of those held in South Vietnam would be "closer to the end of the week."
FOUR HOURS after the commission met, he ' told newmen the release would come before the vote.
Senior U.S. officials said one of the first groups of American prisoners would be released from jungle camps along the South Vietnam-Cambodian border in the An Loc-Loc Nihu area, about 60 miles north of Saigon.
In Washington, Defense Department spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said North Vietnam was expected to release its first American prisoners by Sunday, the time frame specified in the cease-fire agreement signed in Paris Jan. 27.
In Haliphon, Rear Adm. Brian McCaulley and 15 members of his staff conferred with senior North Vietnamese officials about clearing mines from North Vietnam's seven ports and thousands of miles of inland waterways. The Navy task force gathering in the Tonkin Gulf to begin clearing the mines as specified in the agreement.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Vietnam peace agreement has given new vigor to the drive in Congress to limit the war-making power of the President.
The Senate passed a similar bill 68 to 16
April 13, but House response was
lukewarm.
Nine more senators have joined in corsooning a war powers bill introduced by Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., on Jan. 18, bringing total back to 60.
"Our hope is that we will have some by the middle of this week." Friedheim said.
In Paris, South Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegates met face to face for the first time for preliminary low-level procedural talks to set the stage for high-level negotiations about the future political shape of South Vietnam.
The bill is designed to restore to Congress the sole constitutional power to declare war. It would allow the President to commit U.S. armed forces to hostilities abroad only in emergency situations, and then only for 30 days, without specific approval of Congress.
Senate sponsors predict that the measure will pick up support this year from additional House Republicans, who last year feared that it would be construed as an affront to President Nikon's Vietnam war policies.
THE PRESIDENT could use the troops, without consent from Congress, only to repel attack, forestall the imminent threat of invasion. The President endangered abroad or on ships at sea.
Hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee are expected early this year, but a date has not yet been announced.
North Vietnamese, Viet Cong, American and South Vietnamese representatives of a prisoner committee of the Joint Military Commission met in Saigon for three hours to iron out repatriation details. It was the third successive day they had met.
Administration opposition is expected to continue, although one of last year's reasons has vanished. "Wait until after the war ends in Vietnam."
The amount of aid that the South Vietnamese will require from the United States in the near future is still being debated in Washington.
War Power Limitation Gains Senate Support
GAO auditors also said U.S. turnover of jumbo C-130 cargo planes to South Vietnam last fall because of heavy combat needs. The government and mechanics "for some time to come."
Congress' auditors have said the United States, which has turned more than $5 billion worth of weapons over to South Vietnam so far, would have to continue both materiel support and technical training "for the foreseeable future."
The agency's conclusion that some indefinite U.S. arms supply and training
THE ABILITIES OF Saigon's fleet of some 600 helicopter to cope with an all-out North Vietnam attack may be marginal" the United Nations (GAO) said in a report released Monday.
would be needed by South Vietnam was drafted before the Paris peace agreement was reached. The agreement stipulated that the country would be replaced only on a one-for-one basis.
The report said that because of the uncertainties of the peace negotiations and defenses that might be required against potential renewal of hostilities, it could not estimate the cost of continued U.S. arms supplies.
Corona Gets Life Terms For Slayings
FAIRFIELD, Calif. (AP) - Juan Cannon was sentenced to 25 consecutive life prison terms Monday after a judge denied him a sentence of charges of slaying 25 transient farm workers.
The family of the 30-year-old former mason contractor sat silently, showing no sign of tears as sentence was imposed by Judge Richard E. Patton.
"The order of the court is that the defendant be punished by confinement in a prison or life in prison."
Corona himself allyset rose from his seat beside his attorney. A deputy sheriff tapped him on the shoulder and he quietly walked to a nearby holding cell.
Corona was convicted of the slaying of 25 drifters and titerant farm laborors who backed and slashed bodies were unearthed from orchard graves along the Feather River 100 miles northeast of San Francisco during May and June of 1971.
Patton also ordered defense attorney Richard Hawk arrested in the courtroom, to immediately start serving 54 days of a total sentence. The judge issued during the four-month trial.
Sutter County Dist. Atty. G. Dave Tesea and special prosecutor Barton Williams were given until April 9 to appeal seven-day contempt of court tail laws.
Hawk based his request for a new trial on *jurisdictional* jural statements. But Patton on the floor said he would do that.
2
Tuesday, February 6. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Tax Hike Gains Support
TOPEKA (AP) — A bill that would impose a state income tax increase of 1.5 per cent to reduce provincial public spending will support Monday from representatives of small school districts and landowners in the first day of Senate Education Committee hearings on school
The bill, drafted by an interim legislative committee, would hike income taxes by 1.5 per cent to supply about $65 million to schools for the reduction of property taxes.
The bill proposes a total of $133 million in additional state aid for schools but nearly $100 million of that amount is left unfunded by the present form of the bill.
Representatives of small school districts and landowner associations testified Monday in support of the income tax increase over a bill proposed by Gov. Robert Docking that would impose a statewide eight-mill property tax levy for schools.
"The bulk of the opposition to the committee bill is that a statewide property tax might be written into it." Sen. Joseph Education Committee chairman, said.
"I think we may have to agree on that one with the governor," Harder said, without ruling out the proposed 1.5 per cent income tax increase.
Harder said the committee "will cross that bridge when we come to funding the bill," but he added that the statewide property tax was a possibility.
Harder said he had "heard that a compromise might be coming out of the second senator to speak. Mr. Mallack, a docking legislative liaison man, the governor was not now offering a
"We not offering a compromise, but we ready to look at anybody's' alienation."
Matlock said the governor's staff was trying to assess the two proposals.
compromise in the controversy over funding of a school finance program.
Conflicts on funding of a new school finance formula have made a compromise "imperative," Harder said, because the legislature is required to enact a new plan by July 1 under an order from Johnson County District Court.
DUBLIN (AP)—Prime Minister Jack Lynch on Monday ordered an unexpected national election for Feb. 28, apparently to strengthen his government's hand for the bargaining with Britain on the future of Northern Ireland.
Lynch could have waited out the remaining 16 months of his current term of office before going to the voters, but he is riding a wave of popularity and clearly
Election Planned in No.Ireland; Lynch Expects Voter Mandate
hopes a reinforced mandate will help in his forthcoming talks with the British.
Phase 3 Inherits Food Price Woes
Holding a farewell meeting with members and officials of the Phase 2 Pay Board
A British government policy document on the future of Northern Ireland is due in March. The British have promised to consult Lynch in advance on these issues and the high leader appeared to have this mind when he called the snap election.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon cited food prices Monday as the potential key to success of his Phase 3 economic program, a largely voluntary effort to keep the lid on inflation after wage and price controls are disbanded.
Politics
(Continued from page 1)
HE SAID, "You must save your amunition for the bills that you are ready to finish."
"I don't want to prejudice my image on the lesser issues so that I can't work effectively on the major ones," he said. "You expect effectiveness by going down on every one."
those that were controversial and not subjects of great personal conviction.
To do otherwise, he said, would lose the legislator the respect of his colleagues.
A legislator should take positions on the other bills, Walker said, but he should be ready to compromise and take the resulting vote in stride.
He said that on any issue the legislator had to weigh the reactions, for reason of reelection, and, for reason of conscience, the desires of his constituency against his own beliefs about what was in the best interest of the people. But if it came down to a decision whether he would vote those of the people in his district, he would vote his own conscience. Walker said
"You can lead a constituency," he said,
"but you can't get too far ahead."
All three legislators said they were excited to find such close personal ties between them.
"THERE is a fraternal bond," Hess said.
"It's a great big fraternity. You can't get mad at anyone and hold a grudge or you'll never get anywhere."
The resolution was defeated by two votes. The vote of 25 for, 15 against two short of the required two-thirds needed for a constitutional amendment.
HESS SAID pure spite between certain senators resulted in the defeat of the
All three thought the school finance question and its effect on Kansas property taxes was the overriding issue this legislative session.
Hoaagland said that working with the same men for 18 hours a day, eating with them and searching for entertainment with them built close relationships.
All three said that they sometimes got cynical about meeting people because they said that it seemed as if everyone they met wanted something.
But when questioned about which proposal they favored, Governor Docking's or the special legislative interim committee's with an income tax increase, they were told that they didn't really favor either and that some sort of compromise would be preferable.
Hoggland said that he was naive before going to Topeka as a legislator because he had thought that the politicking would and should have been easy. He said that it went on each day in Topeka.
Action on Reapportionment Urged by Docking Aide
A three-judge federal court has ruled a House apportionment enacted by the legislature in 1972 over the governor's veto to be unconstitutional.
The high court gave the law-makers until Feb. 16, 1974 to enact a valid reaportionment or have the court do the job itself.
TOPEKA (AP)—An anide to Gov. Robert Dockling told top Kansas legislative leaders Monday that there was ample time for the 1973 legislature to develop a fair and equal plan to resportion the House of Representatives,
According to Hess, a vivid example of politics inside the legislative chambers was the vote on the liquor-by-the-drink resolution in the Senate recently.
VAN CLEAVE outlined the governor's suggestion in a letter to Senate President pro tem Robert B. Bennett and House Speaker Duane McGill.
Van Cleave reviewed statements by the governor which he said were in the chief executive's hands.
Van Cleve said the governor stated that any reapportionment plan should:
"The governor urges the legislature to immediately undertake this task and enact legislation that will comply with the veto messages and the court decision so that the court can have an ample opportunity to thoroughly consider a legislative action to be taken." Representatives," said Thomas Van Cleave, legislative liaison for Docking.
- Comply with federal and Kansas constitutional requirements as well as accord
-Should provide fair and equal representation;
Should carry out the one-man, one-vote
manifold with as little deviation as possible
beyond it.
The plan should not result in district
'No Bingo'...
(Continued from page i)
"We have several things we brought up and hope we might help our situation," Prindle said.
In a meeting Monday night, optional sources of funding were discussed.
A few donations have been received, but the measures have only been temporary.
"We have some projects that we hope will take up the slack," said Pringle. "It's going to put us in a cramp, but it won't put us under."
Greater emphasis has been placed on family activities and organizations since bingo was declared illegal, Pringle said, because families provided money.
"The bingo issue does not affect the
Eagles organization in any way." Kruall
said.
Although the Eagles Lodge had used bingo as a source of income, Harold Krull, president of the lodge, said it was not a major source of revenue.
gerrymandering for partisan political advantage;
—The plan should not draw boundaries unless unnecessarily divide political division.
—The plan should provide for honest and effective representation, with single-member districts in both legislative branches.
Three Killed In Ship Fire
and Price Commission, Nixon pledged continued government efforts to hold down inflation.
NORFOLK, Va. (AP)—Three sailors were killed and eight injured, four critically, when a boiler exploded Monday after the ship ran aground while operating in the Atlantic northeast of here.
The 390-foot Basilone was proceeding under its own power to its home port of Newport, R.I. An escort vessel accompanied it.
At the naval hospital in New York, Cmdr. R. C. Cochran, the physician in charge said the men had sustained steam or water-type burns over 50 per cent of their bodies in two cases, and 70 and 80 per cent in the other two.
The four critically burned men were shown in two Coast Guard helicopters to St. Martin's Church, Brownsville.
His comments were relayed to newmen by Donald Rumfsfeld, outgoing director of Best of Living Council, who joined other official officials in the cabinet room session.
The names of the dead were withheld until relatives were notified.
The explosion occurred at 5:45 p.m. CST, 140 miles southwest of Newport, the Navy's naval base in Hawaii.
Rumsfeld said the President told the group that wage and price controls helped check inflation without inhibiting growth of the economy but that it was important that monetary controls be lifted so the economy moves back toward a free market system.
The U.S.S. Bowen, one of two escort vessels at the scene, resumed its normal sea operation, but the U.S.S. Hewes stayed with the Bassline for the trip back to port.
"All of them have burns on all their extremities and hands and have burns on both the front and back of their bodies," Cochran said.
"One man had his face spared," he said.
"The prognosis is guarded. All of them are
He added that the President, in referring to the new program which depends largely on voluntary compliance, vowed that he intends to make it work.
"FOOD PRICES are a key to making 3 work," Rumafal quoted Nixon as saying.
The food industry remains under mandatory controls, as do the health and housing segments of the economy. In addition, the administration has taken steps to bolster food supplies by loosening imports and easing crop planting restrictions.
Interviews
Students may up sign this book with the School of Business, 4501 Macdonald Drive. American Compose company, bow Cormingham Corp., Feb. 12, 1981. American Oil Gamble Manufacturing Co., Inc., 1250 E. Masonville
Meanwhile, Secretary of the Treasury
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orgives money to inflation of 1.8 ppt
Students实习者 may also apply up this week to 2021 Summa Companion, Bait System and Maschauzechtrakt Miskin
SHULTZ ADDRESED a conference on Phase 3 rules and standards arranged at the administration's request by the United States Chamber of Commerce, Nixon's top economic spokesman had just come from a talking bulling before a congressional committee.
cent by the year end was "an ambivalent and an attainable goal" under Phase 3. He said that was partly because of the President's fiscal clampdown on the government.
The White House said the President was backing $7.1 billion in budget funds in reports.
In related developments Monday:
- Senators from farm belt states criticized fund cuts in Agriculture Department spending. At a Senate Agriculture and Forestry Committee meeting, E. H. Euskens, D-Dowa, said the cutbacks are "arbitrary, crippling and illegal."
—Arthur Okun, former chief economist in the Johnson administration, told the Senate Banking Committee that firms should be required to give advance notice of major wage and price increases. Now, he said, the law requires that firms increase intervals. He added that wage increases above the 5.5 standard should not be used to justify price increases.
Newsmen Ask Legislators For Shield Law Protection
Newmen in Washington and Topека asked Congress and the Kansas Legislature Monday for legal power to guard information they gain in confidence and to combat any governmental effort to use them as investigators.
By the Associated Press
Caldwell was a central figure in a package of cases in which the high court held that the First Amendment's guarantee of free speech should not right to refuse to testify before a grand jury about information gained in confidence. He was among lead-off witnesses as a House judiciary subcommittee began a new round of prosecution on reporter-protection legislation.
In Topeka news media representatives appearing in support of a newsman's "shield" bill pending before a committee of the Kansas House said Monday that they preferred a bill which was being considered by a Senate committee.
Since a Supreme Court ruling last June, "we have seen prosecutors and judges emboldened by the notion that reporters can become . . . investigative arms of the law enforcement process," said reporter Earl Caldwell of The New York Times.
MANY JOURNALISTS, Caldwell said, "worry that some document or piece of information will come to their attention and that in possessing it or publishing it they must learn to believe the framers of the Constitution intended that no such time exist in America."
The Senate bill would give a newsman protection against being forced to divulge his confidential sources of information. The House bill would give this shield on a qualified basis, subject to an order by the Court of the state to divulge news sources.
"We prefer the unqualified approach in the Senate bill, said Frost Inks, managed by Kim Yoon."
NKS SAID that no one had been jailed in Kansas so far for refusing to disclose his source of information, but that this had happened in other states.
Inks said he thought all segments of the unqualified approach united behind the unqualified approach.
Bob Russell, Topeka radio station executive representing the Kansas Association of Broadcasters, said that television also preferred the unqualified approach.
"This bill is not for the newwoman but for the public," said Louis. "It is in the public interest."
Rep. Richard C. Loux, D-Wichita, one of the bill's sponsors, said that there had been recent developments across the United States indicating the need for such a law.
Loux said that while there had been no problems in Kansas so far, the time to do it would be a few days.
Voter Drive Draws Blank
After three weekends of extended office hours, no additional voters have registered to vote in an approaching spring election, county Clark Delbert Mathis said Monday.
A public vote of confidence now would also help Lily's efforts to crack down on terrorism and keep the violence in Northern Ireland from spreading across the border.
The clerk's office will remain open until 9 p.m. through Feb. 13. Unlike last year, those who fail to register in advance will not be able to do so on election day.
Those who vote in the election and did not register for the general election in November and wish to vote in the upcoming election have until Feb. 15 to sign up.
Mathia said that 33,530 voters had registered as of the November election and he anticipated a maximum increase of 100 voters prior to the spring elections.
The election, Lynch declared, is "essential if a protracted period of political uncertainty and instability is to be avoided."
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His action came as Northern Ireland was ravaged by a bloody surge of sectarian bombings.
with nearly 50 persons wounded, in the last week.
Charge Changed In Stabbing Of Haskell Man
James Joaquín Brown of Shurz, Nev. had been charged in connection with the stabbing death Jan. 25 of another Haskell工学院 Jaxon, 19, of Santa Domingo Pueblo, N.M.
A 22-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student previously charged with first-degree murder was bound over to be tried on June 4. His refilled charge of second-degree murder,
In Monday's preliminary hearing in Douglas County Court, Douglas County Probate Judge Mike Elwell said that the evidence did not support the allegation that he had been committed because the "element of premeditation" had not been established.
The savagery of this feuding between rival Protestant and Roman Catholic extremists spurred wives in Belfast that the violence would secale. In Dublin it was felt that the bloodletting would spill over the border on a wider scale than ever before.
Bankrupt a Shakey's for lunch.
Shakeus
S1 39
Shakeus
$1.39
Come into Shakey's for lunch. Eat as much as you want. And pay the ridiculously low price of $1.39. Even if you have 10 slices of cheese, 2 pieces of chicken, 2 orders of salad and 3 potatoes all you'll pay is $1.39.
We may go bankrupt but you sure won't go hungry
842-2266
544 W.23rd
has the biggest selection of baggies in town 40" Bells & Pleated & Cuffed Pants 711 W. 23rd in the Malls 10-9 M-F 10-6 S
CARICATURE
Cal Philips, junior, felt threatened when his parents accused he word. "They called me a bun and said they were trying to hurt him."
Cair heat out as long as possible. "Two days after they stopped sending bread I got into a Provided Mutual Warehouse and put it in the freezer. Can make my own hours. Can make good money. I got a job waiting for me when I graduated. My parents said I was a great cook."
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Stephen H. Kraybill—Campus Representative 2401 W. 25th, Apt. 9B9 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Res. 913-841-2310 or 913-842-3146
1
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
Lt. Gov. Appraises KU Resources
Lt. Gov. Dave Owen met with University of Kansas administrators Monday to discuss resources at KU that might be useful in stimulating economic growth in
John Conard, director of University Relations, said that Owen was interested in using available resources at all the state universities.
"Owen thinks that these resources would be valuable in trying to achieve some solutions in economic development and the energy crisis," Conard said.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said that the university's development in Kansas was not new.
"The University has been concerned with the fact that little has been done recently," he said.
Nichols said that Owen wanted to
acquire himself with the expertise available at the state universities. He said that Owen would also visit Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
OWEN SAID he wanted to know what research programs and other studies at KU could be used by the Department of Economic Development.
"I also want to begin developing a connection between attracting business and the type of jobs that young people want," he said.
Owen asked Chancellor Nichols and the 10 other KU representatives to choose someone on whom the state could call. But it was clear that no need was needed. He also requested that two or three persons be hired for the economic development department to serve as liaison.
Owen suggested that one or two KU
KU Philosophy Dept. Seeks Student Essays
Entries for the first Edward S. Robinson Memorial Essay Content must be turned in to the department of philosophy in Strong Hall no later than March 1.
The contest, sponsored by the department
of education, may any KU under-
graduate or graduate.
Essay entries for the contest may be on any topic of philosophical interest to the contest. However, entries are limited to unpublished essays.
Money for the prizes will be taken from the Edward S. Robinson Memorial Fund, Robinson, a former professor of philosophy at KU, was killed April 3, 1968 when he beheaded by an executioner turmkupke west of New York Service Area and was struck by an oncoming car.
Prizes up to $100 will be offered, depending on the quality of your purchase. There will be a minimum of three good prizes each.
Robinson became a member of the KU faculty in 1948. He taught symbolic logic, Hellenic philosophy and courses on Martin Heidgeman and Alfred North Whitehead.
A scholar of contemporary German philosophy, Robinson translated the book, "Being and Time," written by the German writer Martin Heidegger. He left his library to KU.
Entries in the contest should be no longer than two pages and no contest may enter more than one.
Jean Marc von der Weld will speak on "Brazil as a Sub-Imperialist Power" 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room of the Kannas Union.
Student Politico From Brazil To Speak Here
He was elected president of the Brazilian National Students Union at their 30th Congress, which was held clandestinely in January 1969.
Von der Weid was arrested on Sep. 1, 1969, and was one of 50,000 persons held prisoner on Ihas dea Flores prison岛. Along with 69 fellow prisoners, he was released in exchange for the captured Swiss ambassador to Brazil on Jan. 14, 1971.
Von der Weld was elected president of the Student Association at the University of Rio, where he studied chemical engineering. He was forced to go underground in August 1968 because of his political activities.
Von der Weid is on a speaking tour of the United States to gain publicity for the coming hearings before the Bertrand family, and for the torture of Brazilian political prisoners.
Winners of the memorial contest will present their essays to an open meeting of the Graduate Association of Students of Philosophy.
Judges for the contest will be the following members of the department of philosophy: Arthur Skidmore, assistant professor of philosophy, Warner Moree, assistant professor of philosophy, J. Michael Young, assistant professor of philosophy and David Schmidt, assistant instructor of philosophy.
Book Collectors Contest Entries Now Accepted
All entries be submitted either to Howard, in the reference department of Watson Library, or to Georgagn Egniak, in the Research Library, no later than April 6.
Entries are now being accepted for the 17th Annual Competition for Student Book Collections sponsored by Elizabeth M. Snyder, Kansas City book collector, and the Oread Book Shop, Clinton Howard, chairman of the contest, said Monday.
The contest is open to all University of Kansas students except for former winners.
representatives become ex officio members of the Kansas Economic Development Commission to increase communication between the state and KU.
Prizes will be given in the form of gift certificates to be exchanged for books of the year.
Each contestant must submit a bibliography of his collection along with a brief statement of the purpose of his collection. At least 10 book entries in the collection should be annotated, telling of its contribution to the collection.
Prizes will be awarded to the winner and runner-up in both the undergraduate and graduate divisions. First prize in each division and second prize in each division is $50.
Entries may not include textbooks and are normally limited to no less than 25 no more than 50 books, regardless of the size of the contestant's entire collection.
The collections need not be large or expensive, said Howard. The judging is done on the basis of how well the author ties his experience with the collection to the collection itself, he said.
"HE IS INVOLVED in an effort to revitalize economic growth in Kansas on a selective basis," Nichols said. "In other words, he wants to attract industries that will provide jobs for the university graduates in the state."
Finalists will bring their collections to be examined by the judges for the final
The winners' collections will be exhibited in Watson Library.
William Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, said the school's aerospace department was working with airplane manufacturers to develop dynamic developments for light planes.
"We also have developed a proposal for the use of solar energy in cooling and heat use."
No judges have been chosen for the
winner of the definite when the
winners will be announced.
"There are not very many specific proposals offered," he said. "Topekha has to put together some sort of game plan first and then we can go from there."
"We offer a certain amount of business research and also an executive development."
The Engineering School would be happy to cooperate with the state, Smith said, but he was not sure.
THE SCHOOL OF Business offers two resources that could be helpful to the state, according to Jack Gaumnitz, associate professor of business.
Herman Lujan, director of the social and environmental studies program, said that
"This study, which was done for the Southeast Kansas Action Program, provided a complete inventory of human and economic material," he said.
his office had recently completed a prototype study in Crawford County that provided an analysis of the general economic status there.
"But, we can't plan for the state," he said. "We can provide them with raw materials and planning strategies which they can choose from."
Lujan said that his office had the capacity to provide the state with necessary data on patients.
Engineers Consider Professional Degree
an individually structured course of study.
The program would combine practical
thinking with theoretical learning.
Those Kansas residents whose last names start with the letter "A" have until the end of February to acquire new automobile licenses. The winner is L. Norman. Douglas County treasurer.
The department of electrical engineering plans to vote next week on whether to add an external professional development degree to its curriculum, according to Arthur Brepohl, chairman of the electrical engineering department.
Dean of Law Throws Hat Into City Commission Ring
Clark, who teaches a course in local government at the Law School said he considered many functions of city governmen- ting to be planning, zoning and revenue sharing.
Barkley Clark, an associate dean in the University of Kansas School of Law, announced Monday his intention to seek a position on the Lawrence City Commission.
The new tags went on sale Jan. 15. As of last Friday, 377 have been sold. Norman anticipates a maximum of 600 tags to be sold this month.
Brepohl said Monday that the proposal would need the approval of the School of Engineering and of the chancellor before it could be implemented.
Clark, 33, of 1511 Crescent Road, said that he would file either today or Wednesday. He is currently nearing completion of a three-year term on the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission, to which he was appointed in April 1970.
Out-of-state students registering their vehicles in Kansas also are required to buy a valid driver's license.
Clark, who has been chairman of the planning commission for the last two years, said that he thought his experience in planning would be helpful to the com-
"The relationship between the University and the commission should be one of mutual support."
A second set of announcements seeking applicants for the position of Lawrence Assistant Professor in education schools and employment services, according to David Kendall, assistant superintendent for instruction and personnel of Lawrence Unified School Dis-
Principal Still Sought For Lawrence High
The new plates may be pick up at the county courthouse. Fees range from $10 to $25 per plate.
"A lot of people feel that some things in Lawrence haven't been planned too well in the past," Clark said. "Since all planning commission matters are appealed to the city commission, my experience there might be useful."
License Plates For 'A' Names At Couthouse
Clark also said he thought his position with KU would be useful to the commission.
Kendall said before Monday's Lawrence
Those needing new tags for trucks, trailers or motor cycles become subject to a $5 fee.
The program would allow engineers and scientists to stay on the job while enrolled in
Before joining the KU faculty in 1988, Clark was a practicing attorney in Denver for five years. He attended Amberst College and St. Joseph's University, and later, Harvard Law School.
City Commission To Hear Pleas On Annexation
Gene Ruling, 520 Pioneer Road, has requested the annexation of approximately 23 acres of the 1st and Iowa streets. John McGrew, 1825 St. Andrews Drive, has requested the annexation of approximately 23½ acres located west of the Alvamar Hills Golf Course.
The Lawrence City Commission will consider two separate requests for annexation of property into the city limits at its regular weekly meeting this afternoon.
Four other candidates have filed for commission posts. They are Mike Morrill, 1520 Vermont St.; Gale McRill, 148 Minnesota St.; John Emick, 190 W. Skirtth; and Harry W. Kroeger Jr., 352 E. 12th H. The filing deadline is noon, Feb. 13.
-Review and consider approval of Civil Defense siren locations;
—Hear recommendations from City Attorney Milton Allen about the notices and ordering procedures of the Minimum Housing Code;
The department presented the proposal in December to its board of advisers, composed of professional engineers from Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri. Bridpohl said the board advised the department to try the program.
—Consider setting 10 a.m. Feb. 26 as the date to receive purchase bids for several items, including diesel oil, gasoline and one street sweeper truck.
The commission also plans to:
According to the proposal, a student in the program would have to accumulate 1,200 credit hours within a seven-year period to earn a deree.
Campus Bulletin
School Relations: noon, Above C Cafeteria, Kansas
Union
College Assembly: 4 p.m. Forum Room.
Health Director Search Committee: 5 p.m., English Room.
Law School; 12:30 p.m. Cottonwood Cafeteria
College Assembly; 4 p.m. Forum Room.
Pep Club: 8:30 p.m. Jaywalk Room:
Science Fiction Lecture and Film: 7 p.m. Woodruff
Union.
Law School: 12:30 p.m., Cottonwood Cafeteria.
Baptist Executive Committee: 7 p.m., Parlor A
Dean of Men, 7:30 p.m., Room Council.
Begapal-Metre Room 7:30 p.m. Counsel Room.
Women's Ceaslon Film 7:30 p.m. Forum Room.
HIMS 7:30 p.m. Oread Room.
Begapal Negotiant Film 8: p.m. Parlour.
The position was originally scheduled to be filled before the start of this school year. In some cases, the position became available in the middle of the term might have prevented some qualified persons from applying. The form for filling in a position at the end of the first semester.
Board of Education meeting that Max Rife, former division principal at LHS has been named temporary principal until the position is permanently filled.
During Monday's meeting, the board heard a report by Ima Clagg, director of food services, on the current standing of her department. Clagg announced that the annual State School Food Service convention will be in Lawrence in March.
Gov. Docking Sets Week For Blacks
The board also heard an explanation of a recent expenditure for science equipment at LHS. Kenneth Fisher, assistant superintendent in the laboratories, reported on the $1,000 expenditure.
The College Assembly will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Members' meetings will still be made mobile that would make be Pearson Integrated Humanities Program open only to juniors and seniors in the fulfillment of requirements. The program will also include a program open to freshmen and sophomores as a substitute for English 1, 2 and 3.
30 THURSDAY. FEB 8
Big 8 Room. KANSAS UNION
Because a student is assumed to spend two hours in preparation for each one-hour class meeting, he would earn three credit hours for each class meeting in a semester.
FEBRUARY SISTERS Feminist Film Festival Part II More FREE Flicks Tonight Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. Everyone Welcome! Child Car Providl
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"It is hoped that schools and other organizations will take this occasion to have speakers, films, displays or in other ways call attention to some cultural, political or social aspect of black studies and to reassess their year round programs in the area."
WIVESOF P.O.W.'S & M.I.A.'S
"WOMEN IN LIMBO"
Weekdays—2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Rep. Clarence C. Love, C-Kansas City, said, "Black Studies Week includes the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass and is meant to embody the values of Americans have made, and are making, to the development of our country."
Twilight Hour at 5:05
TOPEKA (AP)—The week of Feb. 11-7 has been proclaimed "Black Studies Week" by Gov. Robert Docking, the Kansas Civil Rights Commission said today.
Vorsite
WILLIS ... September 1965
901 West 23rd—Lawrence, Kansas
Have you tried McDonald's big, thick, hot, juicy Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with Cheese
We start with a quarter-pound of 100% pure beef ... cook it up just right ... serve it with ketchup, mustard, pickled and onions on a toasted sesame seed bun. The Quarter-Pound cheese comes with all of the above plus two slices of mellow, golden cheese.
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2406 Iowa
---
4
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
A Secret Army
Sen. Robert Dole has promised to introduce a bill establishing a joint Congressional committee to investigate the origins of the Vietnam War. Dole would probably like to organize the investigation around a question like, "Who stuck Nixon with this war?" but much useful information could come from such an investigation.
As a political issue it seems that Vietnam is dead. With the events that are likely to occur in South Vietnam in the next two years, it is doubtful that Republicans will be bragging about the peace settlement in 1974, and the Democrats aren't likely to bet on a horse that was too old and feeble to get out of the starting gate two years earlier.
An investigation could be valuable if it ignores the politics involved and studies the problems in our foreign affairs. It could also plowed such a thing to happen.
The role of the CIA in foreign policy should be explored. When Congress passed the National Security Act in 1947 to establish the National Security Council and the CIA, it specified the CIA's duties as gathering intelligence and performing "such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as the National Security Council may from time to time direct."
Apparently this clause has been given a rather broad interpretation. Victor Marchelli, who served on the CIA director's staff, told Nation magazine in April that the CIA concentrated less than 10 per cent of its men and materials on gathering intelligence. He said the other 90 per cent were concentrated in "the clandestine mechanism whereby the executive branch influences the internal affairs of other nations."
The investigation of the CIA could easily go beyond the Vietnam War. These are the people who brought us the U2 incident in 1960, the Bay of Pigs in 1961, the National Student Association scandal in 1867 and the CIA-TTT-Chile affair last year, as well as incidents in the Dominican Republic in Iraq, Guatemala, Los Ángeles, Some of these were direct CIA interactions in the domestic affairs of other nations, and some were just tremendous blunders because of the CIA's faulty intelligence.
Congress should investigate the wisdom of allowing the executive department to maintain a secret army of 18,000 men, that seems quite capable of finding intelligence that suggests intervention, and that seems quite deaf to information that suggests its projects will fail.
—Eric Kramer
Loans Threatened
If President Nixon's proposed federal budget cuts are approved by Congress, social programs will be the main victims of the federal axe. The National Direct Student Loan (NDSL) program is one that Nixon has earmarked for termination. A limited Educational opportunity Grant program would also be phased out. The two would be replaced by a "basic opportunity grant."
National Direct Student Learning presently provide aid to about 1,700 University of Kansas students. If Congress approves the termination of the program, severe hardships will begin hundreds of KU students.
The NDSL program has provided loans to thousands of students at an interest rate of three per cent. The proposed substitution of basic opportunity grants has advantages, in that it will make the program, the substitution will effectively place educational assistance out of reach.
The main advantages of the basic opportunity grant are that it charges no interest and does not demand repayment. But these advantages make it more attractive for fewer grants will be awarded to loans under the NDSL program.
The disadvantages of the proposed changeover to the new grants are many. Last year hundreds of students could not get aid from the NDSL program because of limited Because of a small loan program, the form proposed by Nixon, less financial aid would be awarded.
The proposed changeover also
allows no recourse to students who do not qualify for the basic opportunity grant. In the past, those students who did not qualify for the limited grant program, now sponsored by the federal government, were able to apply for an NDSL loan. Under the substitution, private loans would have to make up the difference.
Private loans are not as readily obtainable as NDSL loans; they require that a student have a solid credit rating. Many students from low-income families, consequently, be unable to secure a private loan.
Then, too, disadvantages would affect students whose family income was in a bracket above that considered in the allotment of the basic opportunity grant. They would not be able to secure low interest loans, expensive credit or the same opportunity grant. Their recourse again would be to private lending institutions, charging rates they might not be able to afford.
The NDSL program has provided needed assistance to thousands of students. Its low interest repayment rate has allowed students to pay for an education they otherwise couldn't afford. To see it go, which it will if you opt in, visit www.ndsl.org or a backward step in educational funding. Its replacement, although admirable in some respects, lacks the coverage of the old program.
If educational aid and other social programs fall under the ax of a new government priority system, it will be time to re-evaluate the desirability of singleindedly balancing the budget.
—Steven Riel
PRINCE GEORGE COUNTY.
Md.-In the parking lot outside
William Pace Elementary School
there were stickers on the
school windows. I urged "Let's make It Work."
The "it" was a reference to
the final, irrevocable federal court
order requiring that, after 15 years of drowning and integrated into schools.
Busing Controversy Dies Down
Prince Georges County is another of those vast urban-
suburban places like Nassau
PETER HOFFMAN
Nicholas von Hoffman
County, N.Y., or Orange County, Calif., without a central place name to tell you how populist it is. In fact, with 182,000 children in its schools, the county's system is one of the largest in the nation. Thus, with 40,000 of those students, the number of both races in approximately the same proportions is an impressively large undertaking.
On I- Day Monday, when the yellow buses rolled and previously all-black William Paca got itself integrated, he took the schoolhouse door as so many people have during all the miserable years of this degrading controversy. This time, however, they stood next to tables with flowerprint cloths and coffee ursa, to welcome and reassure them, will be attending this school, named after a long-forgotten signer of the Declaration of Independence and son of Maryland.
At other schools, staff members and PTA volunteers moved about about five months ago "tags on their lapels. For a reporter who had once come to equate school integration with National Guard halfracks and 30-caliber machine guns, she was having so decently and intelligently was an unflaming experience.
Not that there werent ants. You could see signs in the front windows of some of the houses, but not very many, that declared, "Our Coca-Cola Buses?" or "Kangaroo Justice Deporta Our Children." A corporal's guard of these women made a ceremonial and picketing visit to one of the schools. On the front steps of the cardboard tombstone to represent freedom, justice and the neighborhood school. In front of it they placed plastic snap-draggons and they walked in a snap-draggon. They sang their own antibusing words to the Coca-Coca song.
Such is political expression in " shopping center land," where the folks don't have a lot of money and they can't store and the good clothes at another. The gourmet cooking at the local restaurant may induce an emotional dyspepsia, but the folk's upset may also be a gripping and funny story. There are many of the people who favor busing send their own children to private schools.
Marylanders also have been mised by numberless politicians cheap-shoting for votes on the party, President, to Mandel, their governor, they've been inflamed into thinking that a family has a constitutional right to free parking in front of a brick-wvee building and is unable to school. If there has been one issue on which you'd think the politicians might have displayed a little of that leadership they're not supposed to be able to handle. One politician, Charles Mathias, senior Senator and the
best thing to come out of Maryland since soft-shell crabs, has nothing on his record to apologize for, so of course, being a feary target, the ladies were singing nastie little songs about him.
None of which is to say that busing is going to secure anybody an education. The internal-combustion engine hasn't solved any other problems in our country, but it's one in the buffering field of education. But some issues are symbolic, just as some acts are.
For us in America, school integration is a symbolic act, just as the once de jure segregated school system of Price Georges County was symbolic race relations.
At this stage of the game we integrate our schools, not knowing what academic good may come of it. We do it for reasons of law and justice, but they don't include black and the white kids may like each other, and, even if they don't, they'll have more realistic
Busing may also destroy the real estate conspiracy, because in the future it will be impossible to build a concessionary buyer a convenient, local nilwhite school. But whatever the future show us, the present activities of the people in Prince Georges County suggest that at long last, this inimobile business issue is about to join the past.
Cargo Greater Safety Threat Than Skyjacking, Pilots Say
(C) Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
WASHINGTON - The greatest threat to air safety, in the opinion of men who fly the jetliners, is hazardous cargo.
reasons for their respective prejudices.
While the airline industry is mobilizing to stop skyjacking, there may be a worse threat to the passengers in the cargo hold.
Pilots have told us that 90 per cent of the 14,000 daily dormesti
"clarified" a ruling, that would have the effect of allowing even larger amounts of radioactive materials to be shipped.
Yet at the request of the radioactive manufacturers and the Air Transport Association, the company has its ministration has obligingly
The Airline Pilots Association, in conjunction with Naked Rader, has brought suits against the FAA charging that the "clarification" was an illegal rule change. The pilots are also
flights carry dangerous cargo.
Anything from carabolic and sulphuric acids to highly flammable fuels may on the next day be in danger. In case of an accident, the inbound ores are obvious and ominous are
Jack Anderson
Radioactive materials, for example, are illegally but routinely shipped by passenger planes. In 1701, a leak developed in a lead container holding radioactive material. It wasn't discovered until nearly two decades ago, due to dangerous radiation as the contaminated plane visited 11 cities.
rying to stir up a congressional investigation of the hot cargo problem.
The pilots' case against the FAA can be summed up in one dramatic statistic. To check the safety of truck cargo, the highway authorities have 15,000 inspectors. To check the safety of air cargo, the FAA has one inspector.
The FAA has said that their cargo checks were "comprehensive, an intensive questioning, and they acknowledged that only 'spot checks' were made of the cargoes. The pilots, however, are checked regularly and they have storage on board their planes.
Readers Respond
Zumwalt vs. Kissinger Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, the
The lack of dialogue allows those watching the movie to enjoy some of the beauty present. Redford is dwarfed by the magnificence of the background. If viewed closely, one can hear
Different Review, Differing Views
'He Survived'
To the Editor:
A different review of "Jeremiah Johnson" would have Robert Redford portraying a man from the southeastern United States, leaving the scene of the Civil War, and travelling to South Africa to search for what "mountain men" seek to find in bounteous solitude.
"Jeremiah Johnson" was a refreshing movie. Duke Callaghan captured the true beauty of the mountains. He showed the mountains from season to season and a diverse range of landscapes, trying to stay alive amid hostile Indians and the harsh wilderness.
and see wind blowing through the pines and the running of snow water. It is possible to feel a "Rocky Mountain high" as one gazes at the splendid scenery, and the rocky landscape illustrating the savagery of the Rockies and their looming superiority to men.
Luke A. Miller
Overland Park Junior
The lack of dialogue and sound, save those natural ones, wind an rain, is a refreshing break to the movie-goer who is usually manipulated by the sounds made by computer or produced in the studio.
The plot seemed to be a common one, man vs. the elements of nature. Redford was the man thrust against the early American wilderness. He survived.
Jazz
W. S. H.
In his review (Jan. 29) of the Modern Jazz Quartet (MJQ) concert, Tim Bradley reveals only that he knows nothing about jazz. The MJQ is decidedly not part of a "Gillespie school," like many in for-profit Lewis strives for a career with concertion of jazz. Also, Connie Kay was not a member of the original MJQ.
To the Editor:
More importantly, Bradley has no appreciation of jazz music, preferring and "too-tappers" He says that the group "soprificates" by implication, that it took its music too seriously, that the group "soprificic" and "nod-off music," and that jazz ought to be relegated to "smoke-filled taverns" where the listener can be doing something else (and also less likely to listen), fact, we are indebted to John Lewis for liberating jazz from such non-musical environs.
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor should type写稿, double-space exceed 500 words. All letters and condensation, according to space limitations and instructions must provide their name, Year in school and job, and must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
--congratulates the President for "An Honorable End."
As those who listened to the quartet know, the concert was one of the most musically exciting eections in recent KU history. Lewis' piano was rhythmic and melodic. Percy Heath's bass work was complex and complex. He prefers the rhythmic diversity of Grand Funk) and Bags lived up to his reputation as one of the great jazz artists. The group played some of its classic pieces, "Bags Groove" and "Django," a beautiful Lewis composition, as well as new music ("In Memoriam," "The Martyr" and the lyrical "Romance"). The band's greatest hits are "True Blues," which lived up to its name, and "Willow Weep for Me."
Bradley's attitudes about jazzy are indicative of America's casual or even oppressive apathy, as seen in the black artists—Parker, Powell, Coltrane, Dolphy—have died without receiving recognition of their accomplishments. While we know that a lot of squallers like Mick Jagger, our great musicians like Ornette Coleman and Sonny Rollins are forced to struggle for survival or, at least, Gordon, are forced into exile.
Wake up to the truth of American, and especially black, music. Only then will the earthly force of 'Trace live on.'
Buddy Bolden
2530 Redbud, Lawrence
A Dirty War
To the Editor:
The comment of John Bailey in the Feb. 1 Kansan displays such a frightening amount of irrational emotions that I was simply overcome by the realization of one of those poor victims of the capitalist, anti Communist fear-machinery, who are still convinced that Communists (I wonder, if he knows what this name really implies?) do not believe in the category that anthropologists term "human beings."
To him it seems only fair that Nixon ordered the heaviest bombing in the history of the Vietnam War to force the "enemy" back to the peace table. Because Bailey looks at such a case, he must have lived of hundreds of innocent civilians, as the action of a "careful, calculating man," it is naturally understandable that he
To me it seems that a dirty a fight with dust weapons from the American public, can only have a dirty end.
I do hope that Bailey does not intend ever to become President of the United States.
Wolf B. Reuter Lawrence Graduate Student
Pearson
This concerns the letter of Jim K. Swindler (Feb. 2).
One of the symptoms of a degenerate intellectual environment must certainly be the audacity of a graduate student to criticize three full professors in an argument amounting to this:
—In an open and pluralistic university all educational points of view are to be tolerated, except in which I personally disagree.
—It is merely illogical.
"I is merely 'hogreal.' To me he insists, "I must not agree with what the man says, but I will defend to the death his right to say it."
To Pearson Integrated Humanities Program he mutters, "Crush the infamous thing."
dynamic, gushy-browed Navy chief, has been making some stinging remarks in private about Henry Kissinger.
Charles Gentry Topeka Law Student
Zumwalt has complained that Kissinger's handling of American foreign policy, particularly in the Middle East, is flawed and drift like a "rudderless sin."
The outspoken admiral was caustic about Kissinger but a staunch supporter of senators. He grumped that "the Soviet Union has an active foreign policy" but the United States "regrettably has a passive one."
The Navy chief, whose famous Z-grams brought liberal reforms to the Navy that ranged from hair length to beer raids, is now tightening up again. Zumwalt has disputed complaints that his reforms had hurt the Navy, citing Vietnam and the high reenlistment rates. Nevertheless, he is quietly cracking down on lax discipline in a new campaign called "Operation Shape Up."
Women at Sea
The Navy is in an uproar over the assignment of two women aboard ship for a five-day cruise. They were selected, along with 33 male clerks, to work see how their team work affected actual ships.
Flanigan Flops
But the salty old admirals and captains who run the Atlantic fleet, manned aboard their vessels. The two ladies were rejected after being told they could take the cruise. The rejection upset navy Captain Kidd, who authorized the trip. Kidd got on the teletype to the Atlantic fleet, and the reigning Atlantic sails grudgingly agreed to take aboard both women and men. The candidates nominated by Kidd.
President Nixon is privately placing some of the blame for the energy crisis on his top business adviser in the White House, Peter Flanigan. This it he has done to cite the President's recent action in removing import controls from home heating oil. Flanagan had blocked the lifesaving of controls for the power plant that was overruled by the President.
Consumer oil experts,
however, say some of this positive action may be erased because Jack Bennett, a former Esso International vice president, will preside on po-ty-day oil policies at the department of the Treasury where he is an secretary.
Control of the White House's oil policy has also now been shifted to tough-minded Treasury Secretary George Shultz, no great friend of the oil industry. The industry had hoped the unit would stay quietly behind and be shifted to the Department of the Interior, which traditionally has danced to his oil's tunes.
Copyright, 1973,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
0
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
*Furnished at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates $6 a semester, 10 a year. Second class enrollment required. Employer and employment offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinion not necessarily accurate.*
Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . Susanne Shaw
Editor Joyce Neerman
Associate Editor Anita Cullen
Campus Editor Bob Simpson
Editorial Editor Robbins
Editorial Editor Joyce Dunbar, Anita Knopp, Hal Hatter, Jozanna Schild
Chiefs Office Linda Chapra, Glintie Micke, Neena Schild
Associate Campus Editors Robin Groom, Billy Morgan
Features Editor Bernard Warner
Featured Editor Mary Lund
Sports Editors Emerson Lyon, Cathy Sherman, Ginnie Micke
Rary Editor Jim Kendell, Cuthher Sherman, Ginnie Micke
Makeup Editors Harry Wilson, Anita Knopp
Photo Editors Brandon Prasad
Photographers Ed Lalie, Dan Laugning, Chandra Chellene
Dartmouth Bay Books John Bellley, Robert Duncan, Erik Kramer,
John Bellley, Robert Duncan, Erik Kramer
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
Business Manager Chuck Goodwin
Chairman Dana Rines Advertising Manager Steve Conner
Assistant Sam Sawyer
Administrative Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotional Manager Mike Hickey
Club Marketing Laura Deary
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
5
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Staff Writer
Mary-Pat Green Returns to Area to Promote 'Godspell'
Former KU Star Tours in 'Godspell'
A former University of Kansas theatre student, who two years ago decided to go to New York to tackle the theatre world, began a weekend in the roadshow of "Godspell."
The former KU student praises KU's theatre program . . .
The former student, Mary-Pat Green, is in back in the Kansas City-Topeka area this week to do promotion for "Gospodell." It will be performed at 8 p. Friday and at 2 p. and 8 p. Saturday in the Music Hall of Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., and at 3 p. Sunday in the Topeka Municipal Auditorium.
Green, who was born in Kansas City and received her first theatrical experience in productions at Shawnee Mission East High School, did about performing at the Music Hall.
BRESIDES HER high school experience, green also worked in the Loose Park Theatre under the Stars, one summer in "The B" and another summer in "South Pacific."
1989-70 as a freakman, Green made her KU stage debut in a children's theatre production of the "Snow Queen." Later that year, she played the gym teacher in "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" and the female lead in "The Three-Penny Opera."
so been so involved in theatre as a resman.
"I was a female-character type which they did not have at KU and which got me in my freshman year," she said.
Green said that she was lucky to have been so involved in theatre as a freshman
THE NEXT SEASON, Green performed in five KU production, "Marshall Shaw," and "Mancha," The "Unknown Soldier and His Wife," "SunSon" and "Ilyssatruta."
In "Lystistrata," which was the last performance she gave at KU, Green filled in for a coed who came down with appendicitis three days before opening night.
Green said that she came to KU with the intention of staying only a couple of years before going to an acting school. She said she took nearly every theatre class offered.
She said the regular KU season gave performers the chance to be in an experimental play one month and in a musical comedy the next. If the season's schedule does not allow enough variety, she said, the team should do something else. "We formerly do any kind of scene they want."
"This is a good beat school," she said. "You cannot beat it for shows."
SHE PAIRED such style classes as Restoration acting and said KU had helped her immensely with acting, dancing and costuming.
The only dissatisfaction she expressed was with the department of voice. She said there was nobody at KU who worked with musical comedy people. Musical comedy is a big field, she said, even for people who want to do nightclub work.
Green said she went to New York in September 1971. Although New York is difficult and expensive, she said, one must go to New York to be in musical theatre.
“WHEN I WENT to New York, I expected that the students in the professional schools would be very good and very ambitious,” she said.
She said she found that some students were as lackadaisical as students she had known elsewhere and that others were as ambitious as she was.
Green started auditioning in January 1972 and said she got many callbacks. In June 1973 she auditioned for the series.
spell." She said she was offered a part in
him, but had already taken the one in
"Goddam."
She had five auditions for "Godspell" spread out over a month, she said. For the first audition she had to sing a number and do a three-minute monologue. She said that during her performance, the audience was streamlined to three bars of the song and a minute of the monologue.
AFTER THE final audition, all that was said was "We'll be in touch with you."
Their company started towing Sept. 21. So far, its last bookING is May 38. Green said she had received an email that said she heard that the director of "Gresse" had wanted her as a first choice replacement for the Broadway show. If she were offered the chance she said she would
Green said that besides the New York production of "Goddess," which has run for 2% years, there were companies in seven major U.S. cities. She said that there were two touring companies, one that played major cities and stayed for two-week stands in New York or college and smaller cities usually for one or two-night stands.
HOWEVER, GREEN has nothing but praise for "Goddess." She said that he was one of the best better than the New York company. Steve Schwartz, who wrote the music and selects
Green said that all 10 cast members were on stage for the entire two-hour and 15-minute performance. There is a song and line for every 10 lines of dialogue, she said.
the casts, said theirs was the best vocal cast to perform it, she said.
Green said that her part in "Goddess" was an excellent start. The play's character gives her a chance to do a solo, which she would have been impossible in other plays.
The show requires so much energy the Green has lost 20 pounds since starting the tour. She said this was a considerable improvement to her tour is fed restaurant food.
"This is a better start than anyone could ever hope for," she said.
SUMMER JOBS
Guys & Gals needed for summer employment at National Parks, the University of Pennsylvania and Resorts throughout the nation. Over 35,000 students audited the course. Students in student assistance program send self-addresses STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research, the Department of Drive, Kaisseil, M9T 5901.
'Rock'Dulls Monkeys; Effect on Man Implied
YOU MUST APPLY EARLY
County Hires Disabled Janitors
If rock music does to humans what it does to monkeys, rock fans all over the country could become sedate or even lethargic, according to a recent study made at the
By ERIC MEYER Kansan Staff Writer
Handicapped persons from Cottonwood Inc., a training center for the physically and mentally disabled, took over janitorial duties at Douglas County Courthouse
The County Commission has hired the Cottontown trainees on an 30-day trial basis.
Gary Conda, director of Cottonwood, had he the idea in mind for over of year.
When he heard that former junior Richard L. Christie was leaving Cappuccino administration, the team
"We hope to use maybe four or six a night things get settled down," Conndra added.
**WERE GOING TO HAVE to prove our**
**reward to wait and see if we make it**
and I think
all of the workers will stay on the same floor and will be supervised by Cottonwood employee Jack Whitaker and All Skeet, county maintenance supervisor.
"I was going to talk to them about it sometime this summer," he said, "but when I heard about the opening, I decided I would as ready as we'd ever be, so i went down."
THE CREW WILL work five nights a week doing basic cleaning, dumping trash, stripping and waxing floors, sweeping, mopping and dusting.
Cottonwood will receive $500 a month for the services. The training center will keep payroll records and divide the money among the workers.
Conda said the first few nights would be experimental to discover who were the best workers and exactly how many would be needed each night. A crew of nine was used
"I anticipate all of the money will go to the clients and the supervisors," Condra said.
COTTONWOOD "CLENTS" as Condra calls them, are currently employed part- or
"We're trying to train them for employment while giving them part-time jobs," said Aimir. "This isn't the first such situation, but attempted, but it is the largest so far."
full-time in private homes and businesses.
suffer from either mild mental retardation or mild emotional disturbances, he said.
or mild emotional disturbances, he said. "Most of them can function well as long as they do not have a history of abuse."
COTTONWOOD CURRENTLY has 30 clients and plans to admit five more in the near future. All of them are from Lawrence or Douglas County, but Condra says some people from outside the county will probably be admitted.
No physically handicapped persons are working at the courthouse, although Cottonwood has several clients with physical disabilities.
Education School to Have 'Educators in Residence'
Four of Cottonwood's clients, all of them older than 18, are also students in the Lawrence schools. They spend a half-day in Cottonwood and half in vocational training at Cottonwood.
"FOR EXAMPLE," Conda said, "we'll teach people how to move lawns out here at Cottonwood and then have mow lawns in the community."
Food prepared in Cottonwood's instructional kitchens will be used in the Lawrence Meals on Wheels program starting Monday.
Training sessions in arts, crafts, food, lawn work, shop and cleaning are conducted at Cottonwood's new facilities southeast of Lawrence on 31st M. The center then tries to place its clients in on-the-job training and employment in Lawrence.
"Our goal is for them to go as far as they can. Some of the more capable can be here for three to six months of training and then be ready to go out on their own. Others may still be here 10 years from now. They will earn an income, but they will never be ready to go out on their own. It just depends on the case." he said.
"Of our 30 clients, we have placed two in full-time jobs and another two in part-time jobs, not including those who will work at the courthouse." Conda said.
Students in the school of Education will share the insights of experienced Kansas educators this spring in a new "Educators in Residence" program planned by their
COTTONWOOD HAS been at its new location for six months. Before moving, it was located at 245 Ohio St. and was known by the locals as The Cornwall. The center opened in the summer of 1982.
Daile Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said recently that the new program would bring educators to the campus who are considered outstanding by college and university standards and had deliberately limited the nominees to Kansas educators so that students, most of whom will teach in Kansas, would benefit from the experience of the Kansas educators in residence. The educators will have their students take faculty both informally and in classrooms.
Cottonwood is funded both by the
Scannell called the program an outgrowth of the school's continuing effort to blend theory and practice in preparing young men and women to teach in Kansas schools.
This spring, Scannell said, he hopes to have an outstanding superintendent, a secondary school principal and a classroom teacher. The graduate he had sought nominees for the program from the Kansas Association of School Administrators, the Kansas Association of School Principals and the Kansas chapter of the National Education Association.
"WE BELIEVE that professional training is a co-operative venture between the university and practitioners, and that program reflects that conviction," he said.
"It doesn't matter whether they like us or not," Scannell said. "We want people who will tell it to our students the way it is, not necessarily sing our song."
He said that the educators in residence
would be chosen by their peers, not by the faculty of the school.
government and by private gifts and contributions. A portion of an authorized half-mill levy in Douglas County and "tutition" money furnished by the State Department of Vocational Rehabilitation are its other major sources of revenue.
Conda has been director since July 1971. Prior to that he was an administrator in the Lawrence and Eudora school systems. He served in vocational and special education.
11:00 a.m.
to Midnight
Daily
University of Wisconsin.
The study showed that factory noise and
monkeys by making
deer dull and quiet.
Whether this means factory workers and rock music devotees will undergo serious physiological changes has yet to be determined, however.
But several such noise studies in different parts of the country have indicated those results, according to John F. Brandt, associate professor of speech and drama at the University of Kansas, who is considered an authority on psycho-acoustics.
"When the animal cannot escape the noise, hearing is temporarily impaired, and there may be a disruption of other body functions," Brandt said. "It's the same in a factory, press room or a session of loud rock music—for a while, the hearing is dulled."
DIRTY
HERBIE'S
NOW OPEN
SPECIALS
Tuesday Night 7:00 p.m.to Midnight Pitchers $1.00 Wednesday Night Ladies Night 7:00 to Midnight Draw 10 Friday TGIF 3:00-6:00 Pitchers $1.00
Parking Regulations Scrutinized by SenEx
The University Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) discussed Monday the report of a subcommittee appointed to study parking regulations and enforcement, said Henry Snyder, associate dean of research administration and member of SenEx.
708 Mass.
SenEx also report a report on the progress of revisions being made in the parking area.
Revision of the parking system has been under consideration recently. More than 35,000 parking tickets were issued last semester. A system devised last year, the result is more reliable than by letters, has not been fully implemented and is causing confusion.
Proposals have been made for changes in
the graduated fine system, methods of anpeals and in towing regulations.
SenEx recommended two students for positions on the ROTC curriculum Committee, Snyder said. The committee, and the team who are now being revived. The committee has been assigned to study the entire curriculum and to consider having ROTC courses listed jointly with other departments in the university and taught by teams with other departments.
snyder said the Chancellor had accepted a SenEx recommendation to circulate the report of the Chancellor's all-unit committee and the committee was appointed in the summer.
Glover Proposes New Bill Offering Kansas Vets Tuition
Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, introduced a bill Monday in the Kansas House of Representatives that would grant Kansas veterans free tuition for higher education.
Glover announced the tuition bill with two others and said the House Federal and State Affairs Committee would start hearings on the bill at 3:18 p.m. Thursday in the Statehouse.
Glover's bill for veterans would grant free tuition at the state's post-high school institutions, which include vocational technical schools, junior colleges, Washburn University and schools under the Board of Regents.
A second bill introduced would require any candidates and political organizations to file a public statement of income and employment in the week before a primary or general election.
Glover told the Kansan that the only requirement was that the veterans had to be enrolled in school.
He said that Kansas veterans paid a total of $162 million to the University of Kansas in the fall of 1972.
The existing Kansas law requires such a disclosure 30 days after each election. A Shawnee County District Court judge last month unconstitutional on grounds of vagueness.
The third bill would prohibit any disciplinary action against members of the Army or Air National Guards because of length of hair or beards, muscars or other
Marzolff said he had special praise for Delta Chi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Alpha Tau Omega and Delta Upsilon.
facial hair.
"It appears that their efforts are going to produce 40 per cent of the total," he said. "I think the communities these men went out in really accepted them."
The 1973 March of Dimes Campaign in the Lawrence area will reach its goal of $2,500, in part because of canvassing done by volunteers from five University of Kansas fraternities, Frank Marzolo, local campaign chairman, said Monday.
Glover said that this bill would help prevent a manpower shortage in the units. He said there was no national emergency at the present time and, if one should develop, the governor would be authorized to state standards for hair length and facial hair.
Fraternity Men Aided Campaign Chairman Says
Approximately 120 fraternity volunteers worked in the campaign, Marzolf said.
Every Tuesday
5 p.m. till 8 p.m.
SPAGHETTI Night $100
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
809. W. 23rd
Lawrence, Kansas
843-1886
Midwest
SUA Classical Films presents
Alexander Nevsky
directed by Sergie Eisenstein and D. J. Nassiliev
Woodruff 7:30 & 9:30
Wednesday, Feb. 7 75+
SUA Film Society
Presents a program of
surrealistic shorts
TWOMEN and a WARDROBE, by Roman, Polansky. BRACTACT, by Ronald. Brenner, Peterson. MESHES OF THE AFTERNOON, by Maya Deren. GHOSTS BEFORE BREAKFAST, by Hans Richer. UN CHIEN ANDALOU, by Luis Bun-
3:30, 7:30, 9:30
75c
WOODRUFF
Thursday, Feb. 8
SUA Special Films presents TOUCH OF EVIL
by Orson Welles
Music by Henry Mancini
Woodruff
Monday, Feb. 12
SLEEPING BEAUTY
2004 NOTES
SUA Popular Films
Frank Zappa's 200 MOTELS — plus—
Part of Captain Marvel
Woodruff 7:00 & 9:30
February 9 & 10
60rcu
SUA Science Fiction Journey to the Center of Time
by David L. Hewitt and Episode 2 of Phantom Empire.
Woodruff Tuesday, Feb. 6
7:30
75c
6
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Carol Mesigh, executive director for the Crittenton Home in Topeka, explains the reluctance of society to accept the unwed mother.
Home Aids Troubled Girls
Less than a block from the Topeka Country Club is an imposing brick home. In the driveway are two late model cars. The door is open.
A sign that reads "Please ring before entering" is the first indication that this is not a privy's residence but the Florence of their mother for unwed mothers and "troubled teens."
"Secluded, sympathetic care" was the "motto of the home's first director and is still the basis of the care offered to girls who come here. But according to Carol Mesig, current director of the home's Criticism group, the focus should be on the individual needs of each girl.
"Pregnancy may be the problem or one of the problems of a girl who comes here," she said. "As one of the two licensed maternity services in the state, we offer the continued schooling, intensive counseling and neutral counseling." In her own young girl who is pregnant and unmarried."
IN THE 42 years of its existence, the home at 360 Western has cared for hundreds of girls. Most have been between the ages of 5 and 18, most are pregnant and most have been single.
But as Mesig points out, "You cannot generalize about these girls. Every case is
Girls have come to the home from every social class, and have varied in age from 13 years old to 52.
And under the newly-instituted "Troubled Teens" program, a girl is no longer in high school. She has services at the home. One third of the 15 girls currently in residence are nonpregnant teenagers who are there because they have emotional problems at school or at home.
Although Topeka's Crittenson home was built specifically as a facility for unwed mothers, it is not the only one.
and residential location offer a homelike atmosphere to the girls who live there. The three-story structure provides adequate living space. An average of 20 girls live there at a time.
ITS ROOMS include a spacious third-floor recreation area, offices and conference rooms, a laundry, a workroom and a classroom.
On the second floor of the home are the girls' bedrooms, many of which are decorated with the bright bedspreads and the animals suggestive of a college dormitory.
On a nightstand in one of the rooms is a stack of diapers and a yellow infant suit.
"Some of the girls buy things for their babies," Mesig explained. "Those girls who decide to relinquish their children may send the things along with them. Sometimes they get to give birth and a baby ring to be given to her child when it is age as she will know that she cared."
On the main floor of the house is the postpartum room, used by the girls when they return from the hospital after their babies are delivered.
GIRLS NORMALLY spend the final three months of their pregnancies at the home. According to Mesigh, they are seldom bored.
"The girls are kept busy," she said. They don't at around waiting for things to go on.
The girls are awakened at 7 a.m. on weekdays, Mysaid said, and after preparing for school they sit down to a family style breakfast in the common dining room.
Residents of the home are able to continue their education in a special school for pregnant teens located in a nearby church. The school is staffed by nine teachers from two Topka school districts. They currently instruct 55 girls.
According to Mesigh, the school was
begin in 1988 as an alternative to private tutoring for pregnant teenagers in the Topeka area who were not able to attend public schools.
"It is cheaper and more effective to teach the girls in bulk than to provide homebound teachers," she said. "And it gives the girls an opportunity to talk with other pregnant teenagers and benefit from the school's emphasis on health care as well."
"WE TRY TO teach parents for those girls who decide to keep their babies," she continued. "There is a high percentage of abuse and neglect among unwed mothers who do not know how to care for their children."
Health care classes at the school include instruction in prevent post-natal care, child feeding and nutrition.
The Crittent home also offers courses in typing, shorthand and other business skills for girls who already have their high school diplomas.
Appointments with social-service case workers and obstetricians are a regular part of the girls' schedules. A nearby shopping center offers Crittleton residents spend money they have earned in a baby-sitting program sponsored by the home.
IN ADDITION, an art teacher comes to the home two nights a week to instruct the girls in macrame, pottery-making or another of 15 or 20 art media, and Red Cross volunteers visit the home to lead the girls in recreational activities. Through an arrangement with a local theater, the girls may attend a free movie once a week.
Each girl is also assigned duties which she must perform around the house, Meshig said, such as helping to prepare meals and preparing it is required to keep her own room clean.
Most of the girls who come to the Critten-
See HOME Page 8
IRENA SCHMIDT
'We are here to show the girls alternatives and to help them deal with their individual situations.'
Mesligh chair an informal afternoon staff meeting. Sherry Baer Hatch (from left) and Ruth Fry Hatch (from left), my housemother, and I
JOHN SCHWARTZ
while Eileen Henry (top left), the home's nurse, and Richa Morris (top right), assistant director, discuss other needs for the girls.
The room is empty except for the speaker, who stands at the front of the room. The audience is seated in a semi-circle facing the speaker. The walls are covered with a patterned wallpaper, and there are several chairs and tables arranged around the room.
Hartenberg listens to the problems of one of the girls. Social work is part of the Criterion services to prepare the girl either to keep or relinquish her child.
text by MYLA STARR photos by ED LALLO
1
Henry teaches a health preparedness class in the recreation room of the home. The girls are told what to take to the hospital to make their stay easier.
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
7
Week Crucial for'Hawks
By BILL WILLETS
Kongan Staff Writer
Although the University of Kansas basketball squad won't play until Saturday, this week may be the most important of the season for them.
because it is their last full week of practice this season, the Jayhawks must prepare not only for Saturday's Big Eight game but also Monday's. The remaining games on their schedule.
“This week is crucial for us,” said junior
Tom Kivishi. “After Saturday we’ll
Owens Stares Intently
be playing two games a week and won't be able to work ruck in practice."
Both Kiviti and Jayawhay Coach Ted
concern over Saturday's
meeting with Nighrawe.
"the psychological factor of playing at home won't be as great," Kviso said, "because we were beaten by them in the Big Eight tournament and they know they can
Nebraska scored a 74-72 victory over KU in the second round of the tournament, after the 'Hawks had been defeated by Kansas State, 91-70. Krivisto said that KU played only one good half in that tournament, the first half against Kansas State, and that the
Disgust Displayed
team wasn't able to reorganize after its opening loss.
presence in the starting lineup.
Owens, too, expressed concern about the Huskers.
He said that part of the difficulties stemmed from adjusting to Dannv Knubt's
"They played well in the tournament and beat us," he said. "We are better now, and they have apparently not been playing as well." he said.
Owens' main source of worry isNU coach Joe Cipriano, who has never won at Allen Field House in his 10-year coaching career at Nebraska.
"It's almost an obsession with him to beat us here," Ows said.
Owens compared NU's loaing streak in Allen Field House to KU's 20-game skid on the road, which the Jayhawks recently broke against Iowa State.
“After a while those kind of things get a little hard to swallow.” he said.
Kivisto called KU's Monday night practice session one of the best of the
Colorado's Kingsley Adams was the meet's only double winner. The sophomore captured the long jump with a leap of 5.02m, and the triple jump with an effort of 94.8%*.
The final points scored in the triangular meet were by senior Bob Borknessel as he placed first in the 60 yard low hurdles with a 7.1
Kivisto said he hoped that KU's excellent play carried over into the NU contest.
Frustration Builds
"Haase (Dale) and Barrow (Wilson)
really looked good," he said, "and we
played great as a team. We had a lot of
spirit."
"We believe we're going good now," he said.
Kansas had won six big Eight indoor titles before the Huskers unseated the 'Hawks last year. The Jayhawks could manage only a fourth-place finish in four events other than the high jump, low hurdles and shot-put competition.
He was quick to point out that the 'Hawks were not underestimating Nebraska, a loser team.'
"We realize that if we play hard there
isn't a team around we can't handle," Kivito said.
Kivisto said he thought there was still room for improvement on the KU squad.
Rudy Guevain placed first in the shot-put with a toss of 57.3% "Koebel Kensing of Nebraska finished second in the shot-put competition with a toss of 51.4" .
"We knew from the beginning of the year that we could do well," he said. "The potential was there. We haven't come around vet, though. We can get better."
Gary Johnson, Lawrence senior, was one of three first-place finishers for KU as he captured the high jump competition with a leap of 6'9". The jump equalized his season's
Kenya Track Champion Signs 3-Year Contract
The Jayhawks were not at full strength, having to leave behind high jump Barry Schur, spinner Peter Scavuzo and pole vaulter Terry Porter because of the flu.
Nebraska, Kivisto said, is not really big and not really quick.
"They try to get their offense working and not make mistakes," he said. "They don't."
Kivisto said that the Iowa State victory was the best KU effort of the season. It was the best the team has played together, he. Kivisto said that the Jahyhaw's play against Oklahoma was just good enough to win.
Kivisto be believed any NU victories would come as a result of spirit. He said that he was looking for a spirited game Saturday night.
The International Track Association ITA signed the Olympic steeplechase champion rule.
NEW YORK (AP) - Kip Keino, Kenya's famed distance runner, did a sudden turnaround Monday and signed an American pilot who admitted "will shock in Nairobi."
Nebraska Wins Triangular Meet; Jayhawks Last
Defending Big Eight indoor track champion Nebraska won its own triangular meet Saturday by sweeping the 15 game Colorado and the university of Kansas.
With a balanced effort the Nebraska
squash team defeated Colorado
Zoraleo and Florida, Kara Jones ended with,
a 7-6, 6-4 victory.
departed for his home in Africa. "I'm pretty sure I will lose my job—and my home—because of this decision," the 33-year-old Keino said. "I asked my superiors before if it would be okay for me to turn pro. They said no."
Coach Owens is taking the same approach to the NU game as he did last Saturday against Oklahoma when he refused to participate in a stopping Sooner standout Alvan Adams.
Twenty-four hours earlier, Keino had said from an amateur meet in Toronto that he would not run for money. Then, late Sunday, he was talked into it.
Keino said, since coming to North America for a series of events, he had refused TTA President Mike O'Rara's bids in Los Angeles, Albuquerque, San Francisco and Toronto. O'Hara even visited Keino in Nairobi last fall.
"We don't spend time worrying about how we'll play them." Owens said. "We'll do the same."
Owens listed 6-foot-2 junior Lee Harris and freshman Jerrell Fort as potential troublesmakers for the 'Hawks. Fort scored one of the teams' first meeting in Kansas City.
"He asked if I could spare a half-hour at the airport," he told. "I said okay and we had a long discussion. I finally decided to stay." He could have waited for many years. We would now run for Klp.
A Ryan vs. Keino mile run now gets top billing. Event winners in the weekly program receive $500 and expenses, runners-in-place and third place finishers $100 and fourth $50.
The ITA inaugurates its program March 24 at Los Angeles featuring such other track and field names as Jim Ryn, Bo Seagreen, Bady Manson, Jim Hines and Bob Haves.
Then. O'Hara gave it one final shot.
"All in all, Nebraska is a good team." Owens said, "but they are a young team."
Kivisto told the KU tradition, a large arena like Allen Field House, and large, enthusiastic camps sometimes inspired a visiting team to play its best ball.
Kivisto would have a hard time convincing NIU Coach Cloriano of this, however.
"Coach Cipriano would probably just ... be Kansas than any other team in the Big Eight."
Last year the Jayhawks scored a 57-55 overtime victory over Nebraska on a last-second shot by reserve Fred Boslevac, who stole in bounds pass with two seconds remaining and made the winning layup as the gun sounded.
'Hawks Fail To Qualify In Nationals
The University of Kansas Women's volleyball team met with tough going at the National Women's Volleyball Championships at Brigham Young University over the weekend. The squad failed to win for the finals in round-robin competition.
Marlene Mawson, assistant professor of physical education and coach of the Jayhawk volleyball team, said the squad was unfortunate.
"We were placed in a pool which had the second and fourth place finishers of the tournament," Mawson said. "It could have been different if we had been in a different pool."
Only the top two finishers of each pool advanced to the finals, Mawson said.
"We finished third in our pool," Mawson said, "and it has to be one of the toughest games we've ever played."
Long Beach State captured the top spot at the tournament, followed by Brigham Young, UCLA, Southwest Texas State and Hawaii.
Mawson said that with the exception of the Eastern and Southern teams the competition was excellent. The power was on in the West Coast and Texas, she said.
The Jayhawks lost their first contest of the tournament to Brigham Young, the second-place winner. The 'Hawks won their victory by downing New York State University.
In a late-night contest California State College at Fresno defeated the Kansas team. Players from both sides were slow in their reactions.
"It was a very late game," Mawson said, and "and neither team was very quick."
Western Georgia became the Jayhaws second victim before the 'Hawks lost to Southwest Texas State in the final game. The Texas State finished fourth in the tourney.
Jayhawks Seek Playoff Chance Against K-State
If the Jayhawks win the game they force a three-way tie for first place with Kansas State and Fort Hays. If they should lose the game, Oklahoma and are eliminated from the playoffs.
Oklahoma watched a mammoth 16-point lead slowly dwindle to a mere four points with 11:03 remaining. But the home crowd lifted the Sooners over the slump, and Breathtuit hitting jumps of 25, 12 and 15 feet, began the final charge.
Breakhit, having a poor percentage from the free throw line, was a prime target for the Missouri last-ditch foulers. However, he sank both shots of a one-and-one with 2:25 remaining and gave the Sooners a decisive five-point margin.
Tigers Stunned by Oklahoma
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)—The Oklahoma Sooners, sparked by reserve John Breathwil withstood a furious second-half Missouri Monday night to upset the seventh-ranked Tigers 90-77 in Big Eight basketball action.
The University of Kansas women's basketball team tries for its fifth straight year in the state play-offs as they match Oklahoma State at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Allen Field House.
Peggy Glym, Topeka junior and team manager, said the team should have a good chance against K-State. She added that they will win because the "mom," slow in starting but finishing strong.
Now it's the women's turn.
Glynn said that the state playoff tournament was organized in 1968 and that the Jayhawks have gone to the playoffs each year. They won the tournament in '71.
Glynn said the admission was free.
The game was locked up when John Gorman sole a Steve Blind pass with 1:09 left. And Breathwit's pass underneath to Advan Adams for the layup stretched the Oklahoma margin to nine. Then Breathwit and Gorman came through with successive jumps followed by Evans' one-and-one free throw tosses to clinch the victory.
Tony's 88 Service
Prepared!
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starting service
Lawrence, Kansas KC554
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KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.1
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kanman are offered to all students and their families for PLACEMENT WALK ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE Country Shops - 3-18s. No, of Kaw
fruit, fruit culture, natural fertilizer, natu-
ture, collocates, gas heating & cooking pow-
ders, bicycles incl 10 speed, ideas, old pot hea-
ter, pots, saucers, bowls, dishes & isubl篮 baskets & wood crates. Fireplace
coord price. Baled alfaifa. brune & wheat straw.
grow some plants. Grown in Kaw. 842-3185 Herbert Allemendr 18
ANTIQUE CLOTHES-833 Maita, Washougat, Mo.
826 or 1044 H.S. Furst; Victorian mottled
or niblocked; or 816 or 1144 Victorian mottled
and latter.
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Component with room
monitors 160 at Ray Bonehack basement stereo room
and 100 at Ray Bonehack basement stereo room.
Magmaxev 100, Watt Stereo Component System
pickup turbines, turntable, 16" Speaker, pickup
turbines, turntable, 16" Speaker, horn in air suspension acoustically sealed cabinets, door handle, RV Rain Scotchgain's basement stero room. 929 Mass.
Rain Scotchgain's basement stero room. 929 Mass.
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Ray Stoneback's .929 Moss. **2-12**
MagnaVax 20 warranty Component System Inventory. New $19,990 off the Bay Stompback & $39 MagnaVax 40 warranty Components.
Floor Sample 50 watt Magnavox component system air suspension. Air Suspension acoustically sealed cabinets sold new for $79.99 now just $299.90 with new warranty. Air Ray Stockholm's Bassinet kit and many more.
Zenith circle of sound stereo for sale AM-FM
861-6033 100 watts peak power Call AR-
861-6033
New Sony. Quad Systems now in stock at Ray Stonebank's 929 Mass. 2-12
Fomantik AM, FM receiver with IR support, record capacity 20GB, FM radio 85.95MB, Vimana loss less than 1%. Batteries 12-24 hours. Phone 826-8600. Web site www.fomantik.com.
**Realistic LAB 24-A automatic/manual turntable.**
**cartridge included.** Almayer new **58**, **3413 after 7**.
Storrie Sound System. Tones $100-$150, tape deck,
card reader. Power supply. Like new. $299; Call
amplifier. Like new. $799; Call amplifier.
Tail-aim-suppe SYST 300 watt IMES, like new.
Tail-aim-suppe SYST 2000 s. 150 watt IMES
JBL-D40: 848-110-110
2 month old Black & White 10" TV. Must sell.
call 843-5810.
2-6
V4-WV- runs good, needs body work. Cheap.
Call Kaye, 864-6309. 2-7
P.A. Biomagnified Alte-Laerating Vale of the
Sea in the Canyon. Volumes 1 and 2,
striped and modified custom 20 "brain
tissue."
You're at an advantage.
You don't.
Western Civilization Notes-Now on sale! There are two ways of looking at it:
Either way, in a classroom at a museum, the same thing—"New Analyzes of Western Literature," Available thirteen times a month"—is the one to be taught.
RAY AUDIO STREEO WARHUSEE The fastest
cost plan for the RAY AUDIO STREEO WARHUSEE 842-358-1947 - 842-358-1947.
1970 CORVETTE convertible, very good condition.
841-3538 or 841-9328, ask Mink for 841-2838,
841-3538 or 841-9328, ask Mink for 841-2838.
Sterio components--component 8150, receiver,
8160, chaser, changer, AF speakers, Wollanack
and Pandora, sl278-chas
Oldtown Toronto, blue, white whitei power, juice
New fire bricks & brush kit
New fire bricks & brush kit
Luxury car wash & cleaning
SKI-ISBN=强新 K2 Four Comp 185m. Hart
Jawkins XII 195m. Callum after 6.30m, 6.40m,
7.00m.
1965 Chevrolet S28 convertible, 32HP. H-P,
40-75cc. ABS. 10-speed manual. Bed top is
badly worn on top lip with a 47,000 lb. Perf.
weight.
1986 Javinell, Console auto, power steering, buckets,
snow, 842-6809
2-9
Drafting Table, S 3 x D drawing board, draw
the design on the paper as described in
dissembles to fit in car. $75.00 - 84.50 - 587-0
- 296-0
AKC St. Bernard puppies. Champion blood lines.
Baltimore. $50.00. Mont Saint-Marc
Mont Saint-Marc 842-323-219
2-19
Alvance 12-string guitar and piano case in excellent condition
and was sold on old $750. Welcome to
to play it. Call 861-288-1530.
TRAC 4015 tape deck with built-in pre-amp and accessory options. $279.00 or best offer. Call 845-787-7888.
Sony TC-35B tape disk, excellent condition
satisfied. $22.00 new, will sell for $12.00.
$89.99 used.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1956 Bandier American - Good running condi-
tion.
1955 Bandier American - cared $30 or best offer -
842-8253. 842-8253.
STEREO-High-quality compact system. Craig 8 track, with AM-FM stereo. Includes power unit, dual phase phase bearer in a tenon, temna, and five tone speaker at a year old, excellent condition. #41-5266 with 7 and 2-8
For sale: 4 tires & 2 snow tires, practically new,
80 plus old tires. Call 811-346-1957. After 5.30 pm.
(Phone number is changed).
1963 PORSCH College, Radialh. Abarth abexh. aur-
boreum, 425-427; 843-845. offer 843-702 for 6.00 p.m.
for examinations.
B flat B Flat Clarinet, very good condition,
new packs, $70. B call 84-1-462-. 2-12
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEER FARMING? BARKING IN PAR-FLOR LOTS? BUILD A HOME FROM a STUDIO from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Preference to reasonable rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates in. Santa Anita. Inches 123D. Ap. 9¢.
Lawrence Auction House
642 MASS
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Three Days
25 words or fewer $2.00
each additional word $0.20
each additional word $0.20
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
Let Us Sell It For You
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows. Bathroom, en-suite bedroom. NURSERY. and near town.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing 1 bed and 2 bedrooms, furnished and unfurnished in a spacious living room, heating and air, pool and laundry. Must utilize bathroom. Call 842-820 or see at 11AW 9th, april 842-820 or see at 11AW 9th, april 842-820
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the MALE C
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
Those powerful spants surround a quiet outdoor gym. A pair of wooden shuffleboards, a basketball playground, a indoor gym room, or even an old school football field.
Cure by and with these new apartments Bent
water bells are paid. Lesser of various lengths are
water bells are paid. Lesser of various lengths are
Embalage Carr 842-1651
2411 Louisiana 842-5522
ROOM: 1 single or double for KU men. Near KU男
References required. K84-7232 for KU男
848-7756
Sleeping room, single and double furnished for 2 persons. Two bedrooms, 13 and 2 beds from Union. Phone - 845-747-6774.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall events, two bedrooms w/Judy; Quitter ubai-baon location; Pool and gas-light, landed courtyard; Executive management. 2000 West 6th Avenue. Eclectic.
Two houses. Two bedroom house and a three
room house. Will need to students 843-731-6
2-4
Ready to make a move? Permitted room for rent
at the office. Please provide your contact
information with a 10-minute call. For information
alongside our office, please visit www.faithchurch.org.
Nicely furn. apt, for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid 843-8534.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
Appt. to sub-leave. Clean, furnished, 1 bedroom.
Apartment or couple - off-attendance:
663-847-6848
663-847-6848
The located rooftop rental listing in rental housing law Lawrence Rental Exchange, $850 for 2-bedroom unit.
APPS FOR RENT extend from Oliver Hall for late
nights (can be shared) One $50 Man on
lead (can be shared) One $50 Man on
lead
NOTICE
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
and furniture for compartmentalization. Call 813-269-0500.
For compartmental information call 813-269-0500.
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-C in an
Mahogany kitchen. A slab to eat at 400-296-3840,
a slab to住 at 400-296-3840, a large rib plate
to eat at 400-296-3840, a large bread plate
to eat at 400-296-3840, $5 pound of beef $3 lb. chicken plate
to eat at 400-296-3840, a large soup bowl
and a phone VI 290-521-5456, a large Soy Sauce
Private parking stalls adjacent to campus Phone:
843-8543 2-7
GAY LEBERATION: business meeting Monday,
7:00 p.m., Union; SOCIAL MEDIA meeting
Monday, 8:30 p.m.; CALLING CENTER:
COUNSELING AND NAP, call 864-356 for information. OFFICE
B12, Union; 864-4098, P.O. Box 234, Lawrence.
No charge, list your house, apartments, duplexes,
landlocks, hotels, and waiting. For more info call Home Locate
Houses, apartments, farmes, all areas,
all prices, no situation too difficult. Home Lo-
vings.
MANY GROUPS OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR
STRESS. You should not stand the
gardel of self as that which must be
you should investigate the idea of Ayn
Rand. Contact K.U. Students of Objectivism at 20-
804-635-1200.
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items.
Country Shop, 971 North, and Open 9-7, 7 days a week.
UNDERGRADES. WE'VE GOT SOMETHING BETT-
TER. Transfer to School for International Training.
Limited enrollment on small, multi-cultural
population; classroom environment; popula-
tion, peace, environment; development;
of the four semesters abroad; Barbier of
Room 10, School for International Training, Brat-
tain Room 10, School for International Training, Brat-
tain Room 10.
The person who聘 lost $20 outside the Un-
ion. PISL, job for Mark. 31, contact me at
2015. id for Mark.
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
tf
842-7098.
Wanted: Roommates. 4 Bdm, modern duplex.
Rent $375 & utilities. Call 824-6442. 2-6
Two girls need a third roommate to share a
room. Two girls need two-bathroom rooms.
Room Call 843-2507. Room
Call 843-2508.
Instructor to teach 3-finger style on 5-sing-
ball. Call 842-7301 after 6:00. 2-6
Sax player wanted to join existing band. Excellent financial opportunities and travel, student or professional background required.
Need roommate to share house with two other humans. Utilities paid. 842-1110. 2-6
Wanted: quiet female to share 2 BR apt. sponsorship. $85 am. call 842-1264 evenings. 2-7
Do you make candies? We buy them. Call Dennis, 841-2088, 1704 W. 24th. Apt. 101. 2-8
induces student wife seeking full-time employ-
ment in New York City, marianne, some French. Willing to work hard and learn English as a foreign语.
1945 - 2008
Casa de Taco
Eat with us—
We try to please.
1105 Mass. 843-9880
PEUGEO
Now in StockAmerica's First Choice Ten Speed
Poupeot PX-10-E $225.00
Pougeot vo-8 $117.50
RIDE ON BICYCLES
843-8484
We need seauture. Any medium. Call Dena-
141-208-794. 170. W.4th. Apt. 101.
2-8
Formate female wanted to share expense with
partnership. 825.00 plus utilities. 842-6401. 2.6
ROOMMATES WANTED: two roommates needed to share large farmhouse ten miles southeast of Lawrence. Reliable transportation necessary; 880-2424, including utilities and food. 24-124 after six.
HELP WANTED
STRANGER IN TOWN》 As an Aven representi-
tive setting, Aven products in vinyet tree boxes. Call
Aven at (801) 325-7200.
We need your artistic abilities. If you have
experience in art, 841. 285-7481, 1704-2
84th. Apt. 101.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses
Wednesday and weekend hours. Phone 543-6160
Weekend and weekend hours. Phone 543-6160
Part-time distributing for the Blind Service
10:45 - 12:30 p.m.
842-695-0855 fb 6 to 7.30 Wed, 08/14
Employment Opportunities
McKenna's needs full and time help for the week beginning July 27. Send payment by mail to startlingjay.com. You will be hourly in person, on Saturday from 10am-4pm.
Permanent future for responsible executive or sales team member to manage public. For permanent resident only, no travel. Expenses paid at hospital costs offer stable career with substantial income and managerial position.
STUDENT EMPLOYMENT in Yellowouts and all U.S. National Parks. Bookteller tells where and how to apply. Send $5. Arno胶管, Money-back guarantee. Rexburg IDA 8440. Money-back guarantee.
Part time secretary needed, must be able to type, journal background helpful. Hours will be 10:30 AM, 10:30 PM and 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Call: Jennifer Yearbook Office, K-884, Union, 664-3728
Part time saleman needed; must be neat. Be available to meet job requirements. Apply in person to Website's Mobile Homes 340 West 12th Street, New York, NY 10007.
Salesman wanted. Sell advertising in new campa-
gage magazine. Work on commerCIAL brochure.
3-12
Hard working men for part time help. Noones
working hard to apply. Maily apply in person.
Showroom 1327, 1328
Young, energetic, intelligent & attractive women for junior positions. Especially women. Apply via Virtue Funds.
LOST
Loat. Swiss Army pocket knife. 3 inches long.
Switzerland. Sentimental value. 2-5.
Call: 844-1144
LOST- One now chain (tire chain). If found,
please enter 843-2540.
2-12
PERSONAL
Cat answers to Hookah. Last seen highway 49—
Call 414. Mon moss. old light, black shrapes
Call 414. Morn moss. old light, black shrapes
At Red Barron, Sat, Jan 27, double breasted navy
uniform. At Red Barron, Sun, Feb 10, No quail-
ries. At Red Barron, Nov 16, 135-108. (Bob)
WINTER IS STILL HERE--germine surcarp are
parked. Bargain price $35.95. Sunflower $24.95.
Lenny Zero's Record Store is going out of business. All credit and records in our used records rack must be collected by no later than Feb. 9. The records from those businesses are Feb. 9. Thank you for your business. 2-9
Writer Wanted--New magazine needs responsibl- upper-classman to cover departments for courteer teacher education. Fame, prestige, pride, reciept- Contact Benn Mair, 846-3800 or 100-629-nectout.
TYPING
Wanted: Any kind of tying-these, term paper
in typing management. Work in campus near big
campus in typing management.
Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other mine types. Mining. Have electric typewriter with plea type. Accurate and prompt typing. Resume written, spelling corrected. Phone 844-9544-MS. Mrs. Wright.
SERVICES OFFERED
WANT IT TO START Call PerFORMANCE
WANT IT TO START Call PerFORMANCE is imported
poisoned-into, we will fix it!
stewing and altering for the college girl. Pick up the eggs and boil them overnight with coats hemmed and relished 8&
MISCELLANEOUS
CARS BOUGHT AND SOLD. For the best deal
Ventures, GI. Joe's Used Cars, $85.
CARVEN, 842-808-3980
FOUND
Very friendly gray and white male cat with a
suitable coat. Please reclaim him by
author 81-244-234. Please
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
---
NEOLEPOINT-RUGS
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2656
10-5 Mon..Sat.
8
Tuesday, February 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kanaan Photo by BILL JONES
Goodbye
The KU Endowment Association has purchased property at 1234 Owens Valley and a possession of H by June 1. According to Young's Insurance, the purchase price is $895,000.
located on the property will be torn down and be incorporated with adjacent association properties to be used as a future building site. The property was purchased from Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy. Ling said the house contained mostly rooms and could accommodate 10 persons. He said only persons occupied the house when he gave nudges for them to move.
California Contemplates Reverting From 'New Math' to Old Methods
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Staff Writer
The old method of learning mathematics by rote may make a comeback soon if developments in California, one of the first states to introduce "new math" into its educational system in the '60s, are any indication.
California now seems to be having second thought about what was 10 years ago considered a revolutionary method of instruction.
According to Dr. Alexander Law, chief of the California Department of Education's Office of Program Evaluation, California sixth graders showed declining scores on nationwide standardized math tests during the last three years. California may change state taxes, pending the outcome later this month of state legislature hearings on new math
It would appear from the decline in computing skills that new math, based more on memorization of rules, has its drawbacks. If the downward slide in math scores were to show this in states besides California, new math could be on its way
IN KANAS, there does not appear to be much disillusionment with new math. A class at Lawrence High School was a pilot class for a University of Illinois experimental project when new math was being introduced across the country. But instead of switching over completely to new math, it took much of the traditional math concepts.
Darrell Failen, mathematics instructor at Lawrence High, said Friday that math teachers must be prepared.
"We kept a lot of the old termiology and concepts, and the balance has helped," he
Paul S. Mostert, chairman of the University of Kansas mathematics department, said that although there may be differences in the way he studied, he did not think new math was to blame.
'The quality of freshmen entering college greatly improved after the introduction of new courses.'
**I'll just use a simple paragraph with no images or tables.**
products because new math placed stress on understanding rather than rote processes. If math scores are declining it is important to enhance enthusiasm for it these days, "be said."
MOSTERT SAID HE did not see an
attempt to make of matte arti-
nulation been developed.
"We may go back to roll. After all, 'oil was new math, too, a long time back.'"
Linda Fissa, who teaches mathematics at Centennial School, said Friday that new math taught the students many things that they did not know. She hoped independent thinking in the student.
Fisher said that while continuing with new math some things needed to be recalled from the old math. The reason for this, she said, is because it takes a little time for the student to thoroughly understand a concept before moving on to something new. In her own class, she said, she usually gave the students suggestions to help them understand better.
HIGH SCHOOL teachers agree that new math is more difficult than old math for average students, but they say that in the long run, the benefits from new math are greater. Students now in high school seem to agree.
By CAROLYN OLSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Architectural barriers are being removed from the University of Kansas campus in response to a committee formed to improve conditions for the physically handicapped.
Physical Barriers to Disappear For Handicapped Students at KU
Construction began this week to lower a pay telephone and a drinking fountain on the first floor of the Kansas Union, Frank Burge, union director, said Thursday. He said special stalls in the Union rest rooms also would be provided.
The group precipitating the change is the University Committee for Architectural Handicap, formed three weeks ago by the National Certification assistant in the geology department.
A subcommittee was formed to compile a list of standards for evaluating architectural barriers. Robert Harris, teaching assistant in the psychology department, is chairman of the subcommittee.
The standards subcommittee compiled a check list of ideal architectural standards for KU and will begin surveying KU buildings for defects, Harris said.
The check list was compiled from a set of standards used by universities in New York.
Architectural revisions also are being made in downtown Lawrence, according to Mayor John Ernick. He said rampas had been installed recently and newly opened Lawrence Public Library.
OTHER ARCHITECTURAL CHANGES may be completed on campus are installation of a computer and associated Auditorium in the Union and placement of Braille markers on campus identifying buildings. Williams said. Material also includes a Braille map of the campus, he said.
"In the past, the City of Lawrence has been negligent in providing for the physically handicapped," Emick said. "But the commissioners are aware of the problem, and we are doing everything possible to help now."
William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he was pleased that the Committee for Architectural Handicaps was formed and that the committee's influence had already been felt by many persons at KU.
Emrick said light switches also should be lowered in many downtown businesses.
"The plans for Wesco Hall were somewhat altered by installing a new enclosure that allowed students to which cost the University an extra $1,000." Balfour said. "The entrance originally planned complied with the state building code, but the university decided to revise it."
BALFOUR SAID HE KEEN of no architectural changes to be made at Watkins Hill.
pleted by next February.
"It isn't that there are a tremendous number of persons in wheelchairs now at Halifax said. "We have to think of how many persons we might get in the future."
He said KU might use the architectural changes to recruit handicapped persons as part-time students, returning veterans or older persons returning to college.
Bafour said KU officials began constructing architectural revisions on campus in the summer by installing curb cuts for persons in cheedchairs.
"Probably 98 per cent of the people on campus believe the curb cuts were installed in response to the shooting."
Balfour said other major architectural revisions on campus would have to be funded by a repair and improvement allocation or through special provisions made in the fiscal 1974 budget to be submitted June 1.
THE COMMITTEE for Architectural Handicaps will meet weekly and the subcommittee on standards will visit Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia to study its method of removing architectural barriers, Williams said.
KU to Submit Modification Of Union Beer Sale Policy
The Board of Directors of the University of Kansas Memorial Corp. adopted a proposal Dec. 2, requesting a modification in the bylaws to allow a greater ability to allow the sale of beer in the Union.
According to a policy adopted in 1971, beer may now be brought into the Union for certain activities, but the Union management cannot sell beer.
Frank Burge, Union director, has repeatedly stated that the sale and consumption of 3.2 per cent beer would be restricted to appropriate food service areas and to groups using the Union for certain social functions.
The Board of Regents must approve the proposal before it goes into effect.
BURGE TOLD the board of directors in December that the present Union policy of allowing groups to bring in beer was awkward for several reasons.
Burge said that most persons did not know how much he奶水 to order for their particular function. This over- or under-burge has been the potential for over-consumption, he said.
the Board also said that when management could not sell the beer, the problems of controlling the age, quantity of consumption and percentage of alcohol were dependent entirely on the sponsoring group.
In October 1971, 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 "permitted under certain conditions." These conditions and regulations to be determined by the administrator of each school."
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.
HIKING BOOTS
For the finest in lightweight trail boots, see the Alps from Fabiano, a durable yet flexible boot that features a sturdy midsole for long wear and padded lining for comfort and warmth. The boot is gray for men and women. Also red and green for women. $25.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
craftsmen of fine leather goods
812 Massachusetts
KU-City Police Rapport Praised
By DANGEORGE Kansan Staff Writer
Although the University of Kansas, like many universities, has had its share of campus disturbances in the past, strong lines of communications and cooperation between government forces have resulted in far less trouble than there could have been, local officials say.
"We've got an excellent mutual-aid type of thing," said Mike Thomas, director of KU Parking and Security, "but, nevertheless, it's a cooperation and the (Lawrence police) don't come unless they're really needed—and then it's only as many as needed."
A recent report by a committee of the American Association of University Professors of Law, and independence of America's colleges and universities are being seriously endangered by the growing tendency to call in the courts or injunctions on court injunctions develop.
ENTITLED "No Heroes, No Villains," the report is primarily a study of the causes and implications of the killings of students at State University and Jackson State College.
Thomas and other officials, however,
don't think that the relationship between
campus and city police does or ever did compare with that of the two institutions in
"We've got a beautiful situation here with the city and the county and the state, based on years of meetings, cooperation and working together," he said.
Although the Lawrence police legally have jurisdiction over the campus, they always have worked with the campus forces and stepped in only when called, he said.
"It's always as a last resort that we're called up there," said Richard Stanwix, Lawrence police chief. "We've got kind of a working agreement. He (Thomas) always keeps us posted on what's going on. We don't regularly patrol the camus."
"IN A STATE INSTITUTION, you have to involve more than the administrative staff," he said. "You may have to involve some state officials or others. It's a judgment of what's in jeopardy—whether property or life that has to be protected."
According to Chancellor Raymond Nichols, such cooperation between the different agencies is a necessity in a university town.
Nichols, Thomas and Stanwix agree that cooperation between the University, police and students during local unrest in 1970 should prevent violence than might easily have occurred.
DILLON ADDED that "except when campus forces had an extreme need for additional manpower, or an emergency situation, such as a mass demonstration, occurred, University officers should have complete control over the campus.
"But I think when Vern Miller comes in, everyone else does a very poor job. In my own opinion, it's because he hasn't dealt with this type of information before and is more willing to deal with it in terms of the fact that it's probably the most sensible route."
David Dillon, student body president,
agreed for the most part with the others.
"I think the Kansas Highway Patrol, when it was here, was very effective," he said.
Both Nichols and Stanwix agreed that a current trend on national campuses was away from mass deconformations and disturbances.
"I don't mean dissent," Nichols said. "People are going to disagree and that's normal. But I mean demonstrations and particularly violence. There's a revolt-mental revolt—against that type of thing, so many people suffer than so many people suffer when it happens."
STANWIX SAID THAT, locally, relations had improved from what they were two years ago between townpeople and the University community.
CHRISTIANS MEET 1221 Tennessee
Every Thursday and Friday 7:30 p.m.
"Experience Christianity"
Toeka's Crittenton home employs six housemothers who work on a rotating basis, a director and assistant director, a nurse, a part-time secretary and a recently-hired so-
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
TUESDAYS 5 to 8 p.m.
Spaghetti Night $1.00
809 W. 23rd
"We are here to show the girls alternatives and to help them deal with their individual situations. We deal with girls who are guilt-riddled about their pregnancies and who don't give a damn. Both are difficult to handle, but both extremes are here," she said.
(Continued from page 6)
Home Aids . . .
It is through these agencies that the girls receive professional counseling. Often full or partial payment for their stay at the clinic is also provided by the referral service.
ton home are Kansas residents from outside the Topapec area. Most of them are referred to as "the Upper Tropics."
If the girl's family is unable to afford the $12.50-a-day cost of the home, Welfare or service agency funds may finance the college education of her students and a private adoption agency, such as the Kansas Children's Service League, Catholic Charities or Lutheran Social Services. If this is the case and the girl decides to continue the adoption will be handled through her agency.
Approximately 50 per cent of the girls who come to the Crittleton home decide to keep their babies, Mesigh said, but the decision to eliminate the child is left up to the mother.
Topeka's Critention home is one of 45 affiliated Forence Critention homes throughout the country. The first Critention facility was built in Albany, N.Y., in the late 1800s as "a mission for troubled people." It was named after Charles Critention in memory of his daughter, Florence, who died from scarlet fever at the age of 4.
cultural worker for troubled-teens counseling.
A graduate of the University of Kansas, is the youngest of the staff members, most of them are not a factor in relating to the child.
Interacting with the professional staff is the Girls Council, comprised of five residents of the home. The council meets twice monthly and has the authority to change house policy in cooperation with regular staff members.
"If there one's place a strong male figure is needed, it's here," she said.
There are currently no men employed by the home, but Meigs said that she would like to see at least one man included on future staffs.
"Our day housemother is her 60s and she works quite well with the girls," she said.
cial worker for troubled-teens counseling
According to Meish, serving on the council is considered a privilege by the girls, and has helped to foster a sense of community among them.
Hoch Auditorium
The CLASS OF '73 Presents
SENATOR TOM EAGLETON Sunday, Feb. 11 7:00 p.m.
Admission $1.00
Free to Senior Class Card Holders
Tickets on sale at The Alumni Office, 103 Union,and The Alley Shop, through Feb.9.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
SNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Pearson Vetoed For Juniors, Seniors
83rd Year, No. 85
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See Story Page 3
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
U.S. Finishes Plans For POW Welcome
SAIGON (AP)—The United States announced Tuesday the withdrawal of 2,000 more troops and completed plans to welcome the first homebound American host, the prisoners are expected to be released from North and South Vietnam by the weekend.
Ambassader Michel Gauvin of Canada, chairman of the International Commission for Control and Supervision, told newsmen the first American prisoners would be detained about Saturday, some in Haiti and others a probably two sites in the Sagou region.
Canadian members of international patrol teams have compared the captives from the last place to the captives from the first place.
of detention to freedom were placed on a two-hour alert.
Shortly after the first group of Americans is released, Gauvin said, Vietnamese prisoners will be freed or exchanged in South Vietnam.
the pullout of another 2,000 soldiers over the last four days, U.S. troop strength fell to 19,000, the lowest level since December 1984. All U.S. troops must be out Vietnam and all prisoners freed by the agreement signed in Paris on Jan. 27.
In addition to Hanoi, Guangnian mentioned two potential release sites. One was An Loc, the devastated provincial capital 60 miles away from Hanoi. The battles of the war were fought last summer
and where the last American died before the cease-fire took effect.
Chancellor Interviewing Still on Open Stage
"If the regents notify the person in April and the person gives six months notice to his employers, it would be October before he could come here."
The second was Piu Hao, in Commistin- controlled territory along the Siang River corridor north of the South Vietnamese capital.
The Campus Advisory Committee for the selection of a new chancellor is in the initial phase of interviewing candidates for the position.
University of Kansas Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Tuesday that he could possibly remain in office until October.
"If the person selected is presently at another academic institution, he presumably will have to give his present employers some notice." Nichols said.
"Because of the time element involved, it is possible but not probable." he said.
Nichols said if the Kansas Board of Regents, which will make the final decision on the selection, chose a new chancellor in the fall, probably not a take office until next fall.
American officials said prisoners released in Hanoi would be flown directly to the medical center at Clark Air Base in the Philippines for doctors and 100 nurses were awaiting them.
Rick Von Ende, acting executive secretary and secretary for the committee, said last week that the initial interviewing would probably end late this month. He said the second phase of the interview process would probably take most of March.
NICHOLS EXPRESSED a hope that the new chair would be sold before beginning work at that
U. s.personals in South Vietnam will pass through medical stations at Saligon, Pleiku in the central highlands and Da Nang in the northern region, depending on where they are released. Then they will also be transferred to Clark
time would be of great benefit to the new man.
"It would be to the new man's advantage to be here by then, because he must acquaint himself with the staff and the procedures of this University," he said.
Former chancellor W. Clarke Wesco resigned from the position in the spring of 1969 but he announced his resignation at the 1980 redevocation, the fall of 1984, giving the university a new face.
Nichols said this forewarning gave the search committee that a year a jump on the number of incidents.
Chalmers was selected by the Board of Regents in February 1969, Nichols said, and was ready to step into the office when Wescoe left.
Nicholls will be 70 on Dec. 29, which is the mandatory retirement age for administrators in Kansas. He said he doubted it would be asked to remain chancellor until then.
CHALMERS RESIGNED without notice in 1972, after he and his wife were divorced.
"I will remain if the new chancellor requests my help," Nichols said. "But if he does not, I will retire immediately after he comes into office."
U. S. representatives to the Joint Military Commission's committee or prisoners met for three hours for the fourth successive day with North Vietnamese, South Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegates to iron out details for the POW reenlistment.
The official North Vietnamese news agency reported that U.S. military officials in Haiphong met for the first time with North Vietnamese military representatives Monday to discuss sweeping U.S. mines from North Vietnamese waters.
Four U.S. Navy minesweepers were ordered Tuesday to begin clearing an anchorage 35 miles off Haiphong to serve as a base of operations to clear out the mines which the United States pledged to do in the Paris cease-fire agreement.
The South Vietnamese government announced it had gone along with Washington and Hanoi in agreeing on Paris as the site of a peace conference. Feb. 26 to guarantee peace in Vietnam. A communique from the South Vietnamese Foreign Ministry said South Vietnam previously had been reluctant to accept the agreement, at the peace-signing ceremony Jan. 27.
China, the Soviet Union, Britain, France,
the four signatories of the Vietnam peace agreement and the four nations on the International Commission for Control and Supervision are to attend. The commission comprises Canada, Poland, Hungary and
Germany. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim of the United Nations also is invited.
A few hours after the joint announcement of the conference date and site, the White House said that Kissinger would stop in Laos Friday to check on prospects for a Laotian cease-fire before heading to Hanoi Saturday for four days of talks.
JAMES OF HOOK
from various publications including files of the Cemetery of Lives on With Feet of Serving men Detail, Vietnam.
1. Brunswick, Capt. Edward A., Air Force, Prison, N.J., Quincy, Mass., dated October, 1953.
2. Stam, Maj Thomas Edward, Jackson, Mississippi, cap. October 1965.
3. Schorn, Capt. James Eldon, A.F., Forest Grove, Oregon, date of capture unknown.
4. Henderson, Capt. Williams J., A.F. not named in previous public disbursa.
5. Angus, Capt. William Kerr, Marines, not named in previous disbursa.
Alive
The POW bracelet has heightened the social conscience, as strangers search POW lists for the name of the man engraved on their bracelet. Gary Mason,
wheat, Lt.
Kansan Photo
assistant professor journalism, was surprised to find the name of his POW, James Schoenberg, reported missing in action five years ago. Although Mason knows that Sechorn is alive, he will not take the bracelet off until he can that he is safe at home. See story page 10.
Airport Security Increases Despite Regulatory Limbo
By LOUISE COOK Associated Press Writer
Security measures were stepped up Tuesday at many of the nation's airports.
plementation of new federal antihijack regulations.
CPA Investigating Ridglea Deposits
"We didn't have to so we're not going to," said Charles Rogers, operations manager of Philadelphia International Airport, in discussing the guard situation. He said city officials had put up about 100 stations at the airport but now would await the outcome of further court action.
The posting of armed guards at departure checkpoints is required under the second security plan, which allows hours before the plan was to go into effect, U.S. District Court Judge John Smith in Washington ordered a 10-day delay in enforcing the new plan and set Feb. 13 for further court proceedings.
Police Repel Irate Indians In S. Dakota
ments were empty, which cost the corporation $13,000 a month.
The corporation said the deposits would be returned with an additional $30 when the old tenants referred new tenants to Ridgles, according to Berman.
He issued the temporary injunction at the request of the Airport Operators Council International, representing 231 facilities serving 90 per cent of U.S. air traffic.
Three fires were reported, one of them at the Custer County courthouse. All the fires had been extinguished by Tuesday evening, authorities said.
The CPA has reason to believe the refusal system employed by Ridgale is a direct violation of the Buyer's Protection Act of 1968, Berman said. This Act prohibits
At least eight lawmen were infured.
See CPA Page 7
The Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) is investigating a reported delay in the return of security deposits from the owner and issuing a warning to Vision Investments of Albunquerque, N.M.
The Indians, associated with the American Indian Movement (AIM), were angered by a manslaughter charge filed against a white man accused in the stabbing death of an Indian last month. They argued that a charge of murder be filled in the case.
BY CATHY SHERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
THE LETTERS said that the security deposits had not been returned because of the corporation's financial difficulties, which the corporation indicated had been intensified by the cancellation of the bus line to Ridgale. In December, 10 apart-
"EVERYBODY that we have arrested will be charged with inciting a rob, obstructing justice, assaulting law officers and destroying government property," said Hobart Gates, Custer County states attorney.
CUSTER, S.D. (AP)—Twenty-one women were arrested and more were being sought, after a club-swinging battle between police and an estimated 200 Indians ended in downtown Custer Tuesday, Custer County sheriff Ernest Penin said.
State Fire Marshal Joe Egger said fires had been set at the courthouse, at a chamber of commerce building across the street and at a Standard Oil bulk plant.
He said fire damage to the courthouse, a two-story landmark, was limited to the front hallway where Indians had ignited fires in the building. The fire was expensive throughout the building.
One of the Indians arrested, AIM leader Russell Means, was hospitalized for what appeared to be a broken arm. At least one other Indian was treated for injuries, and several other injured Indians were helped from the scene by their companions.
PEPIN SAID that the town was quiet Tuesday night but that citizens were edge. Mr. Pepin said
"We're patrolling the streets right now to what we've got left in the way of Indiana."
He said that it was possible that about 100 deputies would be involved in the deal.
The small chamber of commerce building was destroyed, he said, and the office of the bulk plant was heavily damaged. The office of the large plant was also dammable fuel storage tanks, he said.
he said authorities in trucks had been paused to nearby town to find and monitor them.
Berman said he received three letters from the corporation, but was not given any definite date by them for the return of the security deposits.
This southwestern South Dakota town with a population of 2,100 is about 60 miles southwest of Rapid City at the southern edge of the Black Hills National Forest.
CPA manager Raoul Berman, Kanasas City, Kan, sophomore, said Monday that during the past week he about CPA that they had not received their security deposits from Ridgley. All are students or former students who vacated their apartments at least four times in the past year.
him was the owner of Ridglea. There was no address given, Berman said, just a post office box number. Since then, MacQueen has left Ridglea, and a representative from Ridglea has said Ridglea is owned by Vision Investments.
moving out of Ridgale at the end of
the day, delay in receiving their security deposit.
He said that if the owner of Ridglea did not resolve this problem, all students
IN THE PAST, Berman said, Ridgley resident managers usually made a verbal agreement to return the security deposit six weeks after the tenant vacated the apartments. In that case, he please that specifies a date when security deposits would be returned, Berman said.
Seventeen of the Indians arrested were transferred by van to the Rapid City jail for
WTINESSES HAD REPORTED hearing gunfire, but Bernie Christensen, a state Division of Criminal Investigation officer, discovered that from riot guns giring tear gas canisters.
Berman said that in December he made inquiries about the security deposits to the Intone Corp. of Albuquerque, N.M., which the former manager, Bill MacQueen, told
Christensen, Pepin and Deputy Bill Rice were the three men who withstood an initial charge by the Indians into the courthouse. They were among the eight officers injured.
None of the injuries was reported to be serious.
“It’s a good thing we had 15 highway patrolmen and several officers, all riot-equipped, on the second floor of the courthouse or we’d have lost it”. Christensen said he didn’t for the fire trucks right at the back door they’d have burned it down.”
Christensen estimated that about 25 Indians forced their way into the courthouse to argue with a judge.
Bob Swinth Explains Clinton Reservoir Project to Sierra Club
Preservation of the natural environment we see present.
Kansan Photo by PAULA CHRISTENSEN
Boating at Clinton Debated
By DIANE YEAMANS
Kansan Staff Writer
Boating became a point of controversy in the plans for development of Clinton Reservoir considered at the meeting of the Council on Water Rights night at the South Park Recreation Center.
About 110 persons attended the meeting. The group was divided on whether Clinton Reservoir should be developed into multi-use facility or left in its natural environment.
Ed Dishier, chief of the recreation section of the Corps of Engineers, said the corps must consider the needs of all the people who would be using the lake, not just the residents of Lawrence and Douglas county.
The corps is leaning toward dividing the lake into two boating zones, Dishner said. The area near the dam is more open and would be appropriate for the use of high power motor boats, he said. The arms of the lake, could be limited to row boats or motor boats of limited horsepower, he said, with access to a boat ramp that allowed in specific areas where fish would spawn or where other wildlife might be endangered.
ZONING OF THIS NATURE has never
discovered such a thing. Some parts of Perry Lake are
diluted说 some parts of Perry Lake are
Don Dick of the State Forrestry Fish and Game Commission said the enforcement of the law will be increased.
However, several Lawrence residents expressed skepticism.
barred to boats, he said, but they are much smaller than the expands of lake proposed.
Rebecca Coan, representing the League
Local input into the final decision on
inton Reservoir- development was
authenticated.
George Coggins, chairman of the Sierra Club, said the club would like to see total access to the park limited and boating eliminated.
Coggins said that an extremely large number of people would come from Johnson, Sedgwick and Shawne counties for boating, and that it would not take long for the natural environment of Clinton to be extensively harmed if not destroyed.
RICHARD RUPPERT, associate professor of economics, said a new concept for park planning could be in order. He was one of the architects and one or two compatible recreations such as motor boating at Perry Lake and sailing, camping and camping at Clinton. This would eliminate much of the confusion and stress that new experience at the lake lakes, he said.
of Women Voters, said the league would like to see a citizens group with representatives from the various local organizations involved in the examination of the lake's development. She also said a referendum or opinion poll to be conducted might motil of all the people should be considered.
Nancy Hambleton, city commissioner, and Barkley Clark, Douglas County Planning Commission chairman, said an opinion poll could be very valuable in the making the final decision on the development.
Dishairer said the corps would not be opposed to such a poll but that open meetings were allowed. Many of the nurses were used to get some idea of the needs and desires of the community. A good deal of valuable information has come from previous meetings, he said, and information will continue to grow.
COGINS SAID the natural environment of the lake could best be preserved if access was limited. Nothing is wrong with setting up a lake, but that doesn't stop people who could use the park, he said.
Another problem is planning the number and direction of roads leading to Clinton.
Clark said the planning commission was concerned with the amount of traffic that
See CLINTON Page 7
2.
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Doctors Find Cancer Test
KANAS CITY, Kan, (AP)-Two University of Kansas Medical Center researchers believe they have developed a blood test for breast cancer.
If the test proves to be accurate, it could result in earlier treatment of breast cancer, with the result of better chances of successful treatment.
Researchers at the medical center are testing blood samples from women from throughout Kansas as part of a new program of detection and treatment.
The test is for the presence of a blood protein called an antibody, which the researchers have identified and believe is used by the body to combat breast cancer cells.
The cancerous cells, they say, carry chemical identification tags on their surfaces. These tags are canary viruses that set the body's defense mechanisms to working.
Researchers say the amazingly discriminating mechanism can tell friend from foe, so that when enemy cells, such as cancerous cells, appear, the antigens
News Briefs By the Associated Press Southern Court
BATON ROUGE, La.-A judge today ordered six students permanently barred from Southern University's Baton Rouge campus on grounds they had contributed to the death of three students who they have the chance. State District Court Judge Lewis Doherty issued the ruling shortly after it was announced in a related development that the East Baton Rouge police would investigate last fall's violence in which two students died at the campus.
Cosmetic Smear
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration Tuesday proposed mandatory cosmetic ingredient labeling in the nearly 1,000 U.S. manufacturers in the $65-billion industry year would be required to list a company's common or chemical name except in the case of bona fide trade secrets.
Subway Fire
Tribute to Dole
BOSTON (AP)—A flash fire struck a four-car subway train at the peak of the city's evening rush hour Tuesday, and homebound commuters were led choking and gasping from the smoke-filled subway tunnel. Hospital officials said one person died and 50 persons were admitted for injuries caused by the fire. Boston City Hospital reported receiving 30 fire victims and said seven were on the danger list. Massachusetts General Hospital reported receiving 20 injured persons.
WASHINGTON (AP)—Six hundred Republicans turned out Monday night for a Kansas night tribute to Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., who resigned last month, as chairman of the state congressional delegation was host committee for the two-hour reception. A personal letter from President Nixon to Dole was read. George Bush, former ammendator, replaced Dole as national chairman, praised Dole for his devotion to his work.
New Tax Rule
TOPEKA (AP)-Gary Savalo, executive secretary of the state Board of Tax Appeals, estimated Tuesday that as many as 1,000 properties owned by "nonprofessional tax officers" on Kansas tax rolls as a result of a state Supreme Court ruling Monday. The ruling places a strict interpretation on the definition of a "charitable institution." This legislation would lose their tax exemptions on properties not directly used in charitable work, he said.
produce antibodies to seek out and neutralize the invading cells.
Two researchers, Drs. Loren J. Humphrey and William R. Jewell, believe they have found the specific antibody for breast cancer antigen.
The two doctors are encouraging physicians throughout Kansas to cooperate with them to develop a network through which blood samples from women who have been examined for breast cancer, or who have been treated for the disease, would be sent routinely to the medical center for testing and evaluation.
Two doctors say it is only from a large number of cases that they can determine the cause.
Humphrey said that just as the appearance of the antibody in the blood could
prove a detector of the disease, its existence after treatment could provide a means of identifying it.
When removal of a breast tumor by surgery is incomplete, Humphrey said, the antibody still could appear in the blood, indicating the need for additional surgery or treatment. Absence of the antibody after surgery would indicate removal had been complete.
So far, Humphrey said, the test appears more accurate in detecting cancer than the Gold test, a test that many physicians feel is promising.
Breast cancer is the leading cause of death by cancer of American women. It strikes approximately 73,000 women in this country a year and some 32,000 of them die.
NEW YORK (AP)—An end to U.S. involvement in Vietnam has not been a boon to the stock market, but analysts said a rise in the expected, both historically and economically.
The stock market faltered briefly after the end of three of the country's four foreign wars, brokers note. And this time the situation is further complicated by Wall Street's new pressure on insurance pressures, tight money and the weakening of the dollar, they add.
Since the cease-fire was announced last month, the Dow Jones industrial average has dropped nearly 40 points, and declining stocks have been reported. Companies have persistently outnumbered advances.
Analysts also note that the Dow advance about 140 points from late October to mid-January on the strength of peace rumors and say a bit more backtracking would be in
"there were no celebrations about this peace, but instead a tremendous distrust that it would not be lasting," said Bradbury Thurlow of Ladidaw & Co. Now that war operations are being dismantled, he added, the precipition is being focused on the economy."
"If history is any guide, the Dow should drop into the low 900s in the next few months and then recover," said Ralph Acamprora of Harris, Upham & Co. "An ultimate boom market in the neighborhood of a 1,250 Dow during the next week would fit the picture."
Cease-Fire Kindles Expected Stock Drop
Amacura said the stock market declined 5 to 10 per cent in the first month and a half after the invasion of Spanish-American War, World War I and the Korean conflict. "But it was bishall once the initial sell-off was completed, and the war ended," per cent each of those three wars.
The Dow, a weighted average of 30 blue-chip issues considered a major indicator of stock market activity, closed at 979.91 on the ceasefire was announced Jan. 23.
After the end of World War I, he added,
the market climbed steadily for nine more
years.
Docking Seeks Welfare Dept. Reorganization
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)—Gov. Robert Docking issued Tuesday an executive reorganization order under new powers given him in a constitutional amendment approved by voters last fall to reorganize the state Welfare Department into a new "state Department of Social and Rehabilitative Services."
President May Veto Spending If Congress Surpasses Budget
The new department, to be headed by a secretary of social and rehabilitative services, would include a Division of "Social Services," a Division of "Mental Health and Retardation Services" and a Division of Rehabilitation.
Joseph Sneed, deputy attorney general, also said Congress had no signs it had the capacity to insure balanced budgets or control inflation.
His order must be rejected by one house
the legislature, or it will go into effect
if the bill passes.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stripping the President of full power to impound funds would reduce him from chief executive to chief attorney. Justice Department told Tuesday.
Docking's proposal retains the three present divisions of the Department of Agriculture.
The Division of Social Services is the present Welfare Division, and the Division of Health and Wellness is the present Division of Institutional Management which oversees operation of state hospitals.
Seed testified before a Senate Judiciary
subcommittee while the battle of the budget
redefined.
Another reason the market failed to respond positively was that investors anticipating peace had already bought heavily before the war began, and fall, said Monte Gordon of Dfresus Corp.
"And unlike other wars, Vietnam did not require a huge chunk of the country's resources, so there was no backlog of consumer demand when the hostilities ended." Gordon said. The accumulation of such demand normally would have ignited the economy as well as the stock market, he added.
The House Rules Committee cleared a bill to resurrect a popular farm program, the Rural Environmental Assistance program. House action is expected Wednesday.
Acampera called the market's drop since the cease-fire announcement "just intermediate weakness" and predicted it would start moving ahead soon if postwar performances are accurate indicators.
Head for Henry's
And after a White House meeting with President Nixon, Republican congressional leaders quoted Nixon as saying he would take whatever steps necessary to keep his new budget intact. One leader predicted a substantial number of vetoes.
Sen. Sam Ervin Jr., D-N.C., and other senators said unrestrained presidential power to impound funds which Congress has not authorized, but is not now either clerked or balanced.
Ervin said the fact that other presidents had impounded funds does not make the case.
"The exercise of this authority by the President to promote fiscal stability is not usurpation. Rather, it is a great tradition of balance and balances upon which the system is based," he said.
Sneed said the nation needed the impoundment only vested in the President as a general rule.
Sneed said it was his legal judgment that Nixon had the power, derived from the Constitution and various acts of Congress, to kill entire programs or withhold any percentage of congressional appropriations without consulting Congress.
Committee to Discuss Reapportionment Issue
TOPEKA (AP)—The House Appointment Committee is scheduled to take up today what to do about repositioning the House. The committee by a federal court panel late last week.
Rep. William Bunten, R-Topema, committee chairman, said Tuesday there were two major questions which must be resolved before a decision could be made on whether to try to complete the reapportionment this session or give the matter to an interim committee and have it recommend a plan to the 1974 session.
Bring a friend with you to Henry's this weekend!
the federal court, which declared the 1972 House reapportionment plan invalid because it broke many county lines and had too many population deviations among districts, gave the legislature until Feb. 14, 1974, to come up with a new plan for electing
2 Deluxe Fish Sandwiches and 1/2 lb. Golden Fries ONLY 99¢
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun.
Feb. 8-11
Henrys
843-2139
Wednesday's referendum requests the Student Senate to increase the activity fee line item for Student Publications by 67 cents to $3. A majority vote is required to pass, with at least a third of the student population voting.
A plan was introduced in the House Tuesday calling for reducing the size of the House to 60 members, with each of the 40 senatorial districts simply being split in two to determine the 60 House districts. Some House members bristled at this suggestion, however, because it would make Senate reappointion dominate.
The two issues to be decided now, Bunten said, are whether to reduce the size of the House, as has been frequently proposed in recent years, and whether to use the 1970 federal census, the 1972 state agricultural census or the 1973 state agricultural census.
House members next year.
6th & Missouri
The farm program REAP was killed in late December by the Nixon administration on the grounds that it was a low priority item. The legislation cleared for House action would earnark $22 million for the program during the year ending June 30.
Democrats on the House Agriculture Committee said Congress should act.
In other matters:- Rep. John Brademas,
D-Ind., chairman of a House education
subcommittee, said the administration was violating the law with the newly established National Institute of Education funding agency, its policy making beaver has been named.
What happens to the Royal Purple will be of more than passing interest across the country. The yearbook has the longest string of "All American" ratings by the Associated Collegiate Press of any yearbook in the country, 37 in a row.
The K-State Board of Student Publications indicated last spring that if support is not forthcoming from student organizations, discontinue sponsorship of the yearbook.
National Institute of Education funding research contracts before its policy making
MANHATTAN (AP) – The future of Kansas State University's nationally known Royal Purple yearbook may be decided this fall. A panel of Governing Association elections are held.
The White House announced the designation of eight officials from various states to lead the nation.
Our large selection of houseplants is only a small portion of the many delightful items you'll find at The Gardenland. We have one of the largest selections of pottery and baskets found in Lawrence as well as candles and a variety of unique containers. You'll soon discover that Gardenland is the terrarium center of Lawn and Garden, terrariums for plants and shape. For those who prefer to make their own, we carry all your terrarium needs. Come in and see us.
The GARDENLAND
So much more than just houseplants.
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Students Vote On Yearbook At Manhattan
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( )
The CLASS OF '73 Presents
SENATOR TOM EAGLETON
Sunday, Feb. 11 7:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Admission $1.00
Free to Senior Class Card Holders
Tickets on sale at The Alumni Office, 103 Union, and The Alley Shop, through Feb. 9.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
3
Commission Limits On-Street Parking
By ERIC MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission voted Tuesday to eliminate parking on Crelite Drive from Harvard Road to 15th Street, and to allow it to be used for University Printing. Service employees.
The University recently began charging fees for parking in the lot at the printing service. In protest, employees began parking along Crestline.
"Greets are not constructed as storage lots but may move traffic." Commissioner J. R. Barker said.
Crestline Drive is designated as a collector street or a residential street leading to a major road. The additional problems, several commissioners said.
Commissioners Palliam and Jack Rose said there was sufficient space in the printing service's parking lot to handle all of the employees' cars.
The commission also voted to prohibit
parking on the north side of Yale Road from Iowa Street to Highland Drive.
The placement of 10 civil defense sirens was approved at the meeting. The radio controlled air sirens can be heard more than 4,000 feet away. They produce sounds about as rock 'n' roll groups, even at that distance. City Manager Buford Watson.
Two more sirens, which also were purchased with county and federal money, will be placed on the University of Kansas campus.
The 12 sirens will cover almost all of the city. Public Works Director George Williams said he thought "gill over and extend the coverage to the entire city."
Positions for the new stairs are Lawrence High, Woodlaun, Dearfield and Hilkcrest Schools; Lincoln Park; and the intersections of Yale and Castle, 4th and Haskell; 3rd and Haskell, 23rd and Haskell and 27th and Florida streets.
The two sirens on campus probably will be the Chila Gibson, William Library and near the Chla Omega foundation.
The sirens will be activated by radio from the airsiff's office. They will be installed by the airsiff's office.
The commission received a petition from Nerma Nirma, 181S I, 21 St., president of the Commission.
She said members of the firefighters' auxiliary had been picking the city offices.
"We hope you'll consider this sincerely,
"we can't, you can't, we go to a little further."
In other business, the commission:
Nixon said the petition contained "the names of, 1,859 concerned citizens and patrons of Lawrence ... who seek parity with the salaries of policemen and firemen."
In other instances, the commissary referred a request to annex 79.53 acres south of the corner of 31st and Iowa streets and a request to annex 22.5 acres west of the
An amendment that would have made the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program open only to juniors and seniors as a way to keep students from entering to 75. Tuesday by the College Assembly.
The amendment, which was approved at a meeting of the assembly last week, was part of an original motion that had to pass the Pearson program could be changed.
The defeat of the amendment will open a cannon for conderationation as a substitute for English 13.
The original motion stated that the humanities program could continue temporarily to substitute for English 1, 2 and 3. The amendment would have eliminated such a substitution by making it a program to fulfill only upperclass requirements.
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
During the last three years, freshmen and sophomores have been allowed to substitute four six hours courses for requirements in western civilization, speech and humanities.
The program is taught by three
professors of Pearson College, Dennis Quinn, director of Pearson College; John Senior, professor of composition and rhetoric; and Frank Nelick, professor of English.
WALTER CROCKETT, professor of speech and drama, said the amendment should be reconsidered because freshmen and sophomores were the ones who needed the type of program Pearson College was offering.
"This type of program involves students intellectually and helps them to form close relations with fellow students as well as their instructors." Crockett said.
College Assembly Vetos Proposal Altering Pearson Program Eligibility
Crockett said that if students could not be in close association with other students who were involved in courses of mutual interest, the student would soon become alienated.
Crockett said, however, he did not agree that the program should continue to be taught by only the three professors who are currently teaching the courses. Without instructors from outside the Pearson program to present diversified viewpoints, students would develop dogmatic ideas, he said.
Too Many Locked Up Committee Head Says
More people are put in jail in Douglas County than necessary, Forrest Swall, lecturer in the department of social welfare, said Tuesday.
By CHUCK POTTER Kansan Staff Writer
—conditionally accepted a plat of Alvamar Estates.
Alvamar Golf Course to the city staff.
Swall, who is chairman of the Douglas County Committee on Correctional Services and Jail Facilities, said that he would share information with the Douglas County Commission Thursday morning.
— admitted a final plan of University Place No. 2, north of 17th Street on the east side of Bristol Avenue.
Swall and four other members of the committee plan to meet with the commission to discuss progress of a correction to the crime code, which began by the committee in May, 1972.
"The committee is not committed to any
investigation or denial of news."
Swall said, "we just want to get some
THE COMMITTEE was appointed by the Douglas County Commission last year following an unsuccessful bond election for construction of a new city-county government center. The committee since then has been enraged in the survey.
The purpose of the survey, Swall said, is to provide sufficient data with which the committee can make recommendations to the County facilities to the commission.
ideas about specific things the commission wants."
Swall said his statement concerning the number of people in jail here was "purely a hunch" and not necessarily the opinion of the committee.
Campus Briefs Organ Recital
The Pearson program is a unified program that teaches a certain idea about Western civilization, Quinn said. The idea is taught through the works of many diversified authors and is not limited to the instructor's viewpoint. he said.
"It's also my personal opinion that too many juveniles in Douglas County are put in jail," be said. "The juvenile court should have no access to justice, the juveniles should not be returned to hi家."
- re-zone a residential area between the Kansas Turpillie and Kansas Power and Light.
James Moeser, University of Kansas organist and chairman of the KU department of organ, will give an organ recital as part of the KU Faculty Recital Series at 8 p.m. tonight at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. in Lawrence. The rectal is open to the public and there is no charge.
THE PROBLEM is probably even more prevalent in other counties. Swall said.
After the meeting with the commission Thursday, the committee plans to review a full report of survey data to be presented by Bill Arnold, associate professor in the department of sociology and chairman of the survey.
John Masterson, Falls Church, Va., senior and student representative to the assembly, said he agreed with the proposal to include a wider range of instructors who would provide differing viewpoints within the program.
- accepted 9 bids of $5.30 a low tow from Kavalve Motor Co. for towward service.
ALTHOUGH DIFFERING viewpoints are expressed by authors in their works, Masterson said, the instructor's personal experience is the way the text is presented to the students.
- referred a request for paving St. Andres Drive to the city staff.
Chris Miller, contributing editor to the National Lampoon magazine, will speak at 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Room Of Room, 109 University. Miller's topic will be "Satire."
Masterson said that although he thought more instructors should be included in the program, the program should remain open to freshmen and sophomores.
The Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America will sponsor a lecture on the "Archaeological Salvage on the Boulder Creek Site," in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, Cevat Erder, associate professor and chairman of the department of preservation of historic architecture, will give a lecture on architecture at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey, will speak.
The first of the Let's Travel Forum Series will be at 7:30 tonight in the Council Room. Mark Turner, president of the KU Ski Club, will show a film.
"The program is just what it says it is," Quinn said after the meeting was recessed. "It's an integrated program, not a diversified program. If we wanted it to be diversified like every other program, it wouldn't be special."
Lampoon Writer
One reason for establishing the Pearson program was to give the student the choice of whether he wanted to take the same requirements all other freshmen must take or take the integrated program provided by Pearson College. Quinn said.
Turkish Prof
—received recommendations from the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects about signs in the central business district.
Watkins Hospital may be renamed or used for new purposes after the student health center is relocated without affecting funds from the estate of Elizabeth M. Watkins, Lawrence attorney Raymond Rice said Monday.
The assembly recessed until Feb. 20,
when the original motion to continue substitution of the Pearson program for English 1, 2 and 3 will be reconsidered.
Travel Forum
There had been some discussion about the possible renaming of the new health center, but: the estate trustee, the First National Bank of Kansas City, Mo., said it could cut funds to the center if this were done. This possibility was averted last week when KU Chancellor Raymond Nichols said that the name Watkins Hospital would be retained.
Rice, who wrote Watkins' will and probated her estate, said there were no restrictions in the trust concerning the use or possible renaming of the old hospital.
No Restrictions In Watkins' Will To Halt Retitling
- set 10 a.m. feb. 26 as the deadline for
on several public works items,
in addition to other work.
...
Mother Mary's "A Beer Joint"
authorized the executive director of the Urban Renewal Agency to submit a proclaimer's certificate for Phase II of the Neighborhood Development Program
Special!
- referred to the city staff a request for
addition from Ikea to Harvard Road
additional
75c PITCHERS Wednesdays 3-5
forwarded to the water district a letter examining rates for the sale of water to the district.
—heard a report from City Attorney Milton Allen about the constitutionality of declaring one's house substandard and demanding repairs.
Remember... At Mother Mary's What You See Is What You Get.
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Free Parking in Rear
4
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorial!, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Educational Innovation In Pearson Program
Recently the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program (PIHP) has been attacked by some professors at the University. It has been disheardment to listen to the attitudes of some of the educators at this University as they have leveled their attacks.
The Pearson program, originally designed to satisfy requirements for freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, presently represents an alternative to the traditional educational experience. And so several years ago that many have listened to the harsh words aimed at destroying one of the few educational alternatives available.
The Pearson program was developed consistent with the purpose of the establishment of the College - within - the - College system. It was hoped by the creators of the CWC program that each CWC student should identify and offer an alternative for satisfying the requirements of a "liberal education" at the freshman-sophomore level.
PHIP may have its faults. Would one dare say that there is a department on this campus that is performing to 100 per cent effectiveness? Some members of the team are trained to help them alone, and to attempt to solve the problems of their own departments first.
The dispute over P1HP forces us to ask about educational innovation at the University, and whether the educators who establish our curriculum are concerned with offering alternative educational opportunities for K-12 students become the institution that Christopher Jencks and David Riesman say is possible for all universities?
Will KU "become the crucible in which the younger generation shaped its distinctive values and acquired a sense of separate identity, rather than one in which the older ones chose those things gone before and acquired their predecessor's sense of history and purpose?"
Attempts by some members of the faculty to destroy PHIP as an educational alternative for freshmen and sophomores indicates that educational innovation might be slower in future years than it has been in the past. If we agree that a university is, in a sense, an organic institution that must be able to change in the environment, then we must believe that the development of educational alternatives is necessary to the strengthening of this institution's academic programming.
A basic problem with all liberal arts schools, not just the University of Kansas, is that they play the role of processor for society. An introductory course to 10 fields, and a limited amount of time in one—the major, the field of most interest to a student—certifies the student to be qualified enough to prepare to tackle the problems of our society. The introductory course becomes valuable only if applicable to the concerns of the individual.
"A university simply can't serve only the intellectual values of its professors. Unless departments learn how to adapt, become more responsive to students ... and society, 'departmentalitis' will prevent many universities from adapting—and innovating—in any basic sense." What Warren G. Bennis states reflects a situation at KU. Some departments are standing idle and are refusing to recognize the needs of society and the needs of students.
Those who have criticized PHP, and in turn the educational concept of providing many educational alternatives from which a student may choose, do so only for the sake of their own self-centered interests. These same critics are refusing to awaken to the needs of the student.
It is unreasonable to expect that all students will learn within the same structure. For some students, many more students than any other student in the program start of the program, PHP offers a viable educational experience.
Some time ago a graduate of this university said that "the purpose of education can no longer remain as turning out people who have been exposed to the same 'worthy' predetermined facts and skills. Among other things, our schools are producing apathy, self contempt, alienation, conformity, powerlessness, resentment and rage ... America has never been content to turn its face away from progress. We need an education on our industrial and technological resources, we have neglected our most important potential quantity—our human resources—the student."
Students are pleading for professors to stop aiming intellectual missiles at new programs because the programs might alter their comfortable situation. Quit the arguing over PIHIP. If it is not a good program, enrollments will decrease instead of increase.
The challenge has become fulfillment of the promise of the CWC idea, to develop the potential of our student resources, and to begin offering many educational alternatives for the benefit of students.
—R. E. Duncan
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
James J. Kilpatrick
WASHINGTON — Head on collisions between the White House and the Hill are not especially noticeable. One shinks its view of Mr. Obama's visit to Nations, of Roosevelt and his court-packing plan. But it will take a considerable searching of the record books to find a new interpretation of the significant than the coming clash over the President's 174 budget.
New Federalism Sorely Needed
importance is Nikon's grand design. He proposes to reverse the whole flow of political power. He is undertaking to replace the New Deal of Franklin Roosevelt with Donald J. Trump. Richard Nixon. Those of us on the conservative side will be yelling huzzah.
The details are important, of course, but put these to one side for the moment. Of greater
Those on the liberal side, to be sure, will be yelling something else. They are yelling already. On the afternoon of the 27th, when copies of the budget were spread around town, the Potomac went
up a full foot: The bureaucrats and the boondoggles, the weepieses and the grants men, were crying themselves a river.
Nixon is in for a battle. He has proposed the dismantling of the whole rotting, rickety structure of categorical aid programs—a structure jerry-built over 40 years. Some of these outcasts have been the victims. Others, such as federal financing of mental health programs, would by phased out over a period of years. His idea is to
$
substitute more programs of broad federal aid in education, manpower training, law enforcement and criminal justice, and urban community development. These would be administered primarily by state and local governments.
It is this aspect of the budget that especially infuriates Nixon's critics. The President is determined to take the essential step in rebuilding Washington, and to put it back where it belongs; in the hands of the people being served. The Washington Post, which fears such democracy, complains that localities had given the "short end of the stick" to certain social needs. The Louisville Courier Journal, equally distrustful of the local handlers, means that the local handlers have exceptions, "has been in case study 12 social neglect."
This challenge must be met squarely. Power has surged to Washington for many reasons. One of them, admittedly, is that in times past, malapportioned state legislatures, dominated by a few country stalwarts, have frustrated the legitimate right to govern. The situation has been largely correct. No one can complain validly today that state government is not representative.
That being so, what is wrong with moving in the direction Nikon recommends? The is going
back to fundamental principles.
Is he rejecting the cancerous notion that Washington knows what is best for Louisville, or should more money be spent on it and less on vocational education? Should the emphasis be on parks, or on libraries, or on mental institutions? Nixon would put the responsibility for these decisions equally can be seen, where it can be rescued and held accountable.
In coming months, as the battle rolls along, it will be said that Nikon's budget reflects a lack of compassion for the poor and the elderly. Nonsense. There are billions here for the poor. The rest of the country needs more for Medicare, but their needs are generally well met.
It also will be said that too much, $18 billion, is provided for defense, the truth is that most of them are used to raise raises. Relatively little, probably too little, is for new hardware. Some fat can be trimmed; it should be trimmed; but prudent users will have commitments and trim lightly.
Jack Anderson
We believe the documents and information they contain belong
Nikon deserves support, and he will need support, in making his budget stick. Bursacareus and the Nixon administration lobby of great political power. But Nikon is right in what he is seeking to do, and if enough policymakers care about responsible local government, he will win.
(C) 1973 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
News Belongs to the People
WASHINGTON – There can no longer be any doubt that the government is determined to keep President Trump from Peter Zenger was thrown into prison in 1785 for criticizing the governor of New York have so many respersitories been killed in the cause of press freedom.
At least six reporters have been locked up for refusing to disclose their news sources. The government, because it can't control what newsmen write, would like control their access to the news.
We confess freely that we copied information from stolen documents and reported this information to the people.
Should the government be successful in this campaign to force newmen to name their sources, the sources would quickly dry up. Only official sources would have power that would become dependent upon the government's sterile version of events.
The latest victim is my own associate, Les Whiten, who was arrested in the act of covering a story. An FBI agent tore his notepad and pen out of his hands and handcuffed him, thereby preventing him from taking notes. He was mugged, finger-printed and beaten by Department officials debated for eight hours what charges to bring against him.
He was accused of receiving and possessing stolen documents. He said that we had nothing whatsoever to do with stealing government documents. Nor have the documentation ever been in our control.
the people. The documents disclose how the government has cheated, defrauded and neglected the Indians.
But the government is claiming, in effect, that it owns the news, that the facts in the news are true. The people the nooble but to the government.
Should the government be successful in this attempt to establish ownership of the news, its news shall be given to the public. The publication of any unauthorized news would be regarded, thereafter, as stealing information from the government.
Of course, we believe that news belongs to the people and we will continue digging it out and collecting it. We'll try to stay out of jail in the process. But if we must go to jail for reporting the news the police are going to publish, we'll report from the inside on prison conditions.
Crackpot Commentators
At the same time that President Nixon's radio-TV managers have knocked such incidents as William Buckley and Sander Vanocour off the public television network, the Nixon Administration has been featuring a new series of the armed forces radio network.
We recently revealed that the notorious hate peddler, Gerald L. K. Smith, had been given time on the network to promote his anti-Semitic, anti-Negro activities. The fact that he listens could get his hate literature was plugged no less than five times.
Now we have learned that another rattle rabble-rouser, Rudolph Steiner, has been permitted to harangue the network's
two million military and civilian listeners regularly.
Both bigts have appeared on a religious series, called "Suggested Solutions", which is a favorite of armed forces radio director John Broger, an evangelical fundamentalist.
Steiner has advocated some fascinating "Solutions" in his broadcasts. He would try to resettle "at least one-half of the Negro population in the country," cams from distant repeat criminals to labor camps in the Pacific islands and sterilize "those who in all likelihood would produce offspring which might be a burden
to society."
He would also license "authors so that the mass media couldn't popularize crime, violence and vandalism" and institute a tight system. Under his system, "responsible" members of society could cast as many as 24 votes, and "a man who has never seen anything or an old year-old who is just out of school" could cast only one.
Bill Bertenshaw, the moderator of the show, told us in a telephone conversation that Steiner appeared on the series "once every five or six weeks." Bertenshaw claimed that he gave
equal time to other viewpoints. We listened to a broadcast tape, however, which offered no time for opposing views and made no disclaimer dissociating the Defense Department from the opinions of the right-wing fanatics.
Broger refused to discuss Steiner with us. When we reached him earlier about the Gerald L. K. Smith broadcast, he said he was unaware that the hat would be used in the series and promised a full investigation. "It won't happen again," he said.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
AP News Analysis
The conservative anti-Brandt newspaper Die Welt said, "It is
By ANTHONY COLLINGS
BONN, West, Germany—Chancellor Willy Brandt has sent a key aide to the United States amid growing concern here that disputes over the dollar, trade rules and weaken the Western alliance.
German-American Relations Deteriorate on Trade Issue
Karl Moersch, a state secretary who is taking over some of the functions of alling Foreign Minister W Walter Scheel, left Monday for five days of talks in New York and Washington.
He is the fourth official sent by Brandt to Washington this year.
Brandt to Washington this year. German newspaper reaction and private comment by Bonn would undermine that all is not well between the United States and West Germany.
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
Finance Minister Helmut Schmidt told newman Saturday that the bank would have preferred a "float," cutting the mark free from a pegged exchange rate against the dollar, and letting the mark rise in inflation.
The latest source of concern is Bonn's weekend decision not to "float" the West German mark, which would have made exports unprofitable. This decision is reported to have conflicted with U.S. wishes.
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useless to gloss things over:
German-American relations have hit their lowest point since West German came into being."
Instead, Bonn slapped controls on an inflationary inflow of weakened dollars into Germany.
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SOKOLOFF
The Germans want America's 300,000 troops in Europe to remain as a safeguard against any Soviet threat. They fear that Congress may threaten to withdraw the troops if Europe does not help the United States out of its huge trade deficit.
But the Germans remain worried.
The ultimate nightmare for Germans would be a U.S. troop pullout and a trade war.
The influential newspaper Frankurter Allgemeine Zeitung warned of "congressional efforts to make adherence to U.S. troop strength in Europe dependent on continuing American exports to Russia for protection of U.S. industry from European competition."
To avoid this, Brandt has sought to stabilize U.S.-German relations. In a Jan. 18 policy speech, Brandt warned of possible economic tensions and urged a construction of an open dialogue to avert unnecessary political strains.
On the optimistic side, some observers say the U.S.German differences may be only the hardening of position that often
takes place before big trade negotiations.
Despite the weekend currency controls, the dollar continued to weaken in relation to the mark in Monday's trading. The dollar closed at 3.1810 marks in comparison to Friday's closing at 3.1540.
The West Germans seek to avoid an upward revaluation of the mark because it would make their exports more expensive. But an upward revaluation would wake America out of its economic weakness and this would help the United States ease its balance of payments deficit, brought about because the United States is importing more than it exports.
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom-Un-UN 4-4810
Business Office-Un-UN 4-4358
Published at the University of Kentucky in December 2014, and the year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates: $8 per month for a nonpaid postal address paid at Lawnerv. K6. 60044 Accommodations, goods, services and students without regard to color, sex or race are not pressured are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State University.
NEWS STAFF
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor ... Suanne Shaw
Editor ... Joyce Neerman
Associate Editor ... Sally Carlson
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser ... Mel Adams
Business Manager ... Carol Dirks
Ant. Bust. Mr. ... Chuck Goodwin
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
trade
Shaw
Neerman
Carlson
Kansas Photo
adams
ol Dirks
Goodsell
--purchase are:
A. M. C.
Vern Miller Comments on Nude Modeling Studio
First studios must comply with city ordinances.
Vern Vows Long Look At Any Nude Studios
TOPEKA - Attorney General Vern Miller said Tuesday that a nude modeling studio of the type currently operating in Missouri wrote to faculty "close scrutiny" *'Opened in Kansas.*
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Miller's remarks came in the wake of a statement made last week by the owner of a Kansas City, Mo., studio concerning expansion of his business into awareness.
Miller, who said that he "doesn't usually give legal opinions except to officials", cited state statute 213508 as applicable state law.
"Lewd and lascivious behaviour is exposure of a sex organ in the presence of a person who is not the spouse of the offender or who has not consented thereto," the statute reads, "with intent to arouse or incite the sex desires of the offender or another."
Miller did not elaborate on the statute.
"If this would happen (a nude models studio opening in Kansas), each individual case might be scrutinized," he said, "and not prosecuted." "But no, not prosecution would be warranted."
Three modeling studios are now in operation in Kansas City, Mo. Each charges approximately $13 per half hour for the computer system and an additional cloth, semi-ute or completely lute.
A FOURTH STUDIO was recently closed by the Kansas City, Mo. vice square for a new studio.
Ed Jackson, owner of International Models at 3130 Troist in Kansas City, Mo., toldKansas reporters last week that he was planning to send other cities as possible exonation sites.
"I would think that this type of activity would come under close scrutiny because the very aspects of this activity are very important to other criminal activities," Miller said.
"Law enforcement officials would take a long look." he said.
In reference to the statute's "intent to arouse" clause, Miller admitted it might be "possible" for a customer of the studio to not become aroused.
"n adrovious artis, perilides," he ban-
dled. "They had been here in Kana-
sas, the owners would have to first com-
ply with city ordinances, Miller con-
cluded.
"A serious artist, perhaps." he said.
Parties, Speeches, Forums Planned by Class Officers
The freshman class is planning two sets of forums this semester, according to Greg Bengston, Salina freshman and class president. The first forum, scheduled for before spring vacation, will be an organizations forum, with representatives of various campus groups participating, Bengston said. It will last two or three days.
Speakers, parties and projects now are
available in the Class Officer and
individual class office.
A senior class party is being planned for April 20 with the possibility of a pig roast at the same time, Hackney said. The senior class party will be scheduled for the day of commencement.
The most immediate events are the speeches of Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., Sunday, and Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., Feb. 15. Eagleton's speech is sponsored by the class, according to John Hackney, Wichita senior and class president, most senior class projects are tentative at this time. Among the possible activities are a ski trip to Colorado over spring break or a bus camp election or on St. Patrick's Day.
The other forum will be modeled after the sophomore classes' majors for last semester and the junior forum will be held during the week after spring vacation Bengston said.
The University of Kansas chapter of Pi Delta Pi, the National French Honor Society, is offering scholarship money for summer study in France. These scholarships are currently enrolled at KU. French majors currently enrolled at KU. Application blanks are available in the office of the department of French and Italian, 312 Carruthen and are due on or before 1973. For further information contact the department of French and Italian.
French Society Offers Study
7 Sites Sold to Endowment Assoc.
The former Gaslight Tavern, now the Mt. Oread Bar and Grill, is being purchased by the Kansas University Endowment and is managed by Jerry Bergberg, executive director of the association.
The junior class tentatively has scheduled a party for March 10, according to Skip Kaltenhauser, Prairie Village junior and class president. The junior class also is considering sponsoring a benefit for some local cause, he said.
The freshmen are also planning to throw another party, he said.
Endowment Association plans call for eventual raising of the Gaslight building and a structure immediately north of it. Richard and George Waterman, the proprietors of the bar and grill, hold a lease that expires June 30, 1976.
Six other parcels of land north of the campus on Oread Avenue and Louisiana Ave.
Removal of the building will mean the demise of a familiar KU landmark. Torn YE, KU information director, said the building already was a landmark in the late
The building was known as Brick's at least until 1946. According to Betty Pattet, editor of Alumni Association publications, the building was a popular hannout for KU students.
Yoe, a KU student then, said that Brick's was popular as an eating place before any of them even ate.
1930s, when it was a popular food service tavern known as Brick's.
Steve Clark, Alumni Association assistant director, couldn't remember the name of the building when he was a KU student between 1890 and 1864. He said that at that time he would have been remembered the Tavern as a hangout for the Daily Kansan editorial staff.
The building is most recently remembered as the site of the shooting death of
Rothman rejected the idea of a just and moral war, saying that Judaism only permitted the neutralization of a man who tried to kill another.
nine discussion was then opened to questions from the audience. Topics
Life, Violence Topics Of Tri-Faith Speakers
Both Grose and El-Biali agreed with the idea that human life was sacred in Islam. El-Bali went on to say that an often misunderstood concept of holy wars in Islam really meant fighting external aggression.
Nick Rice in the summer of 1970. Last summer, Atty, Gen, Vern Miller and County Attorney Mike Ewell filed an injunction to have the Gaslight closed as a public nuisance. District Court Judge Floyd Coffman allowed the tavern to remain open.
The building is now the property of Mary Rowlands. The Watermans said no one at the University had approached them about buying out the lease, before 1976.
In speaking of Judaiism, he said that human life was held to be sacred ever since Abraham had been prevented by God from slaying his son Isaac. There was in every man, he said, a little bit of God. To destroy man was to destroy a little bit of God.
A former University of Kansas student has been accused of raping two Ellsworth Hall students.
Rothman said that all three religions were monotheistic and that there were many aspects in which the three were in common. He then asked the question of the apathy of human life.
Representatives of the three faiths were the Rev. George Grose, chaple of Whittier College; John Rothman, director of education of Whittier Beth Shalom synagogue; and A. Mushin El-Blah, Amherst Academic Foundation of Southern California.
The meeting, attended by more than 50 persons, was at the School of Religion, with the objectives of helping to reduce tensions and establishing 'levels of caring.'
A Christian, a Jew and a Muslim traveled from California to speak last night on "The Sanctity of Human Life in Light of Contemporary Violence."
discussed were present day strife between peoples of different faiths, capital punishment, abortion, marriage, divorce and women's equality.
A warrant was issued Tuesday for the arrest of Harold Clark Jr., 18, Columbia, S. C. He is charged with committing aggravated burglary and rape on Dec. 10.
Clark is currently being held in South Carolina on other charges. The county attorney's office said Tuesday that attempts would be made to extradite him.
Another warrant, issued Dec. 21, charged
Cameron with raped rape of another
Elsa Worrell woman, wore a
1231 Oread and from 1231 Louisiana, which are being purchased from William L. Lemesay and will be turned over to the association by June 1.
Mike Thomas, director of Traffic and Security at KU, said investigation into the alleged Dec. 20 rape and burglary was completed Monday night.
Charges Filed In Dec. Rapes At Ellsworth
1234 Oread and 1237 Louisiana, which are being purchased from Daniel Ling. The Oread plot will be acquired by June 1 and the Louisiana address by Dec. 31, 1974.
Concerning the question of frequent human suffering in a war-torn world, Grose said that one could not equate followers of a religion with the religion itself. If religion were strictly adhered to without political acceptance, it would not strife. Most strife is started and sustained in the name of religion, he said, but is politically motivated.
Other plots in the Endowment Association
Rothman said he was personally in favor of abortion because the sanctity of the mother's life was not being protected, said, however, that abortion was considered bomicidal in his faith unless the mother's
Both victims quickly reported the alleged crimes to his office, Thomas said.
Speaking about capital punishment, El-Biali said that his faith considered human life so precious that a man who had committed unprematuremed murder could pay a "ransom" to the family of the dead man and thereby preserve his own life. The family of many inmates held the right either to accept this or to take his life as punishment for his crime.
Grose spoke of the after effects of abortion, saying that he was personally familiar with cases of abortions being followed by death, suicidal thoughts, and suicide attempts.
Rothman said he thought that Judaism could not condone capital punishment, but Grose said he thought that one did not have the right to be a capital punishment to be a good Christian.
1245 Louisainn, which is also being purchased from Ling and will be obtained by the university.
El-Biallu was quite firm about the Islamic stand on abortion. Islam, he said, did not have any place for intercourse out of wedlock. A woman was permitted to abort a baby with an unborn child in danger. No person has the right to destroy even a potential life, he said.
There were further discussions on related topics, with varying viewpoints projected by the three guest speakers. On the question of the situation in the Middle-East, Roth-Beckman argued that it themselves to a statement condemning all actions that caused the loss of human life.
They had no comment to make on the conflicting claims of Muslims and Jews to their holy places in Jerusalem, but Rothman said he thought that if politics could be divorced from the issue, a satisfactory solution could easily be arrived at.
43 Students to Decide Fate of Proposed Hall
Forty-three students who have signed contracts to live in a proposed coed scholarship hall next year will decide Friday whether to drop the project.
The University Housing Board decided Tuesday that the students would decide whether to abandon the project for next year or reopen applications to try to fill hall.
Original plans for the coeall hall, an innovation in the eight-hool call, called for 22 women and 30 men to be housed in Stenham Schoolship Hall next fall.
A shortage of students to live in the hall next year will be the main issue of a meeting of the 43 students at 4 p.m. Friday in Sellars Scholarship Hall.
Only 19 women were selected, however. Enough men were accepted so that there we are 11 alternates to fill vacancies. Of the 30 men accepted, 24 have signed contracts.
The board, which comprises Donald Alderson, dean of men; William Bailour, vice chancellor for student affairs; Emily Taylor, dean of women; and J. J. Wilson, director of University housing, said three students would mean higher costs for residents.
The Board also was concerned that the present number of vacancies, along with any spaces that may be created during the financial burden on the hall.
Time is also a problem. The offices of the dean of women and the dean of men will start regular selection processes for scholarship hall residents within two weeks.
They must know by then whether there will be a coed scholarship hall so that the proper number of new residents can be selected.
Chris Miller—Contrib. Editor On Satire
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6
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Spooner, Spencer Prepare Painting, Book Exhibits
BY LYNNE MALM
Kansan Staff Writer
"Museums should be thought of as icebergs, only the tip is on display at any one time," Gridley Smith, curator of collections at Soooner said recently.
Both Spooner Art Museum and the Kenneth Spencer Research Library try to change their exhibits constantly to present KU's holdings to the public.
Artworks in Spooner are classified by use period, medium, and artist. Smith said,
Few works are shown in their collections.
An exception, Smith said, was the Gene Swenson Pop Art collection, given to KU in 1973. It includes paintings and a widely known critic of pop art.
Some Students Sponge County Official Saves
THE PURPOSE of displays is to try to place a work in a new context, so that
By ERIC MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
Everyone who purchases a vehicle tag in the county must pay personal property taxes on the vehicle, even if he buys it or moves, according to Kansas law.
Students who move after they purchase vehicle tags often become "freeloaders" on the Douglas County tax rail, according to county treasurer's and assessor's offices.
A vehicle purchased between Sept. 2, 1971, 1971, and Sep. 1, 1972, and registered in the county is liable for taxation unless it was reported to the county assessor's office.
"Most students just do not know they owe taxes," Deputy County Treasurer Bessie Bennett said Tuesday. "It's a bad deal, too, but it's made everybody else pay higher taxes."
BENNETT SAID more than 2,000 tax statements mailed last November had been returned to her office because the addresses had moved and left no forwarding addresses. The majority, she said, were students.
If the taxes are not paid before March 25,
warrants will be issued, and the sheriff will
collect them.
successful, the statements will be given to the clerk of the district court as liens against any other property the parties may own.
Proof of payment of property taxes must be presented when a new license plate is purchased. However, the staggered purchase period allows the charge to go unnoticed by the student for a considerable period.
“the way the law reads now,” a deputy assessor said, “a person can go clear to December not knowing that he should have met an officer and be there meantime, there will be penalties imposed.”
THE BIGGEST PROBLEM comes from students who leave the state after graduation, the assessor said. They do not realize they own property taxes, she added.
Taxes are figured by ownership as of Jan.
1. Lower charges are made if the purchase is made during the following months, up to September. Statements are then prepared and mailed in November. Payment of half of the taxes is required by Dec. 20.
"If the students would understand these laws and notify us when they moved or sold their cars, it would help straighten this out," the assessor said.
Modus Operandi Similar In 2 Lawrence Robberies
A robbery of the Mission Im, 1904 Massachusetts St., Tuesday morning appears to have been a repeat performance of "Dancing With the Eleven" Eleven Food Store, 174, Massachusetts St.
According to the Lawrence police report, Richard Cassaart, the owner and operator of the Mission Inn, was preparing to close for the night when a man in his early 20s called "The grey scarlet entered and announced," "THe is a stick up. I want all of your money."
Cassaart said that he saw a pistol protruding from the robber's green rubber poncho. The robber kept telling Cassaart to up or he would shoot him, the report said.
checks from the cash register and put it in
the receipt. Then you got back the robot, then
the robot, then Tassougask, whistle!
Cassaart took $259.50 in cash and $15 in
Before leaving, the robber told Cassari to lie down on the floor and warned him that a friend across the street who had a riffle was following him through his scope, according to the report.
Cassart waited for a few minutes before calling the police.
The police said that the incident strongly resembled Thursday's robbery and that the general description of the robber was the same.
In Thursday's robbery, the robber ordered a night clerk to lie down on the floor and also warned that a friend across the street was watching with a rifle.
A new computer system to speed and correct problems with overdue books at Watson Library will be installed in about a month.
Watson Library to Install New Computer Terminals
The biggest advantage to the new system, Nancy Bengel, head of the circulation department, said Wednesday, is that the library day would be lengthened from 4:30 to 5:15, allowing them that many of the problems with overdue books will be eliminated. she said.
With the present system a book is marked overdue by the computer at 4:30 p.m. after a three-day grace period ends, Bengel said. Students will be able to return books until 11 p.m. without being fined under the new system, she said.
whether the viewer has seen it once or a hundred times the context allows them to
recognize it.
However, the book drops on the sidewalk in front of the library will be closed during the evening. Bengel said. They will only be after 11 p.m. and on weekends, Bengel said.
Seasonal themes are repeated yearly, but works used vary, Smith said. Some works may be used more often because they fit into more contexts for display.
to be a great improvement over the old computer systems. Bengal said, although the programmers are having trouble getting the terminals to accept the variety of KU-ID cards the library uses. The new computer terminals must accept the old and new identification cards as well as the faculty and library staff cards she said.
One terminal is being returned for modifications, she said. Instructions for the modifications will be sent to the library so programmers can modify the other two terminals.
Three new computer terminals promise
Problems of this sort have already put the schedule one month behind, Bengel said. Although the new system should be started within the next month, she said, it may not work out as planned for a spring break. The library wanted to start the spring school when library use was light, she said.
Since the library leases the computer system, Bengel said, there would be no need to buy a new computer.
Some one-of-a-kind items or small numbered gene collections are not shown for long periods of time because it is difficult to integrate them into a display.
Sometimes though, such works are shown to a class. This was the case with Byzantine sculptures, which were made in the 4th century.
Examples of seasonal displays are the Japanese Ghost Prints shown around Halloween and the planned February nineteenth century lace valentines.
SPOONER HAS strong collections of American painting, sculpture, and decorative arts. The 1791 pop art gift of the Swenson collection made Spooner one of the strongest university holders in this area. Early Renaissance and medieval medals of Renaissance through 18th century painting are also strong points of the collection.
Although grants provide occasional funds, most of the money for the operation of Spooner comes from the state and patrons. Entire collections are not often purchased. Most of KU's have been donated.
Recently KU used a grant from the National Endowments for the Art Association to purchase works of 20th century artists. The exhibition is in the lower floor gallery in December.
The American, 20th century, and print galleries on the upper floor are reminiscent of the Arts Decorator's office.
AREAS BEHIND the galleries on all three floors are used for storage space, Smith said. The entire building has temperature and humidity control. A Byzantine icon may be stored next to a pop art painting; they have the same preservative milk.
the main gallery on the main floor are relatively permanent, since more fragile works are displayed there. The lower floor gallery is often used for traveling
Spooner does not lend works to other parts of the campus for display to assure their preservation and security, Smith explained. Some works are occasionally loaned to Spencer library, the Chancellor's office, or the museum and history of art offices.
Requests are often made and granted to other museums for the display of certain works. Most lending is done within the boundaries of the United States, Smith said, although foreign requests are sometimes received.
University catalogues say that Spooner has more than 10,000 art objects valued at $4.5 million.
KENNETH SPENCER Research Library don't lend it of its rare and old books to other parts of the campus, except Spooner University's Mason, director of special collections said.
there are several display areas in Spencer: the main entrance hall, two north gallery areas, outside the lower level Kansas collection area, outside the archives reading room, inside the library floor reading room, and the main floor fortnightly exhibit cases. Mason said.
Display ideas come from campus events, seasonal themes, or particularly in the case of the fortnightly exhibits, from pieces of research by librarians, Mason said.
'Who's Who' Locates Jobs for KU Seniors
By MYLA STARR
Kansan Staff Writer
Over 30 students who graduated from the University of Kansas last year found jobs through a senior class publication, "Who's Who at KU for T2." Some of the four hundred seniors listed in "Who's Who at KU" this year may have the same good fortune.
"Who's Who at KU" was printed for the first time last year. It is a compilation of short resumes designed to inform employers throughout the state and the nation about KU graduates. Printing and mailing costs are financed completely by class dues, and any senior class member who has paid them may be included in the listing free of charge.
Brian Braco, Munster, Ind., senior, and chairman of the senior jobs committee this year, said Tuesday that the goal of "Who's at KU for T3" was to reach as many as 150 students in grades 9-12 on campus with emphasis last year was on finding jobs in Kansas for KU graduates, he said.
A COUPON REQUEST for this year's "Who's Who?" was placed in the December issue of the KU Alumni newsletter, Braco said, to give interest alumni from both in the University and at the college of the guide. Braco said that about 180 coupons had been returned so far.
Bracco said that he was still in the process of compiling this year's mailing list, but the who's who at State College was set to 430 unified districts and 830 newspapers and radio and television stations in Kansas. This year's "Who's Who" has been sent to the KU Printing Service and is scheduled for Feb. 16. A lady isady for mailing at the end of February.
Publication of a senior job placement guide was begun when the job market was undergoing its transition. Dodge City senior and developer of the first "Who's at KU" Schwartz, who is in his second year as a senior, said that when he began his May job prospects were bleak.
"I STARTED wondering what could be done to alert people outside of the University community to the large number of KU students who would need and want too." he said.
"Our main goal was to approach Kansas employers with something compact and
Weekly Series On Engineering Begins Friday
The location of the meeting, which is open to the public, will be posted in Learned Hall or may be obtained through the electrical engineering office. 116 Learned.
The first of a continuing series of weekly seminars dealing with topics related to electrical engineering will begin at 3:30 p.m. Friday. Speakers will include members of the professional engineering community and the faculty.
ACTION Applications Taken Now for Fall
Students interested in ACTION programs (Peace Corps or Vista) for the summer and fall of this year should apply now. Those interested can get information from the Peace Corps, the University campus representative or from recruiters who will be on campus later this semester.
The seminar will be sponsored by the electrical engineering honor society, Eta Kappa Nu. A social hour will follow the meeting, which is scheduled to last an hour.
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Schwartz said that last year's placement program consisted of two parts: sending a listing of prospective Kansas employers to senior class members and mailing 'Who's in' to businesses throughout the state. The mature cost approximately $1,000, he said.
A FOLLOW-UP SURVEY showed that about 20 per cent of the students listed in the guide were likely to be by business on the guide's mailing list and that about eight per cent of the seniors in the guide received job offers as a direct result in writing "in Who's a Woman at KU" Schwartz said.
A collection is sometimes exhibited when it is donated to the University, as was a collection of the works of H. L. Mencken in 1971.
"This is not a great number of students," he said, "but if one person had gotten a job out of it, I would have considered it a success."
Two or three major exhibits are
Displays are usually on a topic rather than simply drawn from a collection. The majority of books held by the library are not pleased to the use, Mason said.
Librarians need about two days to set up display in the main lobby cases, because they must be careful in positioning and mounting the books.
"Displays aren't repeated," Mason said.
"I did it once and it failed the second time."
presented each year, Six to 12 middle-sized exhibitions, usually presented in the north gallery, and about 20 fortnightly displays; also presented each year. Megan says,
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. February 7, 1973
7
Guitarist McLaughlin Has Hot New Album
By BILL JONES
Kayon Roderman
"BIRDS OF FIRE" - THE MAHAVISHNU
OCURSHA (Columbia Records)
If you were impressed with the Orchestra's first album, "The Inner Mounting Flame," you should be even more impressed with their second album, "Birds of Fire." In fact, if you buy only one album in the next six months this one should be it.
"The Inner Mounting Flame" had some excellent spots on it, but it guitarist John Mearlaugh, the leader of the group, overemphasized his need to get fed up with too much electric guitar, no matter how good the guitarist is. It gets monotonous.
The Mahavishnu Orchestra's music is characteristically energetic, usually fast and always intense. Some of the pieces on their first album were simply beautiful, but at other times they included rather noisy, nevertheless, the group showed a great amount of creativity.
With this album, "Birds of Fire," McLaughlin has proved himself to be not only a fine guitarist but an excellent music writer as well. (McLaughlin has written all of the music recorded by the Mahavishnu Orchestra.)
It's one thing to be able to play an Instrument well, but that's not enough. This album contains music that not only is beautiful well, but is musically interesting.
The title song, for example, is a moving, restless, rhythmic number. The rhythm of the song is perfect and perfect ease. "Cesetrial Terrestrial Commuters" is another cut using a rather hectic rhythm, while "Hope" is a spirted, dynamic piece of music imbuing stories and unity.
Most of the songs on the album don't use the standard 4-4 beat commonly used in contemporary music, but involve more uncommon time signatures and complex rhythms. This is not unlike the work on "The Inner Mounting Flame." The first cut called "Vital information" had 5% beats per measure, for example.
In this respect, McLaughlin's music reminds me of that of Don Ellis, a big band leader and jazz trumpeter, whose trademark seems to be unusual time. The song "When I'm Born" becomes tiring after a while, but it offers a refreshing break from the usual rhythms.
A few years ago, Miles Davis recorded a "BITCHES BREW" album, called "John McLaughlin." On "Birds of Fire" McLaughlin has reciprocated with a song called "Miles Beyond." It's a rather sensual number, expressing a wide range of feelings. The title mimics voices—spiritual, electric voices that sound similar to the haunting voices in "Unknown Soldier" on Weather Report's "I Sing the Body Electric."
Tickets On Sale For SUA Show, Weather Report
Tickets are still on sale for the Weather Report concert, 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. General admission tickets are $3.
Weather Report was formed by Joseph Zawinul, Wayne Shorter and Miraslaw Almagan. He played in his native city, Vienna, before coming to the United States to study at the Boston Berkley School of Music. His composition "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy," he won the 1967 Grammy
Zawinul has played with Maynard Ferguson, Milies Davis, Yusef Lajeef and Cannonbali Adderly. He also performed on an album of his own.
Shorter wrote an opera when he was 17, and went on to major in music education at New York University. He has worked with the band Nine Inch Nails and Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers.
Vitous originally came to the United States from Czechoslovakia on a Berklee scholarship and has been a musician for 17 years. He has released two albums of his own and is known for Gets, Cells, Rollin, Art Farmer, Larry Coley, Mitsa Davis and Herbie Mann.
Bartok Quartet Will Perform
The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series will present the Bartok Quartet in concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Tickets for the Bartok Quartet per month on sale in the Murphy Hall box office.
Legion Faces Big Bingo Ban
Members of Dorsey-Liberty American Legion Post No. 14 met Tuesday night to discuss the effect the bingo ban would have on their organization.
Dale Dahlem, commander of the post, said Monday night that he had heard rumors that a motion to sell the post home would be made at the meeting.
An executive council was held after the regular meeting to prepare information to be released to the press at noon today. No information was available Tuesday night.
The first part of "Open Country Joy" is a soft, sensitive, beautiful passage that just doesn't last long enough. After a pause, the song goes into a fast, energetic passage that sounds a lot like "Awakening" on their first album. Then, after a while, it goes back into the quiet mood. The song expresses two forms of human joy, but it lacks continuity.
"One Word" is one of the best cuts on the album, especially because each member has a good chance to solo. Billy Cobham, the drummer and vocalist of any recording on any other record so far. As anyone who heard the Mahavishnu Orchestra in Hoch Auditorium last November can testify Cobham is an exceptional drummer, and Moehill plays the violin, violin, Jan Hammer, on Moog, and McLaughlin speak back and forth during the song. They blend well, and don't clash when playing together. The Moog is used most quietly, as an instrument rather than a novelty.
Although "The Inner Mounting Flame" was an impressive album, its flaws escaped the more creative work on it. "Birds of Fire" of a more consistent high quality. The music is complex, but understandable McLaughlin would say, "a bavish inspiration."
Week Scene
Concerts, Eagleton Highlight Week
PROGRAM OF SURREALISTIC SHORTS: This collection is just what the Mesas v. "Enter act." Two Mesas and a Wardrobe v. "Enter act." Two Mesas and a Meshes of the Afternoon," The Ghosts Before Breakfast" and "Un Chien Andalou." Woodwork v. "10 am, 9:30 p.m. admission" 75 cents.
MOVIES
ALEXANDER NEVSKY: This 1938 Russian movie is part of the classical film 9:15 p.m. tonight in Woodruff, admission 75 cents.
200 MOTELS; Frank Zappa's production complete with "The Mothers of Invention," Ringo Starr and Theodore Bikel. Woodruff, 7 and 8; Friday and Saturday, 9 and 10.
POSEIDON ADVENTURE: Starts tonight at the Varsity.
JEREMIAH JOHNSON: Still on at the Gramada.
INNCENT BYSTANDER: Starts tonight at Hillcrest 1.
night at Hintcrest 1
1776; Still at Hillcreat 2
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REEFER MADNESS: This movie, a "Three Stooges" short and a roadrunner
CPA Investigation . . .
the use of any chain referral agreement in which a buyer is induced to purchase merchandise at a cost of more than $80 by a seller's promise that the buyer would have the promise of deduction or commission if the buyer would refer prospective buyers to the seller.
BERMAN SAID he would refer the corporation to the Division of Consumer Affairs in the Kansas Attorney General's Office for further investigation.
A representative of Ridgley said the referral system was necessary, because Ridgley did not have enough revenue from its customers. Ridgely would deposit or the $172,000 a month mortgage.
(Continued from Page 1)
He said that return of the security deposits had always been allow because the apartments had already been occupied and they could also had to be approved by the corporation in Albuquerque.
have to pay rent during Christmas break This left at least 100 apartments vacant, be said.
He said that people had "cleared out like flies" in December so that they would not
THE REPRESENTATIVE said he expected that the deposits would be returned soon, however, because Vision Investments had taken over direct control and subsidy of Ridglea and was sending a new manager on Friday.
Vision Investments of Albuquerque was contacted by phone, but the director of Ridgale Estates was not available for comment.
(Continued from page 1)
Clinton . . .
**Criticism:** would be the only way to lead Lawrence. At present, he said K 10 is the only highway leading to Lone Star Road, which goes to Clinton. The traffic would be a major problem on Friday afternoons at 23rd and 6pm. Or it is the planning commission's problem.
Dishner said a road leading around the entire lake had been planned. For the majority of people, he thought that went to the lake shore, turned around and came back out.
THE WILDLIFE of the Wakarau River Valley will flourish in the area around the two arms of the reservoir, Dishner said. This area is not to be developed extensively, he said, because hunting is the major sport planned for the area.
However, Coggins said the natural environment would be easier to protect if the sea level rises.
Approximately 600 acres are being set aside for a more primitive camping area for those persons wishing to back pack and hike, Disher said. However, these activities would not be limited to this area, he said.
Dilhier said a bicycle path was planned to which would begin in Lawrence, lead across country through the eastern areas of the park and end north of the lake.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Try our Wednesday nite
Pizza Smorgasbord
5 til 8 p.m.
all the pizza you can eat $1.29
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
843-1886
809 W.23rd
I wish you would quit needing me!!
Wull shucks. I's jus scratchin' yur back.
DUAL
Why don't you get a preener then. I'm beginning to feel very ungroovey!
treat your tunes tenderly
AUDIOTRONICS
928 MASS
DUAL
Why don't you get a preener
then. I'm beginning to feel
very ungroovey!
cartoon complete the bill for the midnight show, Saturday at Hircrest.
MR. DEEDS GO TO TOWN and BLACKMAIL: GWE CAP斯 & Alfred Hitchock are the respective directors of the movies on this double bill at the United Ministries building, at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Admission $1.50.
SPEAKERS and LECTURES
HUMAN SEXUALITY SEMINAR:
Alternative lifeways, nonmarried couples,
extended families, gay relations and group
life will be the focus of the seminar. 7:30
am Bldg Eight. Big Eight
THOMAS EAGLETON: Eagleton will speak at 7 p.m. in Sunday. Tickets will be sold for $1 until Friday, seniors with class card will be admitted free.
ART
JOHN TALLEUR AND PAUL WIEDRICH EXHIBIT: The intaglio and woodcut prints of John Talleur, professor of Paul Wiedrich will be shown until March 10 at the 7th gallery. The gallery is open from noon to 8 p.m. on Tuesday through Saturday.
featured on the violins and Karoly Dotys Friday, at Saworth Recital Hall. Admission is $10.
MUSIC
PENETRATIONS: Local boogie band.
Tonight at the Red Dog.
JAMES MOESER: The Faculty Recital Series presents James Moeser, organist, at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Plymouth Church, 925 Vermont. No admission charge.
REO SPEEDWAGON: The hot and heavy sounds of this contemporary group will be present at Fridays, Friday nights, Saturday night, their backup band "Pike" will hold the fort alone.
HUMAN SEXUALITY SEMINAR
ALTERNATIVE
LIFESTIES
Non-Married Couples
Extended Families
Gay Relations
Group Living
€ ♀
WEATHER REPORT: (See story.)
RATIOR QUARTET: (See story.)
HARDY QUARTET: Nymph will be.
730 THURSDAY, FEB 8
BIG 8 ROOM, KANSAS UNION
CHRISTIANS MEET
1221 Tennessee
Every Thursday and Friday 7:30 p.m.
"Experience Christianity"
I
Cal Phillips, junior, felt threatened when his parents suggested he work. "They called me a bum and said they were good at it."
Cat he'd out as long as possible. "Two days after they shipped sending bread I got into a Provident Mutual Bank branch and asked for cash. Can make my own hours. Can make good money I got a job waiting for me when I graduated. Can make money in insurance policy."
PROVIDENT MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PHILADELPHIA
Honolulu, HI 96810 Phs 1901
Home
Stephen H. Kraybill—Campus Representative 2401 W. 25th, Apt. 9B9 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Res. 913-841-2310 or 913-842-3146
SPEED
REO
WAGON
R. E.O.
SPEEDWAGON
with "PIKE"
at
The Red Baron
804 W.24th
EAGLE
Thursday and Friday Nights-Feb.8 and 9 9-12 p.m.
Tickets Available at KIEF'S RECORDS and THE RED BARON
$3.00 Advance
$3.50 At Door
8
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
40
KANSAS
52
33
Kansas Staff Photos by PRES BRANDSTED
Board Muscle
Big Danny Knight, the 6-10 Hutchinson sophomore, provided board muscle for the Kannas Jayhawks in Saturday night's contest against the St. Louis Cardinals.
pressure from Okhahoma freshman center Alvan Adams (33) and forward Tom Holland (40), managed only five points in the game, but gathered five rebounds. Knight got into trouble early in the second half and sat out for eight minutes before re-entering. He picked up his fifth foul with five minutes left in the game. KU won the game, 76-69.
Willie Wise Leads West Comeback
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Hometown hero Willie Wise led a fourth-quarter scoring surge as the West wiped out a 19-point deficit and stunned the favored East 123-111. Tuesday night in the sixth game, N.C. State Basketball Association All-Star game.
Warren Jaballi, the hustling Denver guard, won the most valuable player award on the strong list of some outstanding scoring ability that set the stage for the West takeover.
The West's sudden turnabout, which brought a partisan crowd of 12,556 up roaring, reversed a long pattern of sloppy plav that helped the East build big leads.
The margin was 65-52, at halfway and the last stitched to that 7-10 soon, after it had been cut.
Although the West slowly creep back to within 92-82, it still appeared late in the third period that the East would run away to a victory rivaling its 142-15, rout of last
Mel Daniels of Indiana, whose twisting,
fall-away jumpers helped shut off a
desperate fight to charge the ball.
**25** **Johnson** (25) **Teammate** George
McGinnis scored 23, 11 in the final period.
K-State Edges Cyclones, 78-74
The Wildcats' 10th straight home court victory also booted them into a game in Florida. The Tigers were 7-0, the Coyotes 4-2.
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) - Eighteenth-ranked Kansas State had to fight for its life before finally downing Iowa State 78-74, in a conference basketball game Tuesday night.
Senior forward Ernie Kusner scored four points in the last 29 seconds to insure the K-State win. Kusner hit a drive layup to give K-State a 76-72, advantage, but Iowa State's Martinez Denmon countered with another layup.
Then Kusny, who had 19 points and 11 rebounds, was fooled by Demon and hit both ends of a one-and-one with seven seconds left.
Denmon, a 6-foot-3 senior, led the Cyclones with 20 points.
For the East, which collapsed after playing smooth, team-oriented ball in the first three quarters, Virginia's Julius Ennerle won 22, Carolina's Billy Cunningham had 18.
Kusnery led a balanced Wildcat attack that saw four man score in double figures. Center Steve Mitchell had 16, reserve Jason Snger Snider 12 and guard Bob Chipman 10.
The Ileas dropped Iowa TO 4-1 in the Big Eight and 13-7 over all. K-State in 15-3 on Saturday.
NCAA Approves Football Playoffs
the nation Division I championship will be played in Sacramento, Calif., at the Camelina Bowl, either Dec. 8 or Dec. 15. Edgars A. Sherman, chairman of the NCAA football committee and athletic director at Muskingum, Ohio College, said,
KANSAS CITY (AP) - The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) announced Monday night football playoff competition in both its college divisions.
The semi-finals will be held at the Pioneer Bowl at Wichita Falls, Tex., and the Grantland Rice Bowl at Baton Rouge, LA. Of the four first-round games, three will be played on campus and one will be played as the Boardwalk Bowl in Atlantic City, N.J.
year. But then, the West ran off 15 straight points—12 by Wise and—and pulled out 97-42, 80-36. And the West won 100-71.
Wise led the scorers with 26 points and the corwd manned "We want Willie" as the most valuable player ballots were counted. But the media chose Jabal El-Masri for second tying the game at 92-28. He wound up with 16 points, in 11 the third period.
K-State Wildcats, CU Share Big Eight Lead
The weekend basketball action in the Big Eight Conference will mark the half-way point of the season, and what a season it has been so far.
The KLWN 1973 1,000.00$$ Treasure Hunt is here — Good Luck!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Two teams are tied for the lead with identical 1-1 records. Kansas State is one of those teams who were popular people because the team was a preseason favorite. But the other first place team, Colorado, has astounded sport predictors by winning more games so far this season.
The Colorado Buffaloes have a season record of only 9-8, but have won five straight conference games after losing their opener. They are also the team that have the Buffaloes a conference record of 1-1.
The 'Hawks have lost to K-State at Lawrence and dropped an overtime game at Columbia when they nearly upset the Missouri Tigers, Oklahoma, Iowa State and Colorado have been defeated by the young team of four sophomores and one junior.
Colorado has upset the league-leaders at home and on the road, blasting Oklahoma at Boulder and upsetting Iowa State at Ames. Colorado and upfront defeats defeated Nebraska at Lincoln.
If Kansas an manage to win some of its away games it should finish with the top league teams. The Jayhawks must play the K-State Wildcats next Tuesday at Manhattan in a game that will be crucial to both squads.
K-State has lost only to Oklahoma in conference play and owns a 15-3 overall record. The Wildcats were beaten at Norman and have yet to lose at home during the conference season. The Wildcats won Tuesday night, defeating Iowa State, 78-42.
The Jayhawks of Kansas are still in the race with a 3-2 record. The Jayhawkes were the only team to beat Colorado, and have won two of their six games capable of beating any team in the league.
KLWN
The Missouri Tigers have suffered during conference play and seem now to be out of contention with a 3-8 record. The Tigers, ranked eight in the nation, were defeated by Missouri Monday night in Norman. It was the Sooner's 19th consecutive home game victory.
—Former Political Prisoner, Ilha deas Flores
As A Subimperialist Power
Former President, Brazilian National Students Union
Speaking on: BRAZIL
FM Stereo 106
Missouri, tournament of the Big Eight Presession Tournament, has a 15-3 record, but unfortunately for the Tigers all of the losses have been in conference play.
Forum Rm. 7:30 p.m.
Friday Feb. 9
Oklahoma has shown it can be a good team but has not shown consistency. The Sooners have not won on the road during conference play. The Sooners now have a 54 record. They lost to KU Saturday and upset Missouri Monday night.
JEAN MARC
VON DER WEID
SUA International Issues
Nebraska and Oklahoma State are battling for the seventh spot in the league. Nebraska lost to Colorado, Nebraska lost to K-State Saturday night and was defeated by Colorado Monday night.
The standings:
SUMMER JOBS
Migrators W L Pts.
Kansas State 9 1 .674
Colorado 2 1 .583
Minnesota 2 1 .583
Missouri 2 1 .583
Illinois 1 1 .583
New York 1 1 .583
Oklahoma State 1 1 .144
Guya & Gale needed for summer training at National Parks, Villa Parisiada and Resorts throughout the nation. Learn more about last year. For Free information on student assistance program send self-addressed MAPED envelope to Opportunity Dept J.SO. 51 Flathead Drive, Kaiser Stadium, Kalamazoo, MI 48096. MAY EARLY APPLY
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
SENIOR ANNOUNCEMENTS February 8 & 9 A factory representative will be present in the Kansas Union Bookstore to assist you in ordering your graduation invitations. Samples of the announcements and accessories will be on display at the Book Store the 8th & 9th also. Please come prepared to place your order with full payment in order to be assured your invitations will arrive on time.
kansas
sunior
BOOKSTORE
1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
On March 14 and 15, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973, 1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected.
To become a candidate:
Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 14.
In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate.
A men are color ALI
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
401 River Ave
bldg & nw wood-
horn hon.
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MA open space
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macluo
bldg
Flo arran
gran stree
Ne sto
Cal al
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Rainin
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Stea phieq
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 7. 1973
KANSAN WANT ADS
9
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
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: $0.03
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kanan are offered to students without regard to their financial status. ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLAINT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE DÍICE Shop - 3 blanks. No of Kaw River, livestock, gas heating, uses lure, bicycles including speed boots, new
ANTIQUE CLOTHES-523 Main, Weston, Mo.
ORIGINALS-524 Weston, Mo. or 816-746-3974. Victuallian clothing and indigene art.
AMERICAN COLLECTIONS
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Component with arm
180 at 19.50 Hz at Starback 6 basement stereo room
180 at 19.50 Hz at Starback 6 basement stereo room
Magnavox 100, Watt Stufte Component System includes AMI-4XL and a MIDI console. It has speaker, 1000Hz horn in air suspension acoustically sealed cabling system, and 120W power supply. Ray Stoneback's basement stereo room. 929 Mass.
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Bay Screen
backs. 929 Mass. 2-12
Magnavox 20 watts Survival Component System Intended Now $1,495 off 60 day Bay Stoneback & 299 Mats New $1,495 off 60 day Bay Stoneback & 399 Mats
Floor Sample 50 walt Magnavox component system (299.90) now just $299.90, and Suction Stagnation sealed cabinets sold for $379.90 now just $299.90 with new warmer. Now at Rocky Bay Store Basement $499.90.
New Sony Quad Systems now in stock at Ray
Stonebake's 929 Mass. 2-12
94 WV- runs good, needs body work. Cheap.
Call Kave, 843-609-6981
2-7
P.A. Biagnigno Altes—Larenga, Valor of the
Motherland and modified custom 20 "bringing
the family home"
AUDI SCHOOL WAREHOUSE The-film
RAY AUDIO STORE at coolpointe
at 6044. Phone #6044. Phone 824-201-97.
www.audi.edu.au/warehouse
1970 CORVETTE convertible, very good condi-
tion; 84-338 of 852-346 and for Mike; 84-338 of
852-346 and for Mike; 84-338 of 852-346 and for Mike.
Stereo components-kenwood, S150 receiver,
S151, Dell, LG, Samsung, SLR726 changer, AE speakers, Wollankee
phones, Panasonic cassette recorders,
Tee and Panasonic cassette recorders,
call after 9:00am. Some days used and new
devices are available.
1968 Javitt, Console auto., force steering, buckets,
battery, 842-689. 2-9
1869 Chevette SS 39RE convertible. 325-H P.4 -M.
Rear-wheel drive. 190-H P.4 -M. Rear-wheel
bench lift.易开本 47,000 lbm .MpfeR
Tires: 205/55R16.
1983 Old Toronto, blue, w white vipel, power
New York, shades & brakes & locks & run
Honda, black & red
Drafting Table, '3'尺 x '5' drawing board, draw
a sketch of the desk and cabinet, cabling
dashboard to fit in car. $79.00, 84.00,
126.00, 169.00.
SKIS-Brand new K2 New Comp 165mH Hart
Javelin XXL 150mL Call Chrill at 6:30, 8:30
9am Sunday
SONy TC-353 tape deck, excellent condition,
sold used. $22.99 new will sell for $125.00.
SONy TC-353 tape deck, excellent condition,
sold used. $22.99 new will sell for $125.00.
1963 PORSCHCHE Coupe. Radialh. Abber exhaut, 80 x 45 cm. Paris, 84-7021. @ 8:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
STEREO-High-quality compact system. Craig 8 trak, with AM-FM stereo. Include power unit, and speakers, phase box, FM dipole antenna, and amplifier. For the cold condition. B41-5860 between 7 and 2-8
Lawrence Auction House
642 MA35.
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
7 p.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
PEUGEC
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
1401 Mass. 843-8484
AKC St. Bernard puppies. Champion blood lines.
Kentucky St. Bernard. Stud set. University
Mont Blench St. Bernard 843-260-5363.
Alvaren 12-string guitar and case in excellent condition, about 9 years old $75.00. Welcome to Alvaren Guitar Center.
1965 Rambler American-Good running condition
1975 Rambler American $320 and good condition.
842. j842-8263. 842-2122.
For sale: 4 tires & 2 snow tires, practically new,
$60 plus old tires. Call 814-3961. After 5:30 p.m.
For sale. B Flat Clarinet, very good condition,
new pad, $75. B41-6228-6828.
2-12
TRAC 40105 tape deck with built-in pre-amp and
reverse plus 300 radians and accessor
inside. Call 866-277-2900.
For Sale-Knopf SKI boots with tree, size 10/15,
excellent condition, ice type, $150. Call 843-762-3900.
FOR SALE. Space in the KANSAN for your
event. 400-825-6711. Flint Hall before 8:30 p.m. Monday, February 12.
Friday through Saturday at 9 a.m.
ISIS–Fisher RSI, Skis with Marker Instruments,
20% S., Call 842-6156 for 5 p.m.
2-9
PLAYARY MOZIINE Magazine; January 1961 through December 2015. *The Times* $10 (below current market value); also SPORTS MAGAZINE; from first issue (ATLANTA, June 1962). *Atlanta Journal of Music* logical record of records, $10; Phone Dale at 800-344-2722.
Liquidation of household for travel after graduation is handled by the Office of Housekeeping with decorative cans in good condition, 75 or more years old.
NEATOI A 45 watt KLH stereo receiver model
160 come. I06 use at it 84+154+
around 5.
AUDIO EQUIPMENT- 20 to 40% below retail on over 30 name brands of stereo components. For price quotes and more information call KA and service representatives at 864-268 or 8221.
For Sale: Superfast Flat Sport Racers, excellent
condition with natural tires. Lots of
see at 1346 Kentucky, KY.
2-13
SPECIAL
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 814-5270.
2-9
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
Friday Nite
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
is Date Nite
you're at a madevantage. Either way it comes to the same thing—
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEER
IN THE AIR? JUST SHOW THEY ARE
Try 2 in bedrooms, directly across Mass.
from stadium; Easy walking distance of major
houses. Swimming pool; security vault,
swimming pool; security服务。Reasonable rates, furniture available. Ideal nominates or coaches. In Sante Tepe, 1133 Ad, Apt. 9 or course.
Apartments, furnished, clean, with wall to wall carpet, large windows, stairway, grazing space, shaded KU, and nearby town street, shaded KU, and nearby town street.
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Offer.
You and Your Date
These three basketball apartments surround a quiet tennis court that is open 7 days a week. You can play basketball, use the indoor game rooms, or stay in the gym for a workout.
3 games each
$2.00
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
MALLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
Come by and see these seabed apartments. Rent
willing to pay $150 a month. Water bills are paid.
Leases of various lengths are available.
Available:
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
THE HIL in the WALL
842-5552
--tune-ups starting service
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order 843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Sold EXCLUSIVELY
YARN--PATTERNES
NEEVES
CANVAS--CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
SOME EXCLUSIVELY • Guitars
• Amps
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Evenings
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Fender
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-7656
YARN—PATTERNS
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APMENTS. New leasing and office suites, furnished and unfurnished apartments, include heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities are on campus. Call 843-8229 or see at 1741 8th, apt. 8.
3 games for $1.00
Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
ROOM: single or double for KU men. Near KU
men. Reference required. K8742 fees after
fees.
Sleeping rooms, single and double furnished for
1 and 2 bedrooms; 1 and 3 bedrooms; 1 and 2
bedrooms from Union. Phone 843-578-7
290.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and winter accommodations. 2 bedrooms, 2 bedroom w/Study, quiet ubai-
boro location; Pool and gas-lighted, landedcoastary excellent. Investment, 2506 West
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, padded walls, floor street parking, 2 blocks from the building.
For the latest up to the monthly rental in hacing rent at Lawrence Rental Exchange, 845-679-2211.
Apt. to sub-lease. Clean, furnished. 1 bedroom.
Bachelor's degree or couple, off-ft. parking.
Phone: 864-657-8789.
Website: www.hopkins.edu
Nicely turn, apt. for 1 or 2 students at campus park. Utilities paid. 843-854. 2-14
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
APPS FOR RENT from Oliver Hall. For rent:
$125/month (can be shared) One $50. Men only.
Call 718-946-3858
NOTICE
ROAM with kitchen privileges close to campus.
Call 822-4475.
2-13
115 Michigan St. B-S-Q.B. Bar-B-Q in an open pld with wood w/o only 2 albs of ribs to go for $18.95 Small rib plate $14.95
Lawrence Auction House - Sell your household
fire insurance for compartmental information call 813-430-6954.
The Auction House, 807-248-5111.
Private parking stalls adjacent to campus. Phone 843-8534. 2-7
GAY LIBERATION; business meeting Monday,
July 15 at 8:27-977 for 4:30 for counseling COUNSELING and RAP, calling 864-3564 for information OFFICE:
B-12, Union; 864-4689. P.O. Box 224, Lawrence.
No charge, list your houses, apartment duplexes or townhouses. Call us at 718-392-0586 for assistance waiting. For more info call Home Location.
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
ATTENTION RENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas.
Home and office facilities. Home and office
catering. 311 E. 7th St. #82-6100
MANY GROUPS OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR
the failure of the garden gardel as that which must not be sarrified,
you should investigate the ideas of Ayn Ramm.
825, 433-316, or 825-906. Objectivity at
2-9
825, 433-316, or 825-906.
Discount prices with saving up to 4% on some items.
Country Shop, North 10th and Onsite - 1 day, 3 days.
CONSUMER
CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION
is seeking new board members.
Anyone interested write a few lines giving your reasons and submit it to the CPA office, Rm. 299, Union. No later than 5 p.m. 8-73.
For information
WHY RENT?
For information call 564-3963.
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales
CHICAGO COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
UNDERGRADES. WE'VE GOT SOMETHING BET-
THE Experiment's school for International Training.
Limited environment on small, multi-cultural
population, peace, environment, development,
population, peace, environment, development
International Studies Demo. Bachelor of
International Studies Demo. Bachelor of
International Studies Demo.
Room 10, School for International Training, Brat-
Would the person who lost $0.00 outside me
Jan 30, contact me. 2-12
9135, ask for Martha
2-12
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
antiques. 842-7098. If
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
Maupintour travel service
Wanted: quiet female to 2 BR apt. semi-
furnish. $85 a mo., call 824-1284. 2-7
If You're Planning on FLYING
Do you make candies? We buy them. Call Demis
841-208-794. W 10th. Apt. 101. 2-8
PHONE 843-1211
Make Your Spring Break
Graduate student with seeking full-time employment in the office of a German, some French. Willing to work hard, speak English and Spanish.
Premium female roommate wanted to share expenses with a 28-year-old female Manor Manner. Expenses $35.00 plus utilities. $42.00
We need scuturep. Any medium. Call Denis.
841-208-794. 1704.W.248. Apt.101. 2-8
ROOMMATES WANTED: two roommates to share a large farmhouse ten miles southwest of Lawrence. Reliable laundry necessary. $80-$120 including utilities and food. 8-276142 after xx.
Want to move into China? Need one more to
move from China. Come by & see 1331 Town or call
from Union. Come by & see 1331 Town or call
Two conds DESPERATELY need ride to Silliman. You are going to pay all expenses. Going away way? Fare ride. No.
Wanted: People to go to the K-State game. February 18, 2013. Interested, call: 642-248-2588.
HELP WANTED
STRANGER IN TOWNS? As an Awn representative, I went to a local store selling Awn products in sun-free hours. Call 1-800-277-9365 or visit www.awnproducts.com.
Reservations Early
928 Mass
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses and weekend hours. 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
for appointments.
Be Prepared!
We need your artistic abilities. If you have a call to sell Dentens, 411-285-9780, 192-6
Bapt. April 10.
Tony's 66 Service
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks. $387 inclusive. London depart-
ment. Airfare from New York to
travel (ages 18-30). Europe,
Africa, India, 3-11 weeks. Write: Whole
name, Address, Box, Letter, KJ, C.M.,
G414, L1414.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
THE sirloin
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
CH
Phone
142-1431
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Shrimp to K. C. Skeas.
OR
The Stereo Store
Our motto is and has always been
"There is no substitute for quality
in good food."
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Entomology Plasma
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
VEGAN
UDIOTRONICS
DISCOUNT
DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
Sistema
EUREA
Open 4:30
Closed Monday
%
...
043.
0500.
Permanent future for responsible executive or senior staff in a job role with public. For permanent resident codd, include Expense Manager at home office training school with substantial income and managerial career with substantial income and managerial experience.
Part-time distribution for the Blind Service
phone: 610-357-8900; web: www.blindservice.org; e-mail:
d248.6269@msn.com to 7:30 Wed, mon. 24
Employment Opportunities
First time university education must be able to:
1. have basic computer skills.
2. use a laptop and other computing devices.
3. use a digital camera.
4. use a GPS device.
5. use a smartphone.
6. use a mobile phone.
7. use a tablet.
8. use a printer.
9. use a scanner.
10. use a web browser.
11. use a word processor.
12. use a spreadsheet.
13. use a database.
14. use a database management system.
15. use a programming language.
16. use a programming language for a specific application.
17. use a programming language for a specific purpose.
18. use a programming language for a specific industry.
19. use a programming language for a specific educational institution.
20. use a programming language for a specific research institution.
Saleem wanted. Sell advertising in new cam-
board. Offer at least 10%, of which 82-9000,
2-142
and 563. Offer at least 10%, of which 82-9000,
2-142
and 563.
Hard working men for part time help, Neons
worked in the restaurant. Appliant in per-
sition. Via Restaurant. 1257 W. 8th St.
Part time saleman needed, must be well, agreed, employ in person to Website 'Webster House' 3409
Young, energetic, intellectful & attractive woman
in person. Vivian Restaurant, W 275-800,
in person. Vivian Restaurant, W 275-800,
in person. Vivian Restaurant, W 275-800,
in person.
PERSONAL
Lenny Zero's Record Store is going out of business. All credit and records in our used records race must be paid later than Feb. 6. We will be responsible for paying it. Feb. 9. Thanks for your business. 2-9
WINNER IS STILL HERE- genuine arpaure are-
sists. Bargain租卖 $95.95, Sunflower 租卖 $11.97, MTV 租卖
Writer Wanted - New magazine needs responsible upper-classman to cover departments for coursework, evaluation. Fame, prestige, pride, recognition. Contact Behn Marni, 842-890-108 or 108 Corelect.net.
UP YOUR ALLEY—a coffee house. The pleasant place to escape what has哈as you or meet friends. Planned entertainment Wed, Fr., Sat.
Open on week of week. Open 6-12 p.m. in Lewis Hall. L-23
LOST
LOST-One snow chain (tire chain). If found, please
buy 843-2540. 2-12
-Wide selection of gifts
Alexander's
*Cash & carry flowers every day*
826 Iowa 842-1320
Crédo Irres
Casa de Taco
Eat with us—
We try to please.
1105 Mass. 843-9880
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
842-3232
9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
Locally owned and operated
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
Cat airwaves to Hokahak. Last seen highway 40—
moss, oak, old, gray, black stripes
Bullet 611-8581
Lost, Swiss Army pocket knife 3 inches long.
Located in Sediment. Semi-natural value.
Call 841-6114.
TYPING
LONG-TITED OF KYES nothern corner of O-zone
found set of houses on the high ground of Houses
of Hpa, a hotel in Hpa, House of Hpa,
Kyes, Kyes, Kyes.
Open 24 hrs.
DRIVE IN
AMBULANCE
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
HANDSHAWN
843-5304
MISCELLANEOUS
SERVICES OFFERED
KANSAN
WANT
Wanted: Any kind of typing-scheme, term paper or technical report in typing management. West of campus near big box office.
Sewing and altering for the college pick. Pick up all necessary supplies, even evening swags, costumes and refined $30 clothes from the school's clothing store.
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mine, typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and precise proofing. Proof reading, spelled corrected. 6-843-9544. Mrs.Wright.
FOUND
CARS BUYED AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vermont, 844-908-8000
Cars G.I. Joe's Used Cars,
Vermont, 844-908-8000
USE
Independent Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Very friendly very good and white male cat with a
nose. Please reclaim him by 6:45
calling 81-234. Please.
ADS
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
Coin-Op
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
You have the right to call the wrecker of your choice in case of a wreck or just need a tow. Keep this in mind—call me anytime.
DICK MILLS • OWNER
724 N. 2ND ST.
LAWRENCE, K8.
KAW BODY SHOP
28½ HOUR WIRECHEK SERVICE.
EXPERT BODY & GLASS REPAIR
20 YEARS BAME LOCATION
REPAIRING
IF IT'S BURNED
WILL BE USED
TOWING
DAY 841-2800
NIGHT 842-0131
10
Wednesday, February 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
4. What is the surface area of a rectangle with sides 5 cm and 3 cm?
Commissions Make Construction Plans Far in Advance
BY LYNNE MALM
Kansan Staff Writer
Construction at the University of Kansas is progressing at a continuous rate, but students, departments and schools communicate effectively in main facilities that they consider important.
The University Facilities, Planning and Operations staff and the University Planning Board are responsible for ensuring before a building reaches the construction stage.
Most students do not know of construction until it causes inconvenience by rereouting favorite short cuts or be creating dust and mud.
The facilities and planning staff, directed by Keith Lawton, is a constant factor in the planning of a building. The members of the university Planning Department are permanent facilities and planning staff, are selected on a rotating basis by the chancellor. Members of this board are appointed for one-year terms and take part in only some of these duties while building a building.
CONSTRUCTION PLANS for KU have been made through 1980 by these staffs. Future plans will be affected by the decisions of the Council of Chief Academic Officers (COCAO) and the Long Range Physical Planning Commission (LRPCP).
These committees were ordered organized in 1971 by the Kansas Legislature to coordinate studies of the educational and physical facilities of all six state schools. The schools are KU, Wichita State College, Kansas State College at Emporia, Kansas State College at Pittsburg, Fort Hays State College and Kansas State University.
COCAO and LRPPC make recommendations to the Council of Presidents, the Board of Regents and the Kansas which pass on their merit in that order.
The report by COCAO was completed in December, COCAO was given no funds, but the LRPPC was allocated funds for research on the physical situation of each university. COCAO has been financed by established school offices.
Physical planning has always been about planning and planning and plans, Lawyers and recenty.
Jerry Hutchison, assistant chancellor for academic affairs and KU representative of Institutional Research Personnel (IRP), the research branch of COCAO, said, "the days of public university managing its坠yestiny with unilateral decisions are over."
The final COCAO report has been submitted to the Council of Presidents and the Board of Regents. They have recommended that the Commission propose cuts and changes in the programs.
NO NEW EDUCATIONAL programs will be instituted at any one of the state schools without the consent of the other schools and a full review from all of the commissions, he
IRP and other COCAO offices will continue to function and make recommendations, Hutchison said, although the first major report has been completed.
Hutchison said that no insoluble problems or disagreements had hindered his work at the school. He said he taught state schools. All were interested in cutting high-costs and duplication, a major reason for his decision.
Some of the COCA affiliated groups are
the Council of Graduate Deans, Council of
Directors of Libraries, Council of
Administration, Computation
Center Directors, Hutchison said.
Before these groups were established, the Regents had only the recommendations of the Council of Presidents on which to base their policies.
A CHANGE MADE by COCAO cooperation, Hutchison said, was the development of six schools would run on the same timetable. Because about 15 per cent of the students at KU at any one time will transfer to these schools, this could be of help to them.
At KU plans and appropriate funds now exist for construction through 1981. Beyond that point, although a basic site plan or listing of priorities exists, needs are too changeable for planning specific buildings, Lawton said.
'Prof's POW' Among Those Returning Soon
Now, Capt. James Sehron, the man whose name is engraved on Mason's bracelet will be commemorated.
A year ago last Christmas, Gary Mason,
a journalist, and his wife exchanged POW by
Mason said that he thought that Sehon was classified as Missing in Action and that he was surprised and pleased to find Sehon among a list of returning Prisoners of War.
According to the letter, Sehorn was on his
The Masons received a letter from Sehorn's family along with his picture.
The League of Women Writers will meet
hurryday and Monday to review a local
presentation on the topic.
Women Voters To Consider New Ventures
Thursday meetings will be held in the homes of Clark Coon, 1646 Barker St., 9 to 11 a.m. H. R. Maliowsky, 2214 Hill Court, 1 to 8 p.m. R. Moore Road, 7159 Lawrence Ave., 8 to 10 p.m.
Currently, the league program contains nursing homes, city-county judicial building, planning and zoning, schools, public transportation, health, city government, human resources, and Clinton Reservoir.
In addition to reviewing these areas of study, the League will consider expanding its program to include any other areas which might need government action.
The league will meet from 9:15 to 11:15
m. Monday at the First Christian Church,
601 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10024.
seventh mission in North Vietnam when his plane was shot down, Dec. 14, 1967. Because no one saw or heard Sehom's plane crash, he was listed as missing.
A list was carried from Sweden, April 6,
that contained the names of several
POWs.
Seborn's family began receiving letters from him in May 1970. Although the letters were brief and vague, they were written in cursive, the letters, his wife said in her letter to Mason.
Mason said he planned to keep wearing his braces until Sehron returned to the United States.
"When he gets all the way home," Mason said, "then 'til it send to him."
Mason said that the name on his wife's bracelet had not appeared on any POW lists yet, but that his wife had received a letter from the prisoner's family.
"He's been missing longer than Sehorm has," said Mason, but the family is still vexed.
Board Filings Due Feb. 13
Only three persons—all incumbents—have filed for positions on the Board of Education of Lawrence Unified School District No. 497. The filling date is Feb.
Incumbents Helen Giles, 1301 Iowa St., Larry Hatfield, 1020 Lawrence Ave. and William Bradley, RFD 2, Box 107, are the county clerk's office, according to the county clerk's office.
if three or more file for one position, a
final decision will be held March 6. The
goal of the study is to assess
A fee of $5 or a petition with 50 names is required at filing time.
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILM7
Sergie Eisenstein and D. I. Nassiliev directs
Classical Films
Woodruff 7:30 & 9:30
Wed., Feb. 7 75c
ALEXANDER NEVSKY
TWO MEN and a WARDROBE, by Roman Polansky, EN-
MAN, R. W. D. Lindsay, Francis Picatah, THE CAGE by Sidney Peterson, MESHES of the AFTERNOON by Maya Deren.
GHOBS before BREAKFAST GHOBS after BREAKFAST ANDALUO by Luis Bunnel and Salvador Dall.
Film Society
Woodruff 3:30, 7:30, 9:30
Thurs. Feb. 8 75c
Classical Films
STEELA 606
TOUCH OF EVIL
directed by Orson Welles Music by Henry Mancini
Popular Films
Special Films
Woodruff 7:30
Mon., Feb. 12 75c
In July of 1971 a building plan for 1972 through 1981, totaling $81,985,465, was submitted to the Regents. Included were two teaching laboratory buildings, two research laboratory buildings, two office buildings, and two classrooms. All included were two library units, major remodeling and additions to existing buildings, a computer center, a learning resources facility, a new physical plant facility, a museum of art, a recreational facility, a school building, a physical sciences building and animal quarters and research laboratories.
MANY OF THE buildings students consider permanent are designated as temporary facilities by the KU Planning and Facilities Board. Carruth-O'Leary, a former residence hall and now an office and classroom facility has the same temporary designation as the prefabricated trailer units on campus.
Many of these temporary structures will no longer be needed when Wescoe Hall, the new humanities building is completed. The construction will high on the priority list. Lawton explained.
Frank Zappa's
200 MOTELS
—plus—
part four of Captain Marve
Woolruff
7:00 & 9:00
Feb. 9 & 10
60c
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
KING KONG
—plus—
Episode three of
Phantom Empire
Science Fiction
Ballroom Ride
7:30
Tues., Feb. 13
7:50
The Planning Board faces far more needs than it is able to provide for, Lawton said. Their is a basic site plan that places certain facilities Villies close to each other for convenience.
An example of how the site plan works is found in the next building operation, an engineering addition to Learned Hall, Lawton said. This addition is not the number one need of the campus. The board had agreed that the first need was a visual arts building, but it now is second, because the building has to be built Marvin Hall that now houses part of the engineering school. The engineering school eventually will be moved to the new Learned addition. Then its facilities and visual arts buildings will be closer together.
LAWTON SAID there was a trend toward more upgraded program study areas in buildings, such as the planned study lounge at Lawrence Hall, in buildings that house their classrooms than they did in the past, and fewer students go to the library during breaks between classes. Developments such as these are new buildings in planning new buildings. Lawton said.
Appropriations from the legislature for buildings have been made only through
1975, Lawton said. Usually one year of planning and one year to 18 months for construction are needed to complete a building.
Lawton is the KU representative to LRPP, the sister organ of COCAO, and is in charge of these activities.
facilities planning for the sir: state schools.
The LRPP is presently in mid stride Lawton said. The direction of physical planning should be re-analyzed every eight years. For the first time this analysis is being discussed with the other state schools, Lawton said.
The COCAO recommendations for changes in educational programs will have an effect on the facilities to be built in the next few years, Lawton said. Plans for more education years in the future are flexible and will accommodate themselves to changes he said.
Earn $100 a month and a Marine Corps commission through the Platoon Leaders
Class.
The Platoon Leaders Class (PLC) is the primary college officer commissioning program of the Marine Corps. It is a leadership program, and the positive characteristics developed during training as a marine officer will be of value to you through the career—be it civilian or military.
1234567890
You can join the PLC program in your freshman, sophomore, or junior year of college. Training takes place only in the summer. Freshmen and sophomores take two-s-week training courses. Students take one ten-week course.
One of the many benefits of the Platton Leaders Class is that your total time of service is counted from the start of the program, and additional longevity of accrued service time means a bigger paycheck throughout your period of active duty. These financial benefits make it easier for you to decide to become a career officer.
Financial Assistance PLC members can receive $100 each month of the school year
The financial assistance is payable for up to three years—or a total of $2,700.
The Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will be on your campus 12, 13, and 14 February 1973. If you desire additional information prior to his visit call collect at 816-374-3031.
The location of the Officer Selection Team will be the Lobby of the Student Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
CAROUSEL
..the Store with the Pink Door Mall's Shopping Center
SALE
FINAL REDUCTION ON ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
FAMOUS MAKER COORDINATES
Mix and Match from this huge selection of famous maker sportswear coordinates. Choose from Blazers, Sweaters, Skirts and long skirts, Blouses, Pants, and vests.
Regular $11.00 to $19.00
SALE $8.99
Regular $21.00 to $28.00
SALE $14.99
Regular $30.00 to $43.00
SALE $19.99
PANTY
HOSE
Sheer to the Waist
Colors:
Coffee Bean,
Medium Beige,
Navy & Black
Our entire stock of winter and holiday dresses is reduced 50% long dresses Both short and long dresses in casual and dressy styles.
Short and Long Dresses
DRESSES
Regular $14.00 to $48.00
SALE $6.99
to
$23.99
BLOUSES
Pick a handful at these prices, choose from many different sizes or solid colors. Sizes small, medium, large. Both knit and blend fabrics.
Regular $7.00 to $10.00
Regular $1.99 to $16.99
SALE $4.99
Regular $11.00 to $13.00
SALE $6.99
Regular $14.00 to $18.00
SALE $8.99
CALL 021-789-6734
KLETTER BOOTS
Choose from two-tone black-brown or black-blue. A great time to buy and save.
Regular $19.00
SALE $7.99
C
Regularly $4.00 to $6.00
SALE $2.99
Regularly $7.00 to $10.00
SALE $5.99
Regularly $11.00 to $14.00
SALE $6.99
---
SWEATERS
A great assortment of sweaters in turtlecken, button front, or pulover styles. Both feature patterns and solid colors.
Regularly $4.00 to $6.00
PANTS AND JEANS
JEANS
A large group of high waisted knit pants, corduroy jeans,
and wool slacks in both solid and patterned styles.
Regular $9.00 to $11.00
SALE $6.99
Regular $12.00 to $16.00
SALE $8.99
Regular $17.00 to $21.00
SALE $12.99
COLD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 86
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Bottle Cap Infant Bike Seat Designed
Thursday, February 8, 1973
See Story Page 3
Kansas Photo by BILL JONES
Communists To Release 27 Prisoners
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Communist forces plan to release 27 American prisoners of war Sunday from jungle camps in South Vietnam, Pentagon sources said Wednesday.
These men, among more than 500 held by
the National Guard, are free near An-
napolis for a Provisional 40 miles on tarmac.
1972
Pentagon sources said there still was no word when the first POWs would be released by North Vietnam, but indications were that this would be scheduled to coincide with Henry Kissinger's visit to Hanoi Saturday.
Kissinger, the chief U.S. negotiator in the Paris peace talks, is scheduled to arrive Saturday in the North Vietnamese capital for four days of talks.
Although the Pentagon had no official comment on the report of the first FOWs to be released, relinable sources said the understanding as relayed by the Viet Cong to U.S. officials in South Vietnam tied in earlier statements from Michel Gauvin in Saigon, head of the international commission supervising the cease-fire.
Once released by the Viet Cong, the POWs will be picked up by helicopter and flown directly to Saigon, then transferred to specially equipped medical evacuation jets and flown to Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines.
At Clark, the returns will be given medical examinations and intelligence debriefings before they are flown to one of 31 hospitals in the United States.
Of the 562 U.S. servicemen identified by the Communists as prisoners of war, 456 are held in the North, seven in Laos and 99 in Southeast Vietnam.
Donor
The peace agreement signed in Paris to end the fighting in Vietnam stipulated that the first POWs would be released within 15 days. The 15th day is Sunday.
The agreement also calls for four groups of men to be released about every two weeks, in roughly all installations All POWs are to be set free by March 28.
Sheila Carney, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, gives blood at the Bloodmobile in front of the Kansas Union. The Bloodmobile collected 214 pints of blood in its first day of operation Wednesday. This is less than was collected during the drive
last fall, according to Doug Spencer, Shawnee Mission sophomore and chairman of the spring Bloodmobile. Spencer returned from a combination of factors, including the cold weather and the great number of persons sick. Red Cross personnel responded in addition to 14 to 4:30 p.m. Returned from 12 to 4:30 p.m. Friday and from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Friday.
Center Called Inadequate
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Three members of the Lawrence Park and Recreation Board appeared at the monthly Human Relations Commission meeting Wednesday night to answer charges that the East Lawrence Center played a role in teenage recreational activities.
Norma Harrod, a member of the Park and Recreation Advisory Board, said that the Center was only a temporary facility and that planned neighborhood recreation centers would provide adequate recreational opportunities for teen-agers.
Appearing at the meeting with Harrod were Wayne Bly and Fred DeVictor, director and assistant director of the Park and Recreation Board.
Claude Norris, Chairman of the Human Relations Committee, told the group that committee members recently became concerned with the regularly limited usage of the ELC and the "inadequacy of the ELC and the supervision of it."
Bly said that the ELC was "quite decrepit and poorly planned" but that it was intended to be only a "stop-gap center" until a better building could be constructed.
Bly said if Lawrence wanted a community center, it would have to be funded with tax money. "The city commission hasn't taken definite action yet," he said, and he pointed to the commissioned-to we over the building.
Marijuana Bill Argued Today
A Kansas House of Representatives bill that would remove legal prohibitions on personal use, possession and sale of marijuana in Kansas is scheduled for a hearing at 3:15 p.m. today in the Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Glover said he anticipated a committee vote tomorrow to either and the bill to floor or to kill. He said that the bill will be voted on by the legislature this term were "about 1 to 24."
Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, who introduced the bill, said the measure would strike the word marijuana from the bill. The Glover may be the only person to testify in favor of the bill, but he said, he may ask other people to give testimony, also. He said he would argue for the bill and "individual rights" point of view.
If the bill was to pass, Kansas would be the first state in the country to legalize marijuana. The closest marijuana legalization has come to being passed in a state was a 2-1 vote against making it legal in California last November.
Norris asked Bly whether "there was any validity" to the accusation that "there's a problem with our case."
"In every community, they say, 'there's nothing to do here.' Bly said, "We've had all kinds of structured programs here, but teen-agents aren't what they used to be, and we're only doing it until about four years ago, and we haven't had any structured programs since then."
That prompted a remark by Harrod that neighborhood centers would provide an
"As far as the ELC is concerned, it's the only answer for right now," she said.
Harrod said that she visualized at least six neighborhood centers for Lawrence. Commissioner John Purcell the cost of each six centers would be at least $600,000.
Commissioner Nelson Greene had told Bly earlier that one chargelevel against the ELC was that the "person in charge" was never there.
"We're going to look into that." Bly said.
"For the last few weeks, though, that hasn't hurt us."
Harrod said that community centers on a neighborhood basis would not work unless staffed correctly, a matter she termed more important than facilities, such as the quality of facilities.
Norris, apparently attempting to determine exactly when the center was open, said, "They're not open at all times, right?"
"They weren't open at 8 p.m. last night," Commissioner Hedy Rubion said.
Commissioner Tom Beaver asked Bly whether the ELC and the South Park Center were involved in the development.
Chairman Norris told Harrod, Bly, and DeVictor that he was glad they were "moving on some things" the Human Nations Commission was concerned about.
"We'll have to talk to him (Brown)," Bly ensued.
"No." Bly said.
The commission then discussed local busing problems, after listening to a report on the issue by Ernest Coleman, 924 Holiday Drive.
"We try to get the best people we can," Blv said.
director of federal programs, gave a comprehensive report on the transportation problems of North and East Lawrence students.
According to Coleman, providing transportation for low income students living a long distance from their school was not a new problem.
Two years ago bus service was supplied
Coleman, Lawrence public schools
Navy Plane Crashes Into Apartment House
See CENTER Page 2
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP)—A U.S. Navy jet fighter exploded in flames Wednesday night when it slammed into an apartment building with an estimated 80 persons inside. The building, across the bay from San Francisco, was reduced to rubble.
Witnesses said they thought "only a small
percentage of residents in the building could have gotten out alive."
Highland Hospital in Oakland reported at least 11 persons injured. A spokesman at the Almada County Coroner's office said 11 people were taken and he had received no reports of any deaths.
Coroner's shift commander James
Kissinger Off to Asia For Postwar Parleys
WASHINGTON (AP) - Henry Kissinger left for Thailand Wednesday on a multi-purpose Vietnam postwar mission that will climax with visits to Hanoi and Pekin.
Shortly after Kissinger headed for Bangkok, White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler reaffirmed that the presidential adviser would stop over in Vientiane Friday to discuss prospects for a cease-fire in Laos.
Prime Minister Souvanna Phoua, with whom Kissinger is to dine Friday night, is optimistic about reaching a cease-fire between the Communist Federal Lao in about a week.
Settlements in Laos and Cambodia would be, in the view of U.S. officials, of major help in carrying through the Jan. 27 Paris act for an end to the war in Vietnam.
Kissinger is to fly from Vientiane to Hanoi Saturday morning for four days of talks with North Vietnamese leaders on postwar relations, including U.S.-North Vietnamese reconciliation and the rebuilding of Indochina's torn country.
After a one-and-a-half day rest in Hong Kong Feb. 13, 14-12, Ziegler said, Kissinger will go to Peking for consultations with Chinese and Iran and then return directly to Washington.
In the Chinese capital, Kissinger plans to push for further improvements in Washington-Peking relations and to discuss the need to increase the reference to guarantee an Indonesia peace.
China is one of the 13 parties going to the Indochina peace arrangements conference in Geneva.
Scattered fighting was reported throughout much of South Vietnam Wednesday as the peacekeeping missions met on Wednesday to sharpen their plans for the upcoming year, according to truce-watching teams into the field to attempt to halt the fighting.
Williana said, "I'll probably end up in a job where I work on stuff working we are working with the living."
U. S. C130 transport planes continued daily runs into Hanoi to pick up North Vietnamese and Viet Cong personnel to show up the Communist side of the Joint
A ball of fire shot hundreds of feet into the air after a Navy A7 jet fighter from Lemoore Naval Air Station hit the top of a building, building and exploded, witnesses said.
Delays in getting the military commission up to its full complement have hampered the International Commission for Control and Supervision in its attempts to field a full supervisory force, supposed to be in place a week ago.
Alameda men Terry Lacroix said were 72 to 80 people in the building.
Other eyewearers said two apartment buildings fanking the three-story structure of the building.
Patricia Posche, 19, of Alameda was a passenger in a car passing the building at 705 Madison Street.
"The jet hit flat on top of the building" she said. "The only ones who could have made it were on the bottom floor. Flares of wood came through the car window."
She said a man burned and clad only in T-shirt and slacks fell backwards out of a first floor window and "started yelling my name" before she came back to grab him. "pull his wife and two small kids outside."
The site of the disaster is in the center of a block in a residential neighborhood.
OMB Director Chided By Senate Committee
WASHINGTON (AP)—Members of a special Senate panel scaled federal budget director Roy Ash Wednesday and advised President Nixon not to circumvent congressional attempts to make Ash's position subject to Senate confirmation.
Appearing for the second time in a week before a Judiciary Committee subcommittee on the separation of powers, Ash maintained that as head of the Office of Management and Security he is not a President's personal staff and is not subject to such confirmation.
Sen, Charles H. Fercy, R-III., said he had heard reports Nixon might appoint a figurehead to direct OMB and shield Ash D. Kelsey, who he continued to shame the federal budget.
the Senate 64 to 17. Ash said he had heard no discussion that attempts might be made to get around that bill if it passes Congress and, given the time constraints, consider, an inevitable presidential veto.
A bill subjecting Ash and future OMB directors to Senate confirmation has passed
Percy said, "I hope we will override that to, and I trust there will be no attempt to罢谗."
Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., lectured Ash on the Constitution as it relates to the impoundment of funds and to the appointment of a new commissioner. The second most powerful official in government.
Sen. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., said impoundment of funds appropriated for the regulatory agencies could endanger their continued independence and impair enforcement of their orders—perhaps at the request of large Republican contributors.
Farmers, Street Crews Feel Brunt of Winter
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Staff Writer
It's been a long, hard winter this year for many Kansas, and the wettest one some remember. Many are not happy with the way nature seems to be acting up, especially farmers for whom this winter poses a question of economic survival.
William Bradley, veterinarian and farmer, said Tuesday that this winter's weather had created serious backpacks for him and other farmers by upsetting ploughing and planting schedules and causing livestock losses.
"It'll put some of them out of business," she said, and it might be very, very difficult on others.
Earl L. Van Meter, Douglas County extension specialist, confirmed that it had been a rough winter for farmers and that they would be hurt financially. He said, however, that he thought they would pull through somehow.
VanMeter said that the government would not be able to help the farmer have provided emergency loans for distressed farmers. Referring to the crop and livestock losses that occurred this year, VanMeter was being "spoiled on both ends."
Farmers are not the only ones who have been affected. The excessive moisture this season has created problems for road maintenance crews, who are experiencing the frustration of repeatedly having to repair roads.
Arnold Wiley, Lawrence street superintendent, said this had been the worst winter for roads in the past 15 years. Part of the problem is the intermittent below-freezing temperature, he said, but most of his image has been caused by excessive wetness.
In some areas of Lawrence, Wiley said, drainage problems could not be solved by
spreading rock on roads because there was too much moisture. He said he did not think that the drainage system was to blame but that there was just too much water around. There is no way of getting the problems being caused, he said.
"I just hope Spring will hurry up and get here." Wiley said.
Dean Anderson, county director of public works, also said he thought that winter had been very hard on roads this year. The deep penetration of moisture, he said, spoiled the base, the sub-base and went through to the subsoil below the roads.
"You just don't have any bottom to them. That's how the school bases get stuck on."
Where the roads are not made of asphalt or where they do not have sufficient lateral drainage, Anderson said, they just turn into mudholes.
Snow and ice on the roads has also presented problems by making it necessary to send the snow-plough out more often, he said.
Also affect is construction of Wescoe Hall, which is about 60 days behind schedule because of the rain and snow conditions that have persisted in Lawrence since August, according to Keith Lawton, director of facilities and planning.
Lawton said that completion of Wescow Hall was originally scheduled for late July or early August. He said the construction crews had completed most of the outdoor work on Wescow Hall and that they were now working inside.
Lawton said the biggest problem in the construction occurred during the rainy season.
Watkins Memorial Hospital should be completed by next February, Lawton said. Construction for the new health center is on schedule, he said, because of the large amount of work performed last summer when the weather was favorable.
THE FALLING OF THE EASTERN CONCRETE BRIDGE. THIS IS A CONTINUING PROJECT TO REBUILD THE BRIDGE. THE STUDIO WAS USED FOR THE FIRST EXAMINATION OF THE MATERIALS AND FOR DESIGNING THE NEW BUILDING. THE BRIDGE WILL BE REINFORCED WITH UPSTREAM CONCRETE, AND THE WORKERS WILL CARRY OUT ALL THE CONSTRUCTION PROCESS. THE BRIDGE WILL BE COMpleted IN 2019.
Kansan Photo by LESLIE RISS
Long, Wet Winter Creates Many Problems for Kansans . . . Cold and mud delay construction of campus buildings . . .
2
Thursday, February 8, 1973
University Daily Kansan
House to Consider Open Primaries
TOPEKA (AF)—AHP to do away with voter registration lists and to provide for an open primary election was among new measures introduced in the Kansas House
The Senate received a bill to provide the financing for a medical education and clinical facility at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City.
The bill introduced in the House by Rep. Ruth Luzzi, D-Wichita, would eliminate voter registration lists and provide for open primaries.
With an open primary, a voter could request a runoff if they did not accept the primary election,
regardless of how he might have voted in previous primaries.
The bill for financing the medical center expansion was introduced by the Senate Ways and Means Committee. It would appropriate $28 million from the state budget to support the Board of Regents to issue $22 million in bonds to pay for the expansion.
Senator Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, chairman of the committee, said he supported the proposal, in favor of a measure passed by the legislature last year which would have allowed the regents to issue 844 million in bonds to finance the project.
"If we're going to do it, I think this is the right thing." Doyen said.
Gov. Robert Docking proposed spending the $23 million now to expand the medical center, saying that over the term of the $64 billion budget, he would pay out $77 million extra in interest.
Other bills introduced in the Senate would;
—Require the owner or operator of certain irrigation systems to place and maintain signs and warning devices advising of the operation of such systems.
—Enable certain counties to transfer unexpended balances of certain funds to a special county hospital and county home for the aged fund.
discrimination in employment of the blim.
—Make unlawful the practice of
discrimination in employment of the man
be made available in all accredited肝
Build a Kansas Housing Corporation.
Introduced in the House would.
- Require fluoridation of public water supplies in Kansas.
- Make a jail sentence mandatory upon conviction of driving while the in-
jury has been convicted.
- Prohibit any employer from
discriminate any worker for any
gang-related indebtedness.
Set a procedure for authorizing cities and counties to provide low income housing.
Five Options Offered For Reapportionment
TOPEKA (AP)—Chairman William Bunten, R-Topena, told the Reap; portsmouth Committee of the Kansas House Wednesday the legislature had five unanimous votes to approve a court decision holding last year's House apportionment to be unconstitutional.
These, according to Bunten, are the options:
—The state can appeal.
The state can do nothing, in which case the court will reaportion.
—the state can apportion during this legislative session.
regulative session.
—The state can reapportion in 1974.
—the state can reconstitute in 1974
of which the Kansas House and reposition
in 1974.
"In my opinion, sentiment is to keep the House size at the present 125 members," Bunten said. "We might go to 120, three to each Senate district, but if we do, we will always be at the mercy of changes in Senate districts."
News Briefs By the Associated Press Welfare Reform
TOPEKA-A bill to have the state take over full administration of social welfare in Kansas was approved in amended form Wednesday by a House committee and sent to Gov. John Kasich for review. State administration of welfare was recommended by Gov. Robert Docking but has been opposed by a number of county commissioners who serve as county boards of welfare. The state's education minister the welfare programs order directives from the state.
Viet Recognition
OTTWA—Canada has formally recognized North Vietnam, Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp announced today. Sharp told the House of Commons the move meant that recorded equal diplomatic status to the governments of North and South Vietnam.
Equal Time
WASHINGTON—The four major radio networks have allotted House Speaker Carl Albert, D-Doka, free time next Sunday to reply to President Nixon's budget speech of Jan. 28. Albert and Senate Majority Leader Mike Wainfield, D-Mont., requested the equal time on the ground that the Democrats would pass a controversial domestic program. Albert, who will present the Democrats' rebuttal, will speak nine minutes beginning at 5:06 p.m. Lawrence time over NBC, CBS, ABC and MBS.
Bunten said the members of the committee faced a big job because "not only do we have to do it right, in the eyes of the team, but we also get 63 votes to get it through the House."
Rep. Arden Dierdorff, R-Smith Center, a member of the committee, said it would be better to start work on a reapportionment plan during the present legislative session. He said if the legislature迟 until 1974, and the court rules it too early, it would be too late to try again before the Feb. 16, 1974 deadline set by the three-budge federal court.
Bunten noted the court said a plan submitted by Rep. James Ungerer and other representatives in 1972 was held by the court to be a better plan than the one that was enacted over the veto of Gov. Robert Docking.
"The court didn't say the Unger plan was constitutional," Bunter noted. "It just took me a while."
"But we will take a look at the 1972 state population figures and apply them to the Ungerger plan to see how they fit. If they don't we will have to start from scratch."
Bunten said support would be needed from both the Democratic and Republican sides of the House to get reapportionment done right.
The committee voted to introduce a bill designed to speed up the gathering of state census figures from year to year, which will be published soon and available latest population figures.
County officials now have until July 15 to report their county population figures to the state Board of Agriculture, with a result of being available until September or October.
The proposed bill would move the company to submit their population data on May 19.
The committee indicated that county assessors and clerks would be contacted for an explanation of the problem in an effort to win their cooperation.
Center . . .
(Continued from page 1)
for high school students in East and North Lawrence. This service was financed with state funds under special programs to low income areas.
This service was scrapped after one year because it was ruled ineligible for state assistance by a state agency. State regulations require that funds for low income students not be used to provide those students with general education.
State assistance must be used to provide some special service to the students. Because Lawrence High School is a general public school, no special assistance cannot be used to transport students to it.
Coleman said that the school board determined that it was not financially capable of providing bus service to students within the Lawrence city limits.
Strike Cripples Belfast; Catholic Mourners Shot
BELFAST (AP)—Submachine-gun fire raked Roman Catholic mourners Wednesday in a funeral procession for three Irish Republican Army volunteers, and a militant called by Protestant militants paralyzed the city and parts of Northern Ireland.
Youths also burned a Catholic church and wrecked the home of its priest. Gummen sniped at British troops and police posts in war areas were set in the Belafont business district.
An 11-year-old boy was hit in the abdomen and a 45-year-old man was hit in the leg by a car.
The gunmen apparently were never seen. The three being buried were among six Catholic kills last weekend in a shootout in Texas that claimed two victims who were buried earlier. Wednesday.
The strike, inforced in part through intimidation by Protestant militants, was obeyed by all but an estimated 100,000 of the province's workers, labor sources said.
The one-day work stoppage caused electrical blackouts and disrupted public transportation, closed factories, shops and cut into milk and bread supplies.
The strike was called to protect the detention of two Protestants after a grenade exploded in the courtyard.
and to demand restoration of the provincial parliament. That body was suspended when the governor resigned in 2015.
Protestant youth in East Belfast, where the Protestant Ulder Defense Association is entrained, stoned a police station. Another group invaded St. Anthony's church.
The church was burned to the ground.
Then the ax-wielding youths turned on the adjoining home of the parish priest, the Rev. John Courtney.
His housekeeper, Winnie McCrissigan,
adduced in an upstairs room while the
manor overlooks a park.
Soldiers drove the mob away with volleys of rubber bullets.
William Whiteclaw, Britain's administrator in the North, said his search for a settlement would "not be thrown off by the demonstrations and violence.
"There has been rioting and shooting of
them with a graveful kind," Whitewaid said
in a statement.
The IRA has resorted to violence to force the British out of predominantly Protestant Northern Ireland in hopes of uniting it with the mostly Catholic Irish Republic to the
The Protestants in Northern Ireland have formed their own guerrilla organizations to retaliate, and for the past 3% years there has been a warfare of revenge and hatred.
Manhattan Republican Wins Senate Leadership Position
TOPEKA (AP)—The Republican caucus of the Kansas Senate elected Sen. Dick Rogers, R-Manhattan, the upper chamber's new vice president Wednesday.
Sen. Robert F. Bennett, R-Overland Park,
president pro tem who will become president of the town under a mayor of leaden to lead her office. said Rogers' election was unanimous.
Rogers' formal election will be on a vote of the Senate as a whole, with but Republicans holding a 27-13 advantage, this is a more formality.
With removal of the lieutenant governor as president of the Senate under the executive article constitutional amendment (2015) passed by the House, the Senate now elects all its leaders.
The post of president pro tem is abolished and the position of vice president is created.
Rogers, who is chairman of the Senate Committee on Commercial and Financial Institutions, is in his second term in the Kansas House of Representatives in the Kansas House of Representatives.
An attorney, Rogers sought the chairmanship of the Senate Ways and Means Committee this session but lost out to Sen. Ross Doven, R-Concordia.
Rogers' election by the Republicans
Yarn Sale! 20% Off
All knitting and crocheting yarns (Bernat and Lopi Brands)
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at
Families Needed
The Lawrence Host Family Program urgently needs volunteers to host foreign students who have enrolled at the University of Kansas this semester. Interested persons should contact Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, 228 Strong.
The Crewel Cupboard
15 East 8th 10-5
841-2656 Mon.-Sat.
Bennett said the GOP Senate caucus also discussed priorities on legislation now before the legislature but made no decision. He said no decisions on which pieces of legislation or priority intentions to will be made until "We have several conferences with the House."
Bennett said the Republicans in the Senate would now caucus every Wednesday the remainder of the 1973 session. He said he hopes the caucus can make a decision on which school finance plan to support at next week's caucus.
represented a rebuff to a request by Senate democrats at the start of the session that the new vice president be a member of the minority party. They had urged the selection of Sen. Joe Warren, D-Maple City, who is starting his fifth term.
JEAN MARC
VON DER WEID
Former President, Brazilian National Students Union
—Former Political Prisoner, Ilha deas Flores
Speaking on: BRAZIL
As A Subimperialist Power
Forum Rm.
Friday
7:30 p.m.
Feb. 9
SUA International Issues
SUA Presents:
Ron Crick & Band
Feb. 14 8 p.m.
Union Ballroom
FREE
footstompin! lightening pickin! Good old country fun! Y'all come & bring your sweethearts too!
RON CRICK
SINGER-SONGWRITER
NYE'S FLOWERS
AND
PICTURE FRAMING
939 Massachusetts 843-3255 Local Delivery
With All Your Heart. The FTD LoveBundle.
You have a special someone somewhere, whether it's your mom or your sweetheart, hoping you'll remember her with flowers on Valentine's Day. Send her the FTFD LoveBundle. A bright and beautiful bouquet of fresh flowers in a special container. All designed with 5 February 14th in mind.
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Find out how easy it is to send the right flowers the FTD way. Drop in for your FREE Selection Guide. Wherever you see the famous FTD symbol, (or write FTD, 900 FTD, 8226 FTD, 48226). Most FTD flowers accept major credit cards.
*As an independent business name, each FTD Member Florists sets his own prices. © 1973 Florida's Transworld Delivery Association.*
9th & Indiana
OWEN'S FLOWER SHOP
( )
Commonwealth Theatres
or
NOW SHOWING
John Craig, Top British Agent, is sent on a case involving an internation double cross.
Innocent Hillcrest
You don't turn your back anyone. Especially the partner who's backing you up.
Bvstanders
Eve. 7:20, 9:30
Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15, 4:15
Adults 1.50 Rated PG
MOVIE INFORMATION
Travels
With my
Aunt
BASED UPON
THE NOVEL
GRAHAM
GREEN
Directed by
George
CUKOR
Eve. 7:15, 9:10
Mat. Sun. 2:35, 4:25
Sun-Thurs. 7:15 only
Fri-Sat. 7:15, 9:55
Mat.Sat-Sun. 1:45, 4:10
Expanding With Wit And Humor.
1776
THE HILLcrest
HILLIARD SCHOOL CENTER 490 W. OAKLAND
ENDS
TUES
THE Hillcrest
GENERAL SANCTUARY & TOWN HALL
842-4000
ROBERT REDFORD
PG
18 JEREMIAH JOHNSON
Eve. 7:30,9:35
Mat. Sat-Sun. 3:30,5:25
Granada
THEATRE • telephone VI3-5782
HELL UPSIDE DOWN
"THE POSEIDON
WEED FROM THE DEVIL'S GARDEN!
ADVENTURE
—Rated PG
Weekdays 7:30, 7:50
Sat. and Sun. 8:30, 9:30
7:40, 7:50
Adults 1.75 Child .75
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI-3-1065
OUTRAGEOUS!
OUTRAGE
One MOMENT of BLISS
A LIPETIME of REGRET!
REEZ MADNESS
MONTAGING A THROLL,
THE WALKA A ORIG
OF CONCENTRATED BULL!
WAKE UP AMERICA! HERE'S A ROADSIDE WEED
THAT'S FAST BECOMING A NATIONAL HIGH-WAY!
MARIJUANA
WEED FROM THE DEVILS GARDEN:
Kevin Saunders, ABC,
Plus 3 STOOGES and ROADRUNNER FILM-FESTIVAL
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT Freak Show—Sat. Feb. 10th—12:00
Boxes 17 and 18
75 O’CONNY, LINCOLN ST.
ON/OYLONLY, 14:28-16:28
'THE WORST FILM I CAN RECALL SITTING THROUGH...EVER. A young victim is seduced into smoking the devil weed. No one seems to inhale, but it must be powerful stuff. Before the film is over, they all become screaming maniacs lumbering around like Frankenstein monsters, murdering people, leaping out of twelfth floor windows and tearing at their throats shouting 'Give me a reef!'. "An incredible series of gross and ludicrous distortions that thirty six years later becomes hilarious when seen from the other side of the generation gap, a gap this film did so much to create."
Kevin Saunders, ABC,
Thursday, February 8.1973
3
TNT
Kansas Photo by MIKE FORSYTH
Richard House and Earl Robinson Profit from Industrial Design Class . . . Robinson awaited patent on original design . . .
Child-Proof Cap Designed
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
Robinson is currently awaiting the arrival of the manufacturer on his design of a childproof bottle closure.
Robinson designed the bottle closure for his individual project in a design course at the University of Kansas. He chose to design a child-proof bottle cap because the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommended two bottles of certain kinds of drugs, be said.
An individual project in an industrial design class may turn out to be profitable when the project is implemented.
"Tango" was originally performed at KU in 2016, followed by conjunction with the Slavic Festival of the Year at St. Mary's College.
KU Production Of 'Tango' Goes To Des Moines
The University Theatre production of "Tango" will be presented today at Drake University in Des Moines as part of the American College Theatre Festival.
Because of the federal requirements, many manufacturers are still looking for
The production is one of five plays in the central region to be presented at Drake. It was chosen from a field of about 30 plays in the region.
One play from each of 10 regions will be chosen for presentation in May at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington.
"Tango!" is the second KU production to be invited to festival competition in the five years of the competition. The KU produc- tion team was presented in Washington in 1973.
"Tango" is about the comic and tragic efforts of a young man to render order out of chaos in a society represented by his application of reason and then by force.
The play, written by Czechoslovakian playwright Slawomir Mrozek, grew out of the Polish experience of the late 19th and 20th centuries.
Director William Kuhlke took a company of 25 to Des Moines for the regional presentation. The cast members are Avi Seaver, Lawrence graduate student; Mary Jay Clough, Lawrence special student; Howard Renenland, Lawrence graduate student; Jeffrey Goldman, Lawrence student; Margaret Voldeng, Lawrence junior; Virginia Kent, Lawrence graduate student; and Dan Duling, Lawrence graduate student.
Money Shifted To Scholarships
The executive Committee of the University of Kansas Endowment Association, acting on the recommendation of Chancellor Raymond Nichols, has approved the use of the income from the D. Ernest Worden and Fern Cook Worden funds to provide additional gifts given to students from Summer County attending the University of Kansas.
Although the deadline for applications for scholarships for 1973-74 at KU was Feb. 1, the date for applications for Worden scholarships for the coming year has been March 20. Students applying for one of the scholarships are encouraged to do so during February.
Dermands on the fund for student loans have been relatively small, and the unused cash in the fund has continued to be invested. The projected income available for scholarships for the 1973-74 academic year is $15,000.
Inquiries concerning the scholarships and applications may be made at the Office of Student Financial Aid, Room 26, Strong Hall.
the bottle closure that would meet the requirement, impossible for the request to open. Robinson
Rick House, Lawrence senior, Lance Rake, Waukesha, Wis., junior, and Robinson are in a four-course program in the department of industrial design.
"The yet undefined field of industrial design provides great opportunities for students." Rake said. "The industrial design field has a lot in the last few years, here at KIU."
In designing a product, House said, one must go through three basic phases.
House said each of the students in the senior design class last semester designed his own interpretation of a safe infant bicycle seat as one of the class projects.
product, the conditions under which the product will be used, physiological limitations, and the materials that will be effective and practical in terms of budget.
Members of the senior design class also designed their own interpretations of better campus lighting and did one project complying with their own choice, according to House.
The most time consuming phase of his project was research on the bicycle seat
During the second phase, development, research findings are applied and different ideas and concepts are tried. House said, "In all cases we use our concepts, the designer selects the best one."
The product must be thoroughly researched before actual work can begin. House said. During this first phase the product will be tested in the amount of consumer demand for the
Rake said that last semester, he and members of his junior design class worked on a portable, temporary disaster shelter as a project.
The solution phase is the final phase. The product was built with a full-size mock-up of the product, was built.
Rake said that although the problem was
a old one, the students produced some
unintended results.
Some of the problems Rake said he encountered in creating his product were the lack of a robustness, buildability material, time required to set the shelter up and shelter buoyancy.
Buses Begin 2 New Routes On Monday
Two new bus routes, the Ninth Street, Avalon and Emery Road route and the Malls Shopping Center route, will be added Monday to the ones presently in operation, including the Kansas City, Kan., senior and Student Senate transportation committee chairman.
Powell said he expected, 1,500 patented, who would increase the revenue of the company.
Bus-stop signs have also been posted along the routes of the campus bus service, since the signs have now been posted, buses with a longer stop when the cord is pulled.
Maps of the bus routes and schedules will be posted this week. Powell said.
Powell said that advertising space inside the buses was available to student organizations at no cost. He said anyone interested should contact the Student Senate office.
Starting at the Kansas University, the Ninth Street, Avalon and Emery Road route will run west on Jayhawk Drive to West Campus Road, north to Stratford, west to Emery, north to High Drive, north to Cambridge, north to Ninth Street, east to Indiana, south to 10th Street Campus Road and back around to Indiana, south to Eadland and south to the Union.
The Malls route runs from the Union west on Jayhawk to Crescent, west to Naismith, south to 21st Street, east to Louisiana, south to 20th Street, west to Alabama, south to 27th Street, west to Kentucky, south to 25th Street, west to Redbud Lane, south to 26th Street, west and north to Park 25 apartments, back to 26th Street, east to Redud, north to 28th Street, east to Ridge Court, north to 23rd Street, east to Court, north to 23rd Crescent, and east back to the Union.
Naishtim Hall to Campus, 10 minutes past the hour—7:10 a.m. to, 8:10 a.m.
Gatehouse and Park 25 to Campus, on the hour-7 a.m. to 6 o.m.
The times are:
24th Street and Ridge Court to Campus,
five minutes past the hour -7: 05 am to. 6: 05
pm
Union to West Wills and West Ninth Street.
23 minutes past the hour - 7.23 a.m. to 5.23
p.m.
Ninth Street and Avalon to Campus, 30 minutes past the hour—7:30 a.m. to 5:30
Cambridge and High Drive to Campus, 68 minutes past the hour--7:28 am, to 5:28
Union to 24th Street and Ridge Court via Mall's Shopping Center, 37 minutes past the midnight show.
23rd Street and Louisiana (Malls Shops Center) to Campus via Park 25, 50 minutes past the hour—7:50 a.m. to 5:50 p.m.
Ancient Turkish Ruins Endangered
The ancient ruins of Turkey are in danger of being lost without man benefiting from archaeological research, Cevat Erdur of the archaeology department at Wednesday night in the Kansas Union.
Erder, who is spending a year in residence at the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton, spoke at the meeting of the Institute of America.
Electrical power is one of the major needs to raise the standard of living in Turkey, Erder said. A system of dams is being developed for the power, he said. A map showing the country to be sprinkled with planned and developed dams and lakes.
Though the ancient ruins are being lost under water, Erder said, the developments are forging the archeologists to move ahead and embark on much research as possible can be completed.
In the Keban Dam area, Erder said, more than 200 sites of ancient ruins will be
covered with water. The ruins ranged mosques to public baths, he said.
A six century arch that appeared also to have been used as a bridge, was found in the Kubu.
"May God protect them going out and coming in from this time and ever more" is Dale Sharp's name.
the ancient influences on the rural architecture in the Keban Dam area. Many of the same materials and floor plans for the buildings are still used, he said.
An ancient cemetery dating back to the first and third centuries brought quite a bit of publicity to the research project, Erder said. Many pieces of gold jewelry were found, he said, including finger-rings, earrings, and necklaces.
Compound housing complexes found in ancient ruins and in the rural areas are much the same, Erder said. The emphasis of the floor plan is on function, he said, with a central common area and individual rooms around the sides.
Three mosques found in the area have been dismantled and moved to museums, Erder said. One will be used as a place of worship again, he said. However, the roof, of the mosque is still a problem, he said, because only the walls are complete to any degree.
One of the main objectives of the archeological research as far as the institute is concerned, is to reconstruct a
I am a musician. I play the flute and piano. I also play the saxophone and clarinet. I love to dance and sing. I like to be creative. I enjoy exploring new things and learning new skills. I am a happy and creative person. I am very passionate about music. I love to perform and enjoy the experience of making music. I am always looking for new ideas and ways to improve my skills. I am very grateful to all the people who have supported me in my musical journey. I am very proud of myself and the people who have helped me grow as a musician. I am very happy with my life and the music that I create. I am very excited to continue my musical journey. I am very confident in my ability to play music and perform it well. I am very happy with my life and the music that I create. I am very excited to continue my musical journey. I am very confident in my ability to play music and perform it well.
Any old song and dance.
Give us the old soft shoe.
Or a comedy routine (this
isn't i-k-boy, do we hope it isn't t)
We're auditioning talent of all kinds-singer,
instrumentalist, dancers,
guitarists, gypsies, ventriloquists.
magicians-anything that's entertaining.
Give us the old song and dance.
Auditions are to open on any 16 years of age or older. Just remember the rules. Must be present to win.
SIX FLAGS
Kansas City, Missouri - Wednesday; February 14
3:30 p.m. Kansas City
Grant Hall - Sovere Auditorium
Grant Hall
SENIOR ANNOUNCEMENTS February 8 & 9 A factory representative will be present in the Kansas Union Bookstore
We are an equal opportunities employer
to assist you in ordering your graduation invitations. Samples of the announcements and accessories will be on display at the Book Store the 8th 6-9th also. Please come prepared to place your order with full payment in order to be assured your invitations will arrive on time.
Division of Litton Industrials
GRADUATE TO SALES With A Leading Manufacturer Of Electronic Business Equipment.
kansas
sunion BOOKSTORE
MONROE, Division of Litton Industries, now moving into mini-computers where the big future stands—ours and possibly yours—is looking for college graduates interested in sales careers.
Rewarding opportunities await you in our branch offices all across the country.
1400 567 2392
INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS ALL DAY FRIDAY FEBRUARY 9TH
MONROE
For further information contact:
Mrs. Glads Padget, Room 208, Strong Hall
At the Liberal Arts Office
BE A PLAYER IT'S A SUPER SUMMER JOB.
CARLOS MAYORAL
WORLDS OF FUN, KANSAS City's fabulous new 20.5 million dollar theme park is now auditing for saints, dancers, magicians, gunfighters, barbershoppers, comics and variety acts. If you've got talent, why not combine it with good times and good friends in a full theater production, on a showbowl, or in a good old fashioned gunfire at WORLDS OF FUN this summer?
The WORLDS OF FUN entertainment staff will hold auditions for you on Thursday, February 15, 1973. Beginning at 1:00 p.m. in the Big Eight Room, Kansas Union.
WorldsofFi
Summer positions for over 1,200 students will be available in the many different areas of Worlds of Fun. If you are interested in working as an ambassador in another area than the shows, you can visit the website www.worldsoffun.com/4945 Worlds of Fun, Kansas City, Missouri 641617
Worlds of Fun
KANSAS CITY'S
FAMILY FUN
ADVENTURE
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4
Thursday, February 8, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Phase 3 Buck-Passing
Phase 3 of President Nixon's economic program, which calls for voluntary restraint on wage and price increases, promises to be only slightly more effective than Phase 2. Phase 2 wasn't effective at all.
The goal of Phase 2 was to cut the inflation rate from 4 per cent in mid-1971 to 2.3 per cent by early 1973. For part of that time, from December 1971 to February 1972, the annual rate of increase in consumer prices was 4.8 per cent. Between March and May, this rate decreased remarkably, and it leveled off at 2 per cent. Then some things happened because June and August climbed to 2.8 per cent and between September and November, the rate measured at 4.4 per cent, only a scant four-tenths of a percentage point below the previous year's high mark.
Obviously spurred by the tremendous success of Phase 2, Administration officials have decided that American business and education are ready to exercise voluntary restraint in wage and price increases.
As applied to Phase 3, voluntary restraint means staying within the limits of guidelines set by the federal government. By these guidelines, businessmen can raise prices to cover cost increases as long as they keep within permissible profit margins. Businesses can raise
profits 1.5 per cent without any limit on profit margins and they can raise profits on products when demand for these products exceeds supply.
Of interest to students is the fact that rent price controls have been lifted, though landlords are subject to restrictal restraint in rent price increases.
Workers can expect to receive wage increases, though not more than 5.5 per cent. An exception will be made for areas with localized shortages of labor or similar economic situations. Peter Bommer, a consultant for Rubber, Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America, has already stated that his union will not settle for a 5.5 per cent increase.
The federal government is not leaving itself at the mercy of private interests. The Cost of Living Council has the power to order rollbacks of prices and wages if it judges an increase to be excessive, but the real purpose of Phase III appears to be to allow the government to use business and labor as scapegoats if the economic program is less than successful. Such pressure is designed to force cooperation from business and labor, while offering the Administration an opportunity to partially exonerate itself in the event that the program fails.
John P. Bailey
Federal Agents Nail Pushers With 'Untouchable' Techniques
WASHINGTON—In the nobels-barred style of Eilit Ness, Federal agents are chasing down narcotics pushers for such crimes as tax cheating, serving in court, filing dirty counters in their cafes.
Pursuit on hoods of such unorthodox charges dates back to the days of Al Capone, who was laid for tax dodging when police
Jack Anderson
could not make murder charges stick. And Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy carried the practice to an art when his anti-Maifa drive incited in major gangster with his full of illegally-shot wildflower.
From our conversations in the field with the agents themselves, here are some of their off-beat tactics:
—Armed with city health codes, the agents are checking out junky restaurants and bars for insects in ice cream machines, dirty contacts and scum on sinks. They then turn up the heat to keep the inspectors so drug haunts can be closed down for health reasons,
Now, agents of DALE-Drug Abuse Law Enforcement—are using the same techniques to nail beron street hustlers who are too slippery to be caught on narcotics counts.
—the agents are making cases against operators of dope hangouts that serve liquor to minors, operate after hours and water whiskey. The purpose is to shut down drug harm by follow-up action of local alcoholic gang communications and boards.
- Because city and state tax cases are often easier to make than federal cases, the agents have offer their talents to local
tax men. The agents have proved that hoodlums paid cash for big cars at a time when the hoods had little or no income, they had little or no income.
- In cities where marshals are lazy or overworked, the agents are serving bench warrants on criminals in jail escapes. Sometimes, the fugitives are under charges unrelated to drugs. But they draw their main income from drug trafficking and are fair games for the "marcs."
- These novel methods are showing results, but the agents in the field complain they are getting little or no co��ing. They must be Myles Ambrose. The agents are especially bitter because DALE was the braincratch of President Nixon himself, who installed Ambrose in the job and clearly has praised his successes.
- the agents also have investigated bail bond and parole violations by suspected drug hustlers, so that the pussons can even when the crimes involved are not directly related to heroin.
The agents tell they could get twice as much done If Amrose, his chiefs in the Justice Department or the White House itself would persuade local officials to give them more help.
"a letter from Ambrose or somebody else with some clout back there (in Washington) could DAELE agent told us, "A city booze inspector is set in his ways. He isn't going to help me shut down a bar but harms his mayor and he will cooperate 100 per cent."
Despite these complaints by Federal Narcotics, Tax and
SUPREME COURT
Customs agents, and the local detectives who make up DALE, there have been solid accomplishments.
A confidential tally of DALE's results from last January to Dec. 2014 was that more than 100 pounds of heroin, much of it low grade, was seized or was bought evidence by undercover nen
Although heroin is DALE's focus, the agents have also collected 50 pounds of cocaine, 20 of hashish, 6,000 pounds of another amount of LSD, amphibianies and smoking opium.
DALE also claims 3,782 narcotics arrests, 449 convictions and the seizure of a warehouse of narcotics. These include $714,148 in cash, 671 pistols, nine hand grenades, 229 cars, an antitank gun, a cabin cruiser, six machine guns, an arm and 104 pounds of explosives.
A DALE spokesman conceded that no official guideline had been put out for agents or city officials, but Director Ambrose has visited 38 of DALE's 41 target cities, and in each case has urged local officials to cooperate with the methods, the spokesman said.
Copyright, 1972 by United Feature Syndicate. Im.
By STEVE BUSER
Kansan Staff Writer
Christmas in the Appalachians
Many of us have shared stories with others about our wonderful vacations during Christmas break. My story isn't so wonderful, exciting or entertaining as most students 'might be', but it is also not forgiven by me and my friends.
It didn't take place at Vale, Aspen or Mt. Snow but in an Appalachian territory of eastern Kentucky. I spent only eight days working there. If you read the rest
'For many miles trash heaps covered one side of the road; a sudsy, polluted creek bordered the other side, and land devastated from recent strip-mining operations completed the sordid landscape.'
you'll spend only a few minutes but the people who are the subject of this story are living there in conditions most of us would rather not think about.
I was working with the Dayton (Ohio) University Appalachia Club that has been helping families in an area near Sayville, Ky. It was three days after Christmas and we were getting ready one afternoon to deliver donated Christmas presents to children who attended the club's summer school program last year.
Just as a beautiful entrance is appropriate for a modern subdivision, the way to the homes of these destitute people of Appalachia fitted their dismal
With chains fastened securely on the back tires of a loaded down van, we headed off into the hills that led the way to the town square of one of the nation's five largest counties.
While the van struggled up and down the muddy roads, I started out the window to see where the road covered one side of the road; a sudsy, polluted creek bordered the other side, and land devastated from recent stripping operations completed the sordid
We passed many dilapidated homes that were covered with odd-shaped pieces of worn-out aluminum sidar, tucked under a metal column, cracked boards and other debris.
black smoke from coal stoves inside darkened the already dreary sky; car windows shattered; auto parts, broken tools, bottles, cans and paper littered the barren yards.
The wells, outhouses and coal stoves, which the people depended on, made me think we were in a period a hundred years ago. But the sight of a discarded auto hood or dismantled washing machine made it a reality.
We scrambled past the bumps and holes in the road and soon stopped at the Blantons. Five or six little kids ran toward us in a dash from their shack set back in a hollow a few thousand yards from the road, and crossed a 20-foot wiggle board over the creek and made their way up to the van.
We handed out the presents right away in response to their demands, and they opened them while leading us back to their home. After crossing a bridge we went across a river, and under the shack, supported by stones retrieved from the nearby creek.
Their gleaming faces were a warm welcome because I had felt out of place; my clothes were not hole-covered hand-me-downs as theirs were. Cultural shock was the sight. The slight of a layer on on their flesh distracted me from their smiles.
Nearing the entrance of their house, I began to experience the reality and meaning of poverty, about which I had previously only heard or read.
We entered the first room to greet Phyl (Phyllis) and Cal, the parents of the eight children. Phyl was stopped over a coal stove cooking dinner consisting of a few potatoes and a rusted pan, five onions and six vegetables from last year's garden.
This food and a bucket of cow's milk would somehow feed an already under-purified family of 10.
Cal told me his family recently had moved from another home because the well-went dry. The children were eager to give a new learner like me a tour of their new house, which they proudly exclaimed was much better than the other one. After the tour I was unable to imagine what could be worse.
Three of the girls slept on a normalized bed in a room smoked an old garage. The sheets were gray from smoke emitted by a nearby fireplace, burning blocks of coal. Potato sacks were strewn over their bed to add extra warmth to that provided by the fireplace and distant stove.
While the boys played with their new football outside, the little girls pulled me in another room to see their six-month-old sister. This room was where Cal and Phyl slept and was a storeroom for coal as well.
The infant was clothed in soiled raga, Broken playkith Iggs surrounded her. Cal and Piyi smiled as they watched their mother kill him. The mass presents they had ever received.
The oldest boy soon led me to the rear of the house. He pointed to me opossum sliding across a fence. Ever since he quit school on the first day of his freshman year, he trapped and sold it.
With no chances for a better life in
the content world, she and some
sometimes care, as his bishop father.
Like most others in the area, he will not be able to learn some of the mistakes in life during the teen years when there is time for experimentation. Instead he is forced uncontrollably into an adult world with its responsibilities while most others in the country are busy with homework or dating.
Whenever the van arrived the Blantons celebrated as if it were a holiday. They seemed to experience vicariously the happiness that exists outside the hollow in which they lived. They enjoyed imaginative dresses and clothes and clean skin and be able to travel to places other than Appalachia.
They pleaded with us not to leave, but we had more presents to deliver. The children anticipated the start of summer arts and crafts from the club members.
Before leaving we left them a box of malted milk balls; although they knew it was candy it was something they had never eaten before.
We stopped next at the LeMasters. The whole family was already outside in the front yard preparing to slaughter a hog that would feed them for the rest of the season. The boys and their father were whitening and sharpening their knives while the girls watched with a fearful curiosity.
The two smaller boys, Beecher and Blueboy, opened their presents with great joy. These families have no money for gifts on any occasion and the children accepted this as a fact of life. The men were preparing to slit the throat of the big hog, consequently, the girls in our group felt it was time to leave.
It was quite the opposite. The oldest daughter, 17, was in charge of her six little brothers and sisters when we arrived. It seemed that this was the case
most every day, because neither her father nor mother was greatly concerned with the family.
One of her sisters was a 14 year old who was paralyzed and could not speak. She was positioned in a chair with her knees touching her chin as she watched the commaction of little ones opening their presents inside the house.
Severe mental retardation is prevalent in Appalachia because related families often intermary. With little access to birth control devices, families are usually large and often include children with lower mentality or retardation.
The dirty facts and thin bodies of the Gamble children resembled those of the Blanton children and most others who lived in devastated areas of Appalachia. These children played a play some of the games they received as presents, and then headed for home.
While visiting a day care center the previous day, I worked with three retarded children all from the same family. The moderator of the center said that there was one more child of the same family at home who was unable to attend.
Although our house was equipped with a well, coal stove and loocth, it was luxurious compared to what we had seen that day. On our way home we stopped by to see the Pennington who lived a mile away.
The smell of burning coal and the odor from nearby farm animals made it almost unbareable inside. Mr. Pennington informed us that his oldest son was living nearby in what we later found out to be a reconstructed chicken coop.
At the close of the day I was beset by feelings of confusion, sorrow, pity and
'Nearing the entrance of their house, I began to experience the reality and meaning of poverty, about which I had previously only heard or read.'
amazement. It all seemed so unfair.
I ask her question about you or you are asking now. Why? Nothing could justify what I had witnessed that afternoon.
As we sit in our warm homes tonight after eating their third meal of the day, I hope that we make an effort somehow to remember those in Appalachia and in other parts of the world who are not so lucky as we are.
Besides merely remembering them, I hope that we do something to help them.
Nicholas von Hoffman
Safe Papers, Dangerous Streets
The hours pass, and indeed a sensational arrest is made, but not of the two men who all but murdered the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. They are as safe as birds, but
WASHINGTON - A U.S. Sense is robbed and gunned down in front of his house. Such an attack against a member of Congress is a federal offense, and therefore within the jurisdiction of the FBI. A shocked and worried capital officer rushed into the FBI hawkshaws to make a quick, sensational arrest and throw these crooks in the slam.
To the Editor
A recent letter to the Kananan expressed concern that if the controversial Pearson Integrated School was given permanent status, it would set a dangerous precedent. Jim Swindle's letter contended that he had allowed to substitute for the freshman-sophomore humanities, English and Western Civilization requirements, the following year. "Why shouldn't every group of like-minded professors have its own requirement-filling program and all. He concluded that such a
Rebuttal
The Kansan should print complete results of every track meet, indeed every variety sports day. "I will day a day" is not accurate journalism
To the Editor:
After last Saturday's track meet with the University of Minnesota, the KU's did rather poorly. I was approached by a Kanran analyst. His line of questioning centered on reasons for KU's bad performance.
Mark Lutz Rochester, Minn., Junior
columnist Jack Anderson's senior assistant, Lesh Whiten, is arrested while covering a story, handcuffed and taken to jail.
I wandered that he was last week, when at Oklahoma City the KU team had its best meet so far the day before. The effort showed in up print.
Readers Respond
Track Reports Spotty
Of late the FBI has also shown a prudent interest in dirty movies and, according to Whiten, in finding out whether or not a certain famous football player did get a woman pregnant. Some eight or more of them were able, away from other people's sex lives long enough to arrest Whiten. They arrested him as he was helping an Indian leader to carry several cartons of this stolen
material. The Indian was in a hurry. Why? He had an appointment with an FBI agent.
The Indian was going to return the portion of the documents he had in his possession. He'd done the same thing before. He even sent a letter to them, Hytter—written on the cartons, but as Whiten tells the story, when they got down to the jail and they'd mug-shot him, he asked them to take a picture of kittens as evidence of their intent.
state of affairs would result in a "fragmentation of the college."
I submit that the question has already been answered: One and only one group of "like-minded individuals require-fillment, program and is trying to exclude all other points of view. The present situation is worse than any other possible scenario with a virtual monopoly on approaches to teaching. The majority of current faculty refuse to allow a different level of education to be introduced.
Ubelievable as it may seem, in this age of equality, our state university's arts college is a university that provides realism. The ideological foundation of this inflexibility is even more startling. In the name of academic freedom the Pearson program is being condemned as 'antibiotical' to the aims of our work: an educational program, for example.
During last week's College Assembly meeting, Prof. Donald Marquis of the Philosophy Department proposed to set up a watchdog committee for the Philosophy Department, according to the philosophy of John Stuart Mill. I can well imagine that the venerable old
But the first precept of Western Civilization is to keep an open mind and to allow free interaction of all points of view. Yet, somehow, objectivism is derived from a certain apparent point of view. The very teachers of relativism turn out to be adamant absolutists.
ibertarian would turn over in his grave if he heard his name being scribbled on his roshlp. PIHP offers students a different, recognized university.
It is now fighting for its life because it does not conform to established educational philosophy. Swindier stated that students are better with rhetoric, indoctrinated students and false enthusiasm for the program. I am presently enrolled in the program, and I can testify that mine, as well as the over-30 students in our students enthusiasm is genuine.
There are many courses with selective admissions at KU, which are not as popular as PHP, and I think it is an innate student judgment. It has the popularity of the program to elitism. I must say that my respect for the program has increased during this embarrassing "trial" that the teacher had given me. The have remained courteous and diplomatic in the face of this unwarranted inquisition.
The program's approval will not destroy the intellectual environment of students I am convinced that a vote of confidence for PHIF will be the beginning of an honest pluralism debate in the new. The program has already received much favorable reaction, and its continued existence can only enhance the boy's academic reputation.
Matthew Senior Lawrence Junior
"This camera doesn't take pictures of tops of boxes," they told Whitten, who rather wisely begged that she would. "Decease will never be again."
Even if Whitten were guilty of what they've trumped up against him, he'd have committed no crime. These papers have no monetary value. Their only value is that he has possibly illegal conduct by the government officials who caused Whiten to be arrested.
The case is unlike any of the other freedom of the press cases that have caused so much indignity in the world. The Pentagon Papers case, the government alleged, albeit untruthfully, that their publication might jeopardize national defense. This has nothing to do with national policy.
In the case of Earl Caldwell of the New York Times, the government claimed it had a right to force him to reveal his confidential news sources and testify about the possible commission of a federal grand jury. The Supreme Court ruled against Caldwell.
Whitten, whose only suspected crime up to this point may have been translating Baudelaire into English, was busted for receiving stolen property. He was sent from the Bureau of Indian Affairs building by a small army of infuriated red men. After 200 years of betrayal they'd captured the government office which authorized their woes and had made off with evidence of their betrayal. It was a noble theft.
1
Whitten, who is one of the most esteemed people in the news business and politics, is among the dawn hither and you across the country clande-
tinely meeting with Indians to examine these documents. A number were used as the foundation for Jack Anderson columns, demonstrating yet again how the white man can tie the red man.
one of the columns put the FBI in a bad light and may have had something to do with what they did to Whiten. They had other reasons to get him. He and Anderson had found out about their wasting time on trying to uncover country's dignity by setting up hunting blinds to photograph the sex lives of liberal-inclining Hollywood stars.
The only other explanation that offers itself is that Whiten was arrested to frighten others out of passing information over to Jack Anderson. The Eagleton goof of last summer aside, Anderson and his staff have had an astonishing long run of exposing every
side of crookedness and mendacity at all the higher levels of government.
You may say an arrest isn't that big a thing, but it's a shaking and shocking experience. Merely being arrested is punishment, and even if you beat it you still lose because of the thousands of dollars in legal fees and hours of lost time the costume costs you.
It didn't cost L. Pattray Gray and his transmpse a thing. It's safe and it's fun busting a wheel. He put the cuffs on him isn't like tracking down and catching guys who put two bullets in John Stenis. That takes a little movie; in the meanwhile, he's wearing dangerous and what you read in the papers safer and safer, you know why.
(C) Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
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Thursday, February 8, 1973
5
No Increase in Abortions Expected
By CAROLYN OLSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Medical experts have estimated that a total of 1.6 million American women will seek abortions this year because of the recent Supreme Court ruling liberalizing abortions. But local health officials don't expect a large increase in the number of abortions.
Charles Dennison, administrator for Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said Kansas abortion laws have been fairly liberal since and in 1872 they were liberalized even more.
The Kansas law originally required three physicians to concur that an abortion was needed to protect the mental or physical health of the mother or child. An abortion could also be obtained if the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest.
In 1972, however, a federal district court ruled that only one doctor need approve the abortion and that the abortion could be performed in any state-licensed hospital.
Deniston said about 20 abortions per month were performed at Lawrence Memorial. He said almost all of the doctors performed abortions, but that each physician had a personal choice whether to perform the abortion.
A bill introduced last week in the Kansas Senate, complies with the recent Supreme Court ruling that no hospital or its officers or administrators will be required to permit abortions and that any refusal will not be grounds for a civil suit. The bill was introduced by members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The Senate judiciary bill and a resolution calling for a constitutional convention to consider an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would overturn the Supreme Court ruling on abortions, will be discussed at 11 a.m. today at the statehouse.
The two proposals will be discussed in a bearing before the joint Senate and House Judiciary Committee and the Senate and House public health committees.
Members of the Kansas Right to Life organization will attend the hearing to support the proposed constitutional amendment which would define the beginning of life as the moment of conception.
Meanwhile, a few effects of the liberalized abortions ruling are already being felt in the US.
Deniston said prices for abortions at Lawrence Memorial Hospital might be reduced. An abortion now usually costs about $400 at Lawrence Memorial. The hospital is from $150 to $800, doctor's fees are usually also reduced, Deniston said.
Dr. Dale Clinton, Douglas County health officer, said he usually refers women who want abortions to Douglass Hospital in Kansas City, Kan.
"The personnel at Douglass Hospital usually charge about $200 for an abortion, and sometimes the charge is even less." Clinton said. "Each woman's financial situation is evaluated and then a fee is set."
At Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 357 abortions were performed in Fiscal Year
Campus Briefs
Park Jobs Available
Approximately 125 jobs will be available with the Lawrence parks and recreation department this summer, the department will hire approximately 40 playground aides to swimming instructors with pay between $1.75 and $2.25 an hour. About half the jobs are usually filled by returning summer employees. The jobs include a park officer, assistant director of the department.
Objectivists to Meet
KU Students of Objectivism (the philosophy of Ayn Rand) will meet at 7:30 tonight at 163 Pinecee Drive. For more information call 542-5956.
Car Rally Sunday
The Jayhawk Sports Car Club will have a timed speed and rally day赛. Registration will begin at noon in the southwest corner of O-Zone and the first car will leave at 1 p.m. Participants will be ex-tenue time and distance to and provide their own navigator and a car with an odometer. A keg party will follow the rally.
1972 which ended June 1. In Fiscal Year 1971, only 25 were performed. Of the 837 abortions performed in 1972, 108 were performed on women from out-of-state, while only 54 abortions on out-of-state women were performed in 1971.
Officials from Douglas Hospital and the University of Kansas Medical Center refused to release figures on how many patients died in each hospital during the last two years.
Girl Scouts to Meet
Figures on the number of abortions performed by the individual hospital are required by law to be reported to the Kansas State Board of Health in Topeka. Officials from the State Board of Health said 8,549 abortions were performed in Kansas hospitals in fiscal 1971, while only 8,000 abortions were performed in Kansas and 628 abortions in the abortions in 1971 were performed on women from out of state, while the figure was only 50 per cent in 1972.
There will be an organizational meeting of Campana Girl Scouts at 7 tonight in the library.
Hashingler Hall's production of "Stop the World-I" Want to Get Off!" will be presented again Sunday because of its popularity among students. The musical is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Hashingler Theatre. Residents will be admitted free and other persons may purchase tickets at the door.
The State Board of Health said, 1,300 Kansas residents went out of state in 1971 to have abortions, and compared to 1,000 in 1972.
Hashinger Musical
Abortion opponents have complained that Kansas was gaining a reputation as an "abortion milk" because of the large number of actions performed for out-of-state residents.
T. Roosevelt Butler, administrator for
Douglass Hospital said Wednesday that the hospital was permitting all abortions but that only about one-third of the physicians would perform abortions.
Butler said all of the women who had abortions at Douglass Hospital were released the same day. Demismont said he was not involved at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
"It just depends on each physician, but it also depends on an eye on the patient or not." Denudation.
Dr. Raymond Schweigler, director of Watkins Hospital, said no abortions had been performed at Watkins in the last 30 years.
"We just don't have enough equipment," Schwegler said. "If a physician wanted to bring in some instruments he could carry it because we are certified." Schwegler said.
Schweiger said none of the staff physicians would perform abortions, even at his clinic.
"Our physicians just refer the patients to our hospital and have better facilities," Bettweiler said.
Schweigler was he again against the recent Supreme Court ruling liberalizability abortion law.
"The Supreme Court shouldn't be a legislative body," Schwegler said. "The
'Big Business' Cited As IFC-Chamber Link
The Interfraternity Council voted last week to join the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce because fraternities are becoming big businesses, IFC President Bruce Frazey, Hill City senior, said Wednesday night.
KU fraternities are about a $4-million operation, Pratt & Taylor, including house music.
Frazey said he thought that an increasing number of college students was eager to be accepted as a part of the Lawrence community.
"To be accepted as members of the adult
group, we have to participate in it
on equal terms."
The Chamber would be a good way to gauge student opinion and listen to student opinions.
The Chamber would be a good way to gauge student opinion and listen to student opinions.
The Chamber will meet Feb. 13 to decide on ITE membership.
Frazey said that the IFC had requested positions on both the Chamber of Commerce KU Affairs Committee and Education Chamber and that the IFC become Chamber members.
To establish a better fraternity scholarship program, Frazey said, a committee has been organized to invest in and evaluate the present program in big faults.
He said that the overall fraternity grade-point average was lower last semester than it has been for quite some time. He said he expected grades for fraternity members to be at a higher level at the end of this semester.
Frazey also said that an All University Rush Weekend was planned for Saturday and Sunday. He said that about 250 to 300 men were expected to participate.
Frazey that one of the reasons for the weekend is that it will give prospective KU students a chance to view the campus while classes are in session.
A film about the University will be shown at 2 p.m. Feb. 10 in Wooldruff Auditorium, he said. Speakers from the dean of men's office are invited to attend the session about KU and the fraternity system.
Fraternity membership has increased per cent from £27,000 said, and he believes the need for more members will increase.
people in each state ought to decide if they want to legalize abortion."
"I think the Greek system is more relevant than ever before," he said. "In comparison to communal living it's actually not that much different."
Medical experts have said that the effects of the abortion ruling would be far-reaching. The abortion laws in the state of Texas require that a Supreme Court ruling for two years, and officials say the number of illegitimate births has declined noticeably. One of the effects of the decline in illegitimate births is the increase in adopting babies. New York officials say
Dr. Norman Ryder, Princeton sociologist and a director of the National Fertility Study of 1965, said the number of teenage mothers in her country should be the number of high school dropouts.
Author Speaks About Society, Communication
Society is a matrix where people who have a statement to make come in contact with people who can comprehend the statements of the University of Iowa said Wednesday.
Thayer, an author and magazine editor who has worked at the University of Amsterdam and in Paris, spoke on "Communications as an Integrate Concept in the Behavioral Sciences" Wednesday night in the Jawhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Thayer began his address by saying that communication is one of two basic life processes. He defined it as the ingestion of ideas.
He said the other basic life process was the ingestion of food and other physical needs. People must learn everything they need to know to get by in their environment, he said. Man, unlike lower animals such as the bee, comes totally unprepared for his survival and has no degree of communication and environment must be communicated to him. Thaver said.
"Most learning occurs between people, in each other, each other," Thayer said. "You need my way; is what learning is about. 'I understand you in your way' is what education is about."
Thaier said that man institutionalized truth, as in marriage, because a truth was a common trait of the world.
"Society is that matrix in which people who have a statement to make come into contact with people who can comprehend that statement," he said.
Thayer said that much of what people
know about the environment and
environment in which they lived.
"How do I know what I know?" he asked,
because someone told him so, and
he didn't.
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Cai held out as long as possible. "Two days after they shipped sending bread I got into a Provenal Mutual Insurance Company." "What can you do?" Cai can make my own hours. Can make good money I got a job at the local fire station. They were proud of me. So I told them an insurance policy.
Cal Phillip, junior, felt threatened when his parents suggested that he called a bun and said they wanted an abortion.
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WEATHER REPORT
is:
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electric & acoustic Keyboard
Wayne Shorter
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6
Thursday, February 8, 1973
University Daily Kansan
21
30
32
No Playoffs
Even 100 fans and the two Jayhawk
musicians were and enough for the Jayhawk
band to play.
University of Kansas women's basketball team looked strong through most of the game, they were unable to widen the consistency of a sharpshooting Kansas player. The loss put an end to any KU hope of traveling to the state playoff this year,
30
Kansan Staff Photos by PRIS BRANDSTED
Hockey Club Asks Senate For Finances
The organizers of a new ice hockey club at the University of Kansas have submitted a student senate treatuar for review by the senate Finance and Auditing committee.
Valentine Rader, Anchorage sopmoron and one of the organizers, said Wednesday that the request was for transportation and equipment needs of an ice hockey team.
"The top 20 players on the team will spend close to $3,500 on their own equipment." Rader said. "The goalies' equipment itself costs about $200.
The team plans to compete with league teams from the Kansas City area, Rader said there were some college teams and a few pro teams. The Kansas City that the KU club would paly.
At present, the main problem is finding a place to practice, he said.
"I have contacted King Louie West in Kansas City," Rader said, "and they have agreed to let us practice at reduced rates. The practice time is from 11:30 to 1:30 Friday night, and our games will be on Saturday."
"Anyone wanting to join should know how to state pretty well because hockey in a team can be tricky."
He said that 23 students had contacted him about the new club and that more people would probably join if the funding was approved.
Rader said the prospective member should be prepared to buy some of his own equipment, such as gloves and a hockey stick.
"If we don't get the funding," Rader said, "the cost of the effort to form a team because of it."
The request is expected to be on the senate agenda for Feb. 14.
Tonight: Thursday, Feb. 8
Featuring
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Jumping a Game of Speed to Schur
Practice is not what makes Barry Schur a good high jumper—or at least not practice
Of course, Schur does some of the regular things in his work outs. He lifts weights and he runs stairs and sprints. It's the one thing that he doesn't do that makes the fact that he has leaped as high as 7 feet 3 inches unusual. He doesn't practice high jumping.
"I only jump in meetings," Schur said "That's why my rhythm is not so good early. I really don't do much. It's just that when I need it I do it hard and try to get a lot out of it."
Use Kansan Classifieds
disclosing his goals, other than wanting to improve each year, it is evident that his first 7-foot leap is just a start for this year.
In two meets so far this winter, he has jumped 6-foot-9~3~—good for second place at the New Mexico dual—and 7 feet for first place at the Oklahoma City Invitational.
Apparently, the Kansas method works. He is the Kansas outdoor high jump record last spring as a freshman with his 7-foot-13 jumper. He has been a Hawkway jin marker at 6-foot-10.
And, as Schur will tell you, speed is the thing that makes him a 7-foot high jumper. It's also the thing that makes jumping as hard as possible. The 64,190-pound Tucson, Ariz., sophomore
"I was really pleased with that," Schur said of his 7-foot leap. "I hadn't worked on speed at all and I hadn't worked on my approach at all."
"I rely more on speed," Schur said. "The longer my approach, the more I can get going. For me the big difference is I can use a backpack and indoor doors. Indoor everything is so compact.
"I'm not really fast in a 80 or 100-yard dash, but when it comes to attacking the ball, I'm far better."
Nicklaus Leads In Hope Classic
PALM DESERT (AP)—Jack Nicklaus, making his most determined effort ever in this tournament, fashioned an eight-under-par 72 to claim the $10,000 Bob Hope Desert Golf Class.
Current Canadian Open champion Gay Brewer, and a pair of tour non-winners, George Johnson and Bob Barbarosa, shared second place at 66. Brewer, like Nickiaus, played in Indian Wells, while Barbarosa and Johnson were at Tamarisk.
Pro golf's premier performer had seven birdies and an eagle in his romp over the 6,500-yard Indian Wells Country Club course. He tied for first place in five of the 90-hole event.
Although Schur has a habit of never
time on it. It's just that I'm quicker than most jumpers."
Billy Casper, on the rebound from an off-season in 1972 and playing very well this year, headed a group at 88, four strokes back of the incredible Nicklaus.
At 67 were former Masters champ
Coody, Canadian Ben Ketel
and Dwight Howard.
Also at that figure were Kermit Zarley, Bob Payne, John Mahaffey and rookie Tom Jenkins. Arnold Palmer rallied for a 71 after a poor start and British Open champion Lee Trevino could manage only a 74, far, far back in the field.
"I try to get one indoor peak and one outdoor peak," Schur said. "I usually try indoors for around the Big Bighl or NCAA's conference." After I need to try it to stay difference.
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Continuing our series of top entertainment.
Don't miss R.E.O. Speedwagon.
Come and see how good it is yourself. Don't hear how good it was.
$3.00 Advance
$3.50 At Door
Thursday, February 8, 1973
7
Printers Decry Car Move
By DAVID HEALY
Kansas Staff Writer
Some University of Kansas Printing Service employees, who have been parking on Crestline Drive instead of paying $25 for a permit to park in the service's parking lots, expressed outrage at daytime at a traffic stop by City Commission to eliminate parking on Crestline.
In a vote Tuesday, the commission removed parking on Crestline between Harvard Road and 15th Street saying that Crestline was a collector street, which was meant to move traffic and not to store cars. The commission said the printing service's lots were sufficient to handle all of the employs' cars.
Joel Klaassen, a printing service employee, echoed the position of some of his fellow employees when he said Wednesday, "I shall continue moving further from here until they take all their parking places in town. I'll never buy a parking permit."
Wednesday morning, Klassen's car, which was parked on Crestline, was hit three times because of the icy road conditions.
Kiaasen said there was little hope that any of the employees would lodge a protest with the KU Parking and Traffic Board because many employees had already bought permits.
"There are a few die hards," he said,
"and we die hard."
This year is the first year that University permits have been required for parking in the printing service lots. Permits would have been required last year, but the wage and price controls prevented their establishment.
The employees who will not purchase
permits said that the printing service lots were paid for with money from the printing service general fund and that the lots did not affect the campus traffic situation. Employees also said the lots were too far removed from the main campus to be used by anyone other than printing service personnel.
Some employees who have bought permits said that they did not like having to purchase the permits but that they thought there was nothing they could do about it. Others said that the permits were not worth the fight.
Last semester some of the employees did lodge a complaint with the KU Parking and Traffic Board but to no avail. State law requires the board all control over University parking.
Gerry Kelly, associate professor of electrical engineering and space technology and chairman of the traffic board, said recently that the University decided two years ago that everyone on campus should be treated equally. At that time, the board decided to require permits for parking on West Campus, he said.
The permits cause special problems for the employees who ride in car pools. Carl Shankland, printing service employee who rides in a car pool, said that three men riding together have to buy six permits to use one parking space.
He said that each of the men took turns driving and that in the summer, they drove air-conditioned cars and in the winter, they drove non-air conditioned cars.
Another employee said he was in a car pool with three others from Topeka. Each of them drove the bus to work and if each bought a $25 permit it would cost a total of $100 for the three to park in one
parking space. They have been parking on Crestline.
In response to the city commission's recent action, the employee from Topeka said, "We will just have to walk a longer way to work."
A few of the employees said that they thought the University had gotten the city commission to eliminate the parking on site so that they would be forced to pay permits.
One man said, "AI Capone rides again. We are going to give you this protection and you must pay our price whether you want or not."
Seniors Planning Spring Ski Trip
The senior class officers are attempting to organize a ski trip to Colorado during spring vacation, according to John Wichita senior and class president.
Hackney may the advertised price of $55 for the trip differ among the resorts. At this point, whether the places include meals with the $55 fee is uncertain.
Hackney said that although plans for the trip were still tentative, four sites were being considered. Breckenridge, Aspen, Springs or Burling Spring will be selected, he said.
The senior class is taking a mail by poll to gauge interest in the project, Hackney said.
gague interest in the project, Hackney said. Hackney said organizers were considering chartering a bus to take participants to Colorado.
The trip is a senior function, Hackney said, but is open to all students.
County Hires Clerk, Laborer, Clerk-Typists
The Douglas County Commission hired
their first staff at a routine meeting
Wednesday morning.
Those hired were Cindy J. Hadl, clerk-typist, county engineer's office, $330 a month; William E. Holmes, common laborer, highway department, $405 a month; Melinda Reeves, clerk-typist, county assessor's office, $330 a month; and Herman Tusher, clerk, county assessor's office. $330 a month.
Two reports are on today's agenda for the commission, which meets every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday. A report from Forrest Swail, lecturer in the department of social welfare at the University of Kansas and chairman at the Douglas County Correctional Service, Jail Facilities, and a report Wells Park, a new county recreational facility under construction southeast of Lawrence are scheduled.
- Received a rent payment of $250 for
February from Valleville Home;
- In other business Wednesday the commission:
- Purchased a desk and a chair for $185.64 from the low bidder, Lawrente Wynn from the low bidder, Lawrente Wynn
—Rezoned two sections of agricultural land. One section, which belongs to Tom Akin and is situated between the Union Pacific railroad tracks and U.S. Highway 89. The other section, in Rocky Mountain Park. The other section, a lot in Sandywood Subdivision, was rezoned for light industry.
Council of Presidents Prepare for Hearing
The Council of Presidents of the state schools met Wednesday to prepare for a hearing on budget requests before the Senate Rules and Means committee next Wednesday, Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Wednesday.
Nichols presented the Kansas Union's beer proposal to the presidents at the meeting. They discussed the proposal but took no action. Nichols said.
Regular items of business were also discussed. Some of the items were postponed because iy roads prevented some events from attending the meeting, Nichols said.
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Forum Room
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SUA Contemporary Issues
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. Jeans... 3.99
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. Cotton Knits... 295
. Sweaters ... 1/2 price
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Acrylic Knits... 499
- Trousers ... 1/2 price
. Outer costs...1/2 price
. Sport coats...up to 1/2 OFF
. Suits... up to 1/2' OFF
THE Town Shop
University of Kansas students who are employed by the University will not feel the effects of the recent increase of the social security tax.
Lawrenceen finest shop for men
On Jan. 1, of this year, the withholding tax of the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) was raised from 5.2 per cent to 5.85 per cent. The withholding tax on the tax were raised from $9,000 to $10,800. L. Martin Jones, budget officer of the University, said Friday that a person who was enrolled as a student at the same time in college at the University was exempt from the tax.
The University employs some aliens who are also exempt from the tax, he said.
Ronald Hamilton, comptroller of the University, said that Haskell students and Lawrence High School students who were enrolled in the University were not exempt from the tax.
Jones said that the increased tax affected seven months of fiscal 1973 and meant that the University would have to pay an additional $62,323 to match employee contributions.
Gov. Robert Docking has recommended that this amount be included in the budget, but the legislature has not yet approved that suggestion.
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8
Thursday, February 8, 1973
University Daily Kansan
'Travels With Mv Aunt.' Touching
3y ROBERT MILLER Kansan Revlewer
Aunt Augusta is a dreamer. All her hectic life she has dreamed of being the main character in stories of romance and adventure. What makes her different from most other English ladies past 40 who daydream of faraway places, or who are dreamers, is that she has been hard at work making those dreams come true for many years.
From the day she deserted her fellow schoolgirls to follow a mysterious stranger in a Paris railway station, Augusta has tried her hardest to be a "woman of the world."
She completed her education in the brothels of Europe and invested her best years in playing mistress to an assortment of moderately wealthy men. Although she was living with a black fortune teller from Sierra Leone, Augusta longed for the companionship of her long lost first "Gent terman," the man from the railway station.
When she learned he had been kidnapped, she enlisted the aid of her recently deceased sister's son, and began to play the adventures once more, in hopes of raising the ransom. So the story begins in George Cukor's "Travels With My Aunt," which was based on the best-seller by Graham
Maggie Smith as Aunt Augusta is a bit hard to take at first, but her overly mannered speech and lax facetious wit make her an alluring appeal of a stale crumpet.
If you can stay with the film, however,
and not walk out for the first 45 minutes,
you may find yourself getting engrossed in what
turns out to be an amusing and touching
character study superimposed on a filmay
plot.
Cukor has repeatedly excelled at directing stories of marvelously strong women and their weaker dependent men ("A Bill of Rights for Women" by Berk,) He has a field day here as worldly Aunt Augusta introduces intrigue Henry to continental ingenuity aboard the famed Orient Express and ultimately, to the battle in Rome, not to us/ruhra about his own parentage.
Memorable offbeat characterizations are
Author Claims Sequal To God's First Book
By BILL GIBSON
Kansan Revlewer
"As Almighty God, I welcome you to Our latest book. These Words are being dictated by Me - my Living God . . . " Thus begins the latest "divine" message brought to the world in care of author Eugene Changye and Carlton Press (1972). From them fly the messages of interest to all those absorbed in metaphysics or stopped on religion.
My cynicism is not directed toward Changey's communication with God which is a phenomenon I can not judge. But even the most zealous of the Jesus Movement would roll their eyes over such pretentious remarks as:
"Man must have the companionship of a Savior. That Savior is My Son, Eugene, in this world."
Traditional religion has been spurred through the ages by the energies of great poets, artists and composers. The Bible is of poetical and if not theological value. Dante's "Dive Comedy," John Milton's "Paradise Lost," and Christopher Marlowe's "Dr. Faustus" are examples of the ooetic attention religion has enjoined.
In more apathetic modern times the poet has, in many cases, abandoned traditional wisdom and instead has relied. The void has been inadequately filled by well-meaning theologians and crackpots. Chancey's book can be added to this list. It is a non-religious national or rational proof of its philosophy.
"From thy Creator with Love" proclaims a sort of second-comning of God. He suddenly bursts out of age-old silence with the aid of Changye's pen, pennishing the world, that the meek shall inherit the earth and generally reaffirm Christian doctrines.
The book is filled with clichés and inconsistencies. God says, "Man cannot exist by bread alone," and "Honesty is the best policy, Son." Early in the book it is asserted that God will forgive those afraid of death, Son. Yet later God says, "the wages of sin are死 death." One hopes that an all-powerful, all-good, all-knowing God would be more articulate and profound.
For the faithful and patient reader, this book may fulfill its promise to "free a tainted soul and let the spirit worship in peace—free from the darkness of a cynical reader can only hope that God, in his next book, will clean up the discrepancies and avoid the clichés.
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An advantage is sound clarity in the prompts of EIS. Clear, transparent prompts that bring a new awareness of the student are beneficial for all students, especially those with Acceleration or the迫降 key. The more rugged a pressure/highlight motion the less information is presented. With high acceleration from thunderstorms to highest acceleration from thunderstorms both through distance and high acceleration are perceived as clear at light speed from the uncomcompressed TRANSTATE back through the bookmark from the uncompressed TRANSTATE back through the bookmark to be loaded into the support the support
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supplied on the sidelines by Lou Gosset and the African crystal hall gazer, and Cindy Williams in one of the first screen portrayals of a well-known stereotype of African college students spending summer vacation with a knapsack and a Eurell驴
At age 74 and with some 45 pictures to his credit, George Cukor may have lost touch with the tastes of today's movie-going public (the sex in the film is never blatant as it is in mish) but the maintain his touch in the telling of a sophisticated and witty story.
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Keeping its promise to bring you the finest entertainment, the Sanctuary is bringing Mud Creek back to town, Friday and Saturday night.
Make sure you are a part of this musical happening.
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Directly above the Stable
members and guests only memberships available
Use Kansan Classified
Ireland.
The CLASS OF '73 Presents
SENATOR TOM EAGLETON
Sunday, Feb.11 7:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium Admission $1.00
Free to Senior Class Card Holders
Tickets on sale at The Alumni Office, 103 Union, and The Alley Shop, through Feb.9.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
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A great assortment of sweaters in turtleneck, button front, or pullover styles. Both novelty patterns and solid
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---
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 8, 1973
9
'Poseidon Adventure' Formula Entertainment
3y JERRY MARR
Kansan Reviewer
It is true what the critics say about "The Poseidon Adventure." It is entertaining, it is suspenseful, it has an easy to plot fall. One can even come away content with the excitement of "the implications." Hollywood again shows proof that it can still make a movie with a predictable beginning, a predictable middle, and a predictable end. This is formula entertainment with no secret information in intricate subplots, no special symbolism.
Formula entertainment rarely produces great movies. It often produces bad ones, too. "The Best Possession," Possioned Adventure" is just such an average one. It will surely be a bounty-maker because it fills out the formula with the proper ingredients, big names and lots of laughs.
Twelve major actors fill the screen, including Gene Hackman, last year's 'best actor' in *American Grown*. Carol Lyley, Red Buttons, and Jack Albertson. Unfortunately, most of their performances range from average to below average, with the exception of Shelley
Gene Hackman is the same mind-minded tough guy he played in "The French Connection." Here he portrays a priest who can give himself up to death, and encounter death with a mere twitch of remorse. A true hero. You have to love him for doing the impossible, even if it may be gruesome. He will do it in the best performance of the adventure, by far. Through her portrayal of a middle
aged Jewish grandmother, the audience can really feel the drama of disaster.
Winters' performance, as well as the other principals, however, is almost thoroughly washed out by two forces that operate from the direction and Sirling Siliphant and Wendall Mayes' screenplay. The sometimes inane dialogue and often sterile delivery combine to make most of the characters appear unrecognizable. A disaster reminds one of guests at a cocktail party watching an earthquake on television. Their reactions are just too superficial to be believed. In this sense the character may seem less plastic creatures on those television movies.
Indeed, "Poseidon" could easily be entertainment.电视 television, since it is formula
As Vernon Scott of the UPI notes, “There was a movie that this movie no doubt, no homosexuality.
Nothing in this movie should offend anyone's senses. It is just pure and simple action, and regrettably, the characters are not very credible.
But, perhaps this is a good thing. When the characters are not entirely believable, the audience doesn't (as an imagery) get put into place, but sit back and enjoy the spectacular effects, with which "The Poseidon Adventure" is packed, and not be afraid to be a bit more international. It considers.
The formula is, then, to keep the action lively and spectacular and the characters aloof. So, go to the theater and enjoy "The movie," or wait awhile and it will be on TV.
Ersatz Cream Churns On In Turgid Metamorphosis
By VINTON SUPPLEE
LAING
KAISAN REVIEWER
WHY DONTCHA—WEST, BRUCE, &
LA YARD
"Cream" broke up about four years ago, but you wouldn't know it from listening to this record. Leslie West and Corky Laing come out of "Mountain," which was always "Cream's" anyway, and better yet Jack Bruce, Mr. Cream himself, makes you laugh. So guess what legendy, defunct English group they sound like?
Musically "Why Dontcha?" is very much a product of the power trio school of rock that "Cream" originated back in 1967. The sound is thick, tactile and aback in its essence, but it has undergone some progression. Thus it is almost entirely dependent upon sheer volume for an
powerovering, bombastic effect, a sort of Wagerian rock muzak.
The songs on the album might as well be out-takes from Wheels of Fire or Disraeli Gears since they employ all three instruments, for example is "Rollin' and Tumblin'" combined with "Traintime". Jack Bruce still plays a fair harp. These guys even play "de blooz" on Third Degree, a re-run of any of a few brilliant Brits playing that were tedious and still are.
West plays guitar throughout like a fat Eric Capton on a bad night while Bruce Gates struts through the stage. Ginger Baker imitation, complete with lolling, schizoid drummer pose on the cover.
SUA Classical Films presents
Music of this sort isn't intrinsically
don'tin' don'tin' rocks out directly and forcefully.
NIGHT OF THE HUNTER
Directed by Charles Laughton, starring Robert Milchum, Peter Graves, Shelley Winters and William Gish.
Woodriff 7:30 & 9:15
Wednesday, Feb. 14 75c
SUA Film Society
SUA Film Society Presents a program of surrealistic shorts.
TWOMEN and THE ENTRACTE by Romie ROMA and ENTRACTE by TWOHEAR; CLAIRE: THE CHAIR; by Sidney NOOON; by Maya Deren; GHOSTS BEHIND UN CHIEN AND LOAULO, by Luis Bun
WOODRUFF Thursday, Feb. 8
SUA Special Films
presents
SUA Popular Films
TOUCH OF EVIL
STEELWOLF
Frank Zappa's 200 MOTELS
Part of Captain Marvel
by Orson Welles
Music by Henry Mancini
Woodruff
Monday, Feb. 12
7:00 & 9:30
SUA Science Fiction
Journey to the Center of Time
by David L. Hewitt and Episode 2 of Phantom Empire.
Woodruff 7:30
Tuesday, Feb. 6 75c
BOOGIE WITH
OUR BAGGIES!
ပြန်တဲ့
711 W. 23rd in the Malls
10-9 M-F 10-6 S
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to all students without regard to gender. All Classifieds to 111 FLL HALL ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLL HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH BIDEN COUNTY Shop-3 blks. No. of Kaw ($8.00) Large glass tables, metal collapsible, gas heating and cooling boots, bicycles including a speed rack, skateboard racks, drums, new baskets and lily bushes (basketed wood and ceramic), Fireplace mantel, candle holders and cord price. Baked alfalfa, brome and wheat straw, grown some pumpkins. Bake or cook in the oven. 12th floor. iff
NTIQUE CLOTHES-823 Main, Wainton, MA
614-850-9537 Westchester, NY 614-850-9537
or 814-654-2977. Victorian men's and women's
clothing. Mail adress: 322 South Street,
New York, NY 10004.
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Component with air
room. 80W at 15kW. At Ray Boneckham base station room
at 15kW.
Magnavax 100 Watt Stirer Component System includes AM- FM-stereo record *Magneti-pac* magnetic piston horns *Hornis* in air suspension acoustically sealed cabinets and *Ray Stoneback* basement stair room. 929 Mass.
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Ray Stone
houndpark, 922 Mast.
2-12
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAKEHUICE - The flue-set
streamer, the 28'x14' stage set. RM-6405,
Kan. 64045, Prune 8422-2047, FF
8422-2048. (B)
New Sony. Quad Systems now in stock at Ray
Stonebake's 929 Mass. **2-12**
1970 COVTECTE convertible, very good condition.
Model # 443-358 or 443-928, ask for Mike. 442-
888.
Stereo components- Kenwood K150 receiver,
Sony Ericsson X250, Siemens SL726 change, AE speakers, Wollomack and Pomona micro reverberant recorders, Sony Micro reverberant recorders, can be used 60 days later. Some used and 3-8 months later.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1969 Chevrolet SS 298 convertible. 253 H.P. 4-4,
2750cc. $18,995. Total stock value, 47,000 lbs. Merge
all trucks! total stock value, $165,995.
1963 Old Torino, blue, w white imp, power
1965 New Fire, shucks & brakes, power & run
1968 New Fire, shucks & brakes, power & run
1689 Javwin, Console auto., power steering, buckets,
snow, 842-8609. 2-9
Drafting Table. 5' x 3' drawing board, draw
matches to fit in car. $75.00; $84.30-29
8-20
Skjern-Black new K2 Pew Comp 185p. hs.
Skjern-XXL 150L, call Chris at 6:30 p.m.
SKJERN XXL 150L, call Chris at 6:30 p.m.
Sony TC-353 tape deck, excellent condition,垫
buyed, $22.99 new will sell for $84.99
$84.99
STERERO-High quality compact system. Craig & track, with AM-FM stereo. Includes power unit, 2 bookcase speaker, phase box, FM dipolar audio amplifier and amplifier condition. 814-5360 between 6 and 7 2-9
1963 PORSCIK Company Radiala. Abarth aexh lubert,
excipient condition of a radiator. 843-7021 at 8:00 p.m.
AKC St. Bernard puppies. Champion blood lines.
Gaucherian guarantee. Payment by. Study ser-
vices at AKC St. Bernard.
Alvarez 12-string guitar and old case in excellent condition.
Play on your own at $75.00.
Play on CD at $18.99.
2-12
1965 Rambler American-Good running condition.
Has had good rear, $380 or heat offer-
21-12
For sale: 4 trees & 2 snow trees, practically new,
80 plus old trees. Call 814-3066. After 5.50 pm.
www.treesforsale.com
For Sale - Kofosh SHI boats with tree, size 101x,
convenience condition, boat type, $159. Call 800-324-7600.
For sale. B Flat, Clarinet, very good condition,
new pads, T50. Call 842-683-628.
2-12
FORE SALE. Space in the KANSAN for your
new home or rental. Flint Hall before 5:00 p.m.
Monday; February 12, 19
FLAYBOY Magazine; January 1964 through December 2013. Subscription value $5.00, current blood value $18.00; also SPORTS ILLUSTRATED Magazine: from first issue (August 1962) to the present. Record local record sales. $150. Phone Dick at xx-xxxx-xx-xxxx.
Three Days
TEAC 40105 tape deck with built-in pre-amp and
adapter, or best offer at Kodak 847-7487.
or best offer at Kodak 847-7487.
Liquidation of household for travel after graduation or for retirement. Gift items with decorative arms in good condition, $75 or more, to a friend, family member, or employer.
NREATO A 45 watt KLJ stereo receiver model
needs to come. 100 can be at 814-535-
around 5 and 6.
205's, **K9**, Call 842-6154 after 5pm. 2-9
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Casa de Taco
Eat with us—
We try to please.
1105 Mass. 843-9880
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 843-9694
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
PEUGECT
For Sale Superfat Flat Sport Racer, excellent
condition. Fully stocked. See us at 1345 Kentucky. No. 5. 2-13
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
AUDIO EQUIPMENT - 28 to 40%, below return on over 30 name brands of stereo components. For价 quotes and more information call the Service representative at 643-3501 or 842-321.
72. Toyota Corolla Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 841-5270.
2-9
RIDE ON BICYCLES
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it!
you're at a unadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—
2. If you don't you're at an advantage.
72 SUZUKI 720J, TSAJ. With tack, speedometer, camera. tarp, 2 arm. Exections: Handrail 435-147-747
46 Chevette SS, 6 cyl. 2 d hr. HT, very good
70 Caddis body, super clean, body super,
$60.85 BILLET $19.95 new, $14.95
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
Available now at campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
166 Chevrolet Cruze, vinage hatch, V-8, 4-Dr.
must to appreciate. Phone 843-845-6
must to appreciate. Phone 843-845-6
WURLTTER organ, with double keyboard, base
wildlife organ, books and warranty. 843-754-14-
14
must Selljahw Tower Apt. contract to 1 or 2
Must selljahw Tower Apt. at 841-2638 or collate
pkia 233-2002.
1401 Mass.
A/C 18,000 BTTU 220 V with custom winter cover
$95. 843-4197.
2-12
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEPED
ROOMS? STAY IN A CAMPUS. 2 bedrooms, directly across Mascot,
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus
buildings, parking lot, free Cable.
Frequently available rooms. High rated
rates, furniture ideal. Ideal roommates
Suite 942, San Francisco, Apts. 1128, Apt. 9,
ft. 942-213-6162
Akjarmets, furnished, clean, with wall to wall windows and doors, large littering bins, hospital wards, kitchens, locker rooms K.U., and near town S.M.P.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
INVESTMENTS
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet
park with a promenade and a backyard basketball
playground.
843-8484
Come by and see these rent apartments Rent
water bills are paid. Water bills of various lengths are
paid.
Evenings call 842-7651
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings; 1 bedroom; 1 bedroom w/Study; 2 bedrooms w/2 bedrooms; barn location; Pool and gas-light, landscaped courtyard. Excellent management. 2500 West 8th Street.
Nicely furn. apt, for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-854-21-4
For the latest up to the minute renting in rental
rentals. Rental Rental Exchange, 840-
200-916 Kentucky.
**FREE RENTAL, SERVICE**
Ap. to sub-leave. Clean, furnished. 1 bedroom,
2 bathrooms. In-law suite. In-room-
living. phone 664-6478.
APENS FOR RENT across from Oliver Hall for $80 a night. OYB (can be shared) $10. Men $20 a night.
BOOM with kitchen privileges close to campus.
Call 842-4475. 2-12
1. berm. ldr. to camp. off-street parking.
2. also studio. apt. No pets. 1423.018-213-14
3. also studio. apt. No pets. 1423.018-213-14
NOTICE
No charge, fit your homes, apartments, duplexes or townhouses.
No charge, wait! More for info call Home Locator.
Houses, apartments, buildings, farm all areas.
Homes with large yards do not difficult. Home areas,
carsil 311. E this s114. S this s124.
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks, $287 inclusive. London depart-
ing travel (ages 18-30). Also Europe,
Africa, India. 3-11 weeks. Writer: Whole
Travel, Ltd., Book, W179. K.C., M.O.
*
LAWRENCE, Ruthie 0017 VI 2-1008
2434 Iowa
tune-ups starting service
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS.
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Q in an
large steak house. A slab to eat here $2.40, large rib
plate $3.99. A stab to eat here $4.20, large rib
plate $6.99. Beef sandwich $5.00. Found of beef $3.15 chicken platter
$3.75. Phone and Tmobile $9.90. 515 Mish St.
MANY GROUPS OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR
MASSAGE or TENS. You should not be masticated
the skin as that which must not be masticated,
you should investigate the ideas of Ayn. Rand.
824, 531-367, Objectivism as Objectivism
824, 531-367, or 824, 596-96.
2-9
Lawrence, Anchorage House. Sell your household
for conformation information call 869-520-1470.
For conformation information call 869-520-1470.
UNDERGRADRE. WE'VE GOT SOMETHING BETT-
ING! The Experiment's School for International Training. Limited enrollment on small, multi-cultural populations of students. Environment, population, peace, environment; development; two of the ten seminars offered; Background of our school; Information Room 10. School for International Training, Brattleboro.
Dicolecnt pays with saving up to 60% on some items. Shop at Country Store, 707 North 2nd, Open 9-7, 7-day.
Rose and candi may be sweet, but a Valentine
treatment is a the most is a very special treat,
7 Wet St.eth 13
Would the person who lost $0.00 outdue the Uni-
tion be a good candidate for Jan. 30, contact me at
192.568.ask for MK
WANTED
Let Us Sell It For You
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
tablets. 842-7098. tt
GAY LIBERATION ACTIVITIES: Monday-bust-
7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. Union; FRIDAY-SOCIALIZING-
12:00 p.m. 12:00 p.m. Union; MONDAY-BUST-
844-326-3500 for cereals; OFFICE-81-
Union, 844-409-8089; Lawrence, 2-14
YARN-PATIEN-
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
do you make candies? We buy them. Call Dell, 841-2088, 7104. Wash. Apt. 101. 2-8
Graduate student wife seeking full-time employ-ment in New York City. Resume to Graduate State, Germany, some countries. Willing to work hard and make progress. Apply online.
We need sculture. Any medium. Call Devil-
841-2088. 1704. W. 24th. Apt. 101. 2-8
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2656
Female roommate wanted to share expenses with 4 other girls in beautiful Barker Minor. Expense will be paid at home.
HELP WANTED
Want to move into Chennai? Need one more to
come from Union. Come by & see it. Irenal or
manual. Call 714-260-1900.
Two cocks DISPERATELY need ride to Silliman's phone. The guy has paired up his phones. How can we GET RIDE into the house?
Wanted: People to go to the K-State game. February 13. Round ball girl to play 2-6/8/13.
K.U. Grad student wants study to Lawrence from
Washington in 34 days a week a door 345-383.
961-874-674 2-12
961-874-675 2-12
Wanted—Petition to fill position of roommate. No associate needed. For more information call 800-421-5760.
Wanted: Rousseau to share tlg 3-2 bedroom
with KU girl. Kids excels case OK, fenced-in
and in shared bathroom.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cook/maid waitresses.
The kitchen is open late, Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone: 843-650-6500
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
Permanent future for responsible executive or manager in a job offered with public. For permanent resident only, ios travel. Expenses paid at home offer training and career development. Career with substantial income and managerial experience is required.
STRANGER IN TOWNS As an Aven representativeness Sellon products in winter tree hours. Call Aven products in winter tree hours.
"JOBS IN ALASKA"
We need your artistic abilities. If you have a phone call call me: 841-2658. 170-284, Apt. 101, Apt. 103.
Available now. This handbook covers all fields, summer & career opportunities; qualifications, employers.
PLAN YOUR adventure! $3.00
JOBS IN ALASKA, Box 1565,
Anchorage, Alaska 99510
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
2-12
Part-time distributing for the Blind Service
from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. each week. Car 2-8
from 10 a.m. to 7:30, Wed. only.
Dancers wanted for attentions. Must be as
you see. In line 2, 4, and Haskell between 11, 2, 4
and 2-14.
Employment Opportunities
Part time. secretary, needed, must be able to
type, journalism background helpful. Hours will be 8:00 to 11:30 MWF and 1:00 to 3:00 Tuet. Weekends. Yearbook Office Manager: 864-3784. 864-3784
Part time aide needed; must be nust, agreeable, in person in person to Website Home 2405, in person to Website Home 2405.
Young, energetic, intelligent & attractive women in person. Visit Vita Restaurant in Applesboro, in person.
Sakuen menumantar $190 advertising in new cam-
sels. Prices range from $249 to $429 and are at least 10% of sale. 842-3900. 2-12
Hard working work for part time help. Neons
work in restaurants to apply. Apply in person.
Visa Restaurant. 1327 W. 8th St.
PERSONAL
Lenny Zero's Record Store is going out of business. All credit and records in our used records rack must be collected by no later than Feb. 9. The records are returned to record store 2-9. F. Thanks for your business.
Writer Wanted—New magazine needs responsible upper-classman to cover departments for course-teacher evaluation. Fame, prestige, pride, treason. Mornin' Birth, 842-6900 or 100-6900 neaticut.
UP YOUR ALLEY—a coffee house. The pleasant place to escape what has taken you or meet friends and entertainment Wed., Fr.
Sunday, week of rest 04-12月 Open 8+12pm in Lewis Hall. 2-13
Come usufl o our store! 20 new fragrances have been original! 7 originals at Waxman Cove, 7 West 14th St, 9 West 6th St.
LOST
LOST-One snow chain (tire chain). If found,
please call 843-2540. 2-12
Lost, Sea Army pocket knife. 3 inches long.
Worn, Seal Army pocket. Sentimental value: $4.
Call 841-1144.
GLBST-SET OF KFYS northeast corner of Q-zome
Landfill, 520 S. Hallway in House of Bags
if found contact H.S. Hallway in House of Bags
or contact LS at 801-396-1234.
TYPING
LOST - Much loved cat. Sear shirt, gray with a
white bow tie. Please help me find her.
Please help me find her.
Caim terrier, male, off-white, dark muzzle and
face. Family peel named Cyrie. 843-4158.
www.caimterriers.com
SERVICES OFFERED
Experienced in typing, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Has corrected spelling correctly. Ph.D. 845-9544. Mrs. Wright.
Sewing and altering for the college girl. Pick up all knitting and sewing supplies. Costs hamilton and reduced. 12
MISCELLANEOUS
CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION
is seeking new board members.
Anyone interested write a few lines giving your reasons and submit it to the CPA office, Rm. 299, Union. On less than 5 p.m. 2-8-73.
For information call 864-3963.
2-8
WHY NOT!
Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the
UDK
10
Thursday, February 8, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Indian Jewelry Big Seller
Just as there are very few genuine Americans, there are also very few genuine American art forms. One of the most famous is jazz, but one that is regaining prominence is the handcrafted jewelry of the American Indian.
The current trend in fashion jewelry seems to be a move away from the gaudy gerns of Hollywood starleties toward simpler designs that highlight purity of line and on-road use of material.
The skillfully crafted silver and turquoise jewelry of the Indiana of the Southwest file below.
Sophisticated Westerners have been collecting this jewelry for years but only recently has their foresight been rewarded by the high demand for turquoise jewelry has begun rising steadily.
Customers in Lawrence may have some difficulty in finding genuine Indian jewelry. Local merchants had not counted on the jewelry's being a big seller. Dave Anderson of Trinity Leather said that he had received a gift from Thanksgiving, but that most of it was gone.
"We had a deal with some people over at Haskell to trade leather for turquoise which they were getting from Indians in New Mexico, but there's not much left—just a few rings and they are beautiful." Anderson said. The women they were hoping for a new shinestone to arrive soon.
"The stuff really moved fast. The college kids were usually the ones that bought it, but there were older people, too," he said. Another jewelry retailer in Lawrence, Pat Read, is in the process of moving his displays to Room 203 of the Eldridge House and hopes to be open again by the middle of next year, not only Jewelry, but Indian handcraft.
"We have the largest stock of Indian products in the area," he said.
All of Read's merchandise is made by Indians of the Navajo, Hopi and Zuni tribes
Ex-Chancellor To Launch Lecture Series
Former University of Kansas Chancellor Franklin Murphy, who is now chairman of the Board of Directors of Times-Mirror, Inc., Los Angeles, will deliver on March 14 the first lecture in this year's Spencer Lecture Series.
Also scheduled to speak in the series is Edward D. David Jr., a former presidential science advisor to President Nixon. David is in late November or early December.
David was director of the Office of
Science and Technology during his
integration last month.
Before that appointment, he was involved in research at Bell Telephone System Laboratories as a specialist in underwater sound and communication acoustics.
in New Mexico and Arizona.
"strictly retail operation. We sell to
that Indian jewelry in enjoying a boom.
"We make two or three trips a year to the Southwest to buy the stuff," he said. "All of these pieces are hand made—strictly one-of-a-kind items."
"Our business is the largest it has ever been. We've got rings as inexpensive as three dollars and necklaces as expensive as $50 and it's all selling," he said.
Read said that although he sometimes sold to stores in the area, his operation was
Prof Aids Preparation Of Uniform State Laws
William A. Kelly, professor of law, has been appointed to a third two-year term as a commissioner to what has been described as "the world's least known legislature," the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
The conference is a group consisting of three members from each state, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico that prepare their delegations to attend the conference on subjects where uniformity is desirable.
Special committees meet regularly to draft laws of uniformity for such issues as abortion, marriage, divorce, commercial codes, motor vehicle accident reparation and many other topics of concern to all states, Kelly said.
The conference meets annually to hear proposed acts of uniform legislation from special committees, according to Kelly. Proposed acts are debated, and after a minimum of two years the acts are voted on by the conference.
If an act is accepted by the annual conference, it is taken back to the individual state legislatures for consideration, Kelly said.
Kelly, who has been a commissioner to the national conference for four years, is a member of special committees on the Uniform Motor Vehicles Accident Reparation and the Uniform Abortion Act. He has been a member of both committees for two years.
Commissioners from Kansas are appointed on recommendation of the president of the Kansas Bar Association and the lieutenant governor, Kelly said.
The other commissioners from Kansas are Glee Smith, former president pro tem of the Kansas Senate, and Paul Wilbert, Pittsburg attorney.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
The Malls Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
Reg. $5.98
$299
Island Records
New TRAFFIC LP
HUMAN SEXUALITY SEMINAR
ALTERNATIVE
LIFESTYLES
HUMAN SEXUALITY SEMINAR
ALTERNATIVE
LIFESTYLES
Non-Married Couples
Extended Families
Gay Relations
Group Living
7 30 THURSDAY. FEB 8!
Big 8 Room. KANSAS UNION
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
€ ♀
Reg. $5.98
$299
Wear them at board meetings, rock concerts or anywhere.
DEXTER
Whether your scene is fifty stories up or the Underground, this is the shoe for you in soft kid and patent leathers, leather with leather and the new higher heel. Generation Gap? Not with Dexter.
McCall's
Pat Yourself in our Shoes
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Reg. $5.98
$299
Island Records
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
1
15,000 Levis can't be wrong
Get them now at Lawrence Surplus
Look closely and you'll find
- Levi Blue Jean Bells
- Levi Corduroys (10 different colors)
- Levi Brush Denim Bells (8 different colors)
- Levi Bush Jeans (5 different colors)
- Levi Brush Corduroys (7 different colors)
- Levi Low Rise Brush Denims (4 different colors)
- Levi Superbells (6 different colors)
Newly Arrived!
Western Shirts
many sizes, many colors
Only $7.95
All here at:
They've finally come!!
Levi Big Belled Denim Jeans
We're open THURSDAY nights
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
740 Mass.
"The home of Levis"
L
Johnson
LAWRENCE
URPLUS
740 Mass.
Alert Students Can Trim Uncle Sam's Tax Income
Bv ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
It's income tax time again and everyone is looking for loopholes, those ingenious little bits of know-how whereby one gets the better of Uncle Sam.
Besides downright deceit, there just aren't any loopholes available to most students, because their lives are not extremely complicated. However, there are a few things a student can do to pay less income tax.
The short income tax form, the 1040A, is being revised this year. This form is probably more advantageous to the student than the long form, said Sherwood Newton, a legal counsel for the IRS.
The short form may be used, Newton said, if the total taxable income is less than $20,000 and is primarily from salary and wages. No more than $200 of the income can be taxed. There are dividends and there cannot be any rental income or income from business, he said.
do to use the one sheet form was to report his total income, list his dependents and mail the form to the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS will calculate the tax using the deductions for dependants and the detributions for dependants. No itemized deductions are permitted. Newton said.
The student is allowed a minimum standard deduction of $1,300 and up to 15 percent of his income to a maximum of $2,000. Newton said. He said the procedure was short and relatively simple, and because he had only been plocated, the minimum $1,300 deduction was usually more than he would have received by itemizing.
Whether a student is claimed as a dependent by his parents makes no difference in the tax the student must pay, Newton said.
If a student earns more than $750 in taxable income, the parents are entitled to the dependency credit if they furnish more than half the student's support, Newton
Newton said that a student claimed as a dependent was required to file if the total taxable income was $750 or more. The parents received no credit and the parents got the dependency credit.
A student who is not claimed as a dependent need not file a tax return unless he earns $2,050 or more, Newton said. He said that if the student's income was less than $2,050, he could file a return to claim pay that had been withheld.
said, as long as the student does not file a joint return.
Newton said a student not claimed as a dependent who paid no tax last year and would earn less than $2,050 this year may request his employer not to withhold any pay. The student could then avoid filing a federal return.
Parents lost the dependency credit if the child files a joint return and is required to file, that is, if he earns $750 or more, Newton said. Married students not claimed
If a married child and his spouse file separate returns, the parents get the dependency credit if they contribute over half toward the support of the child regardless of the child's income. The parents also get a dependency credit for the child's spouse if the spouse earns less than $750, he said.
Newton said it generally paid for a married couple to file a joint return. The couple could split their income and take the exemptions of both taxpayers, he said.
For the married student, Newton said, the deciding factor in the decision to file joint or separate returns is the parents' dependency credit. To save the parents money, the couple themselves return, he said, but the couple themselves will save money by filing a joint return.
Newton said married students often discussed taxes with their parents, filed in tax season, and did not pay them.
divided up the difference in total taxes between joint and separate returns.
Newton said that the parent need not match purely grant-in-aid scholarship money to have contributed over $0 per cent of the total fund, but they must furnish over half of any other total funds spent on support regardless of whether those funds are taxable or not. Newton said that certain GI benefits were matched by the parents that had to be matched by the parents.
as dependents need not file a return unless the combined income is $2,800 or more.
Money spent by parents for capital investments, such as buying a car, is not taxed.
He said that parents might claim a medical expense deduction for a child if they provided more than half that child's income. No other qualifications were necessary.
Newton said the question often arose concerning deductions for education expenses. A person could deduct education expenses if the education was to keep him
abreast of his field of interest once he was established in his occupation. For example, a teacher taking additional college study in his field could deduct his college expenses.
"However, education that qualifies you to enter a field or occupation does not qualify for deduction." Newton said. "This applies to most college students."
Scholarships requiring no services from a student, such as tutoring, or grading papers, are not taxable, Newton said, unless paid by a former, present or future employer.
Fellowships that do require services are taxable, he said, unless the student is required to do only those things that must be done by any candidate for the same degree. If student teaching or library research had to be done by all students in a certain major, students who have completed such formed those services would not have to pay taxes on the scholarship.
Gratuitous scholarships are not taxable, he said.
A LITTLE WARMER
83rd Year, No. 87
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
HOLLYWOOD, CA - JULY 26, 1975 - A man in a suit stands at the microphone addressing an audience. He is flanked by another individual who appears to be speaking as well. The background features a patterned wall with a dotted texture.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Kansan Photo by ALICE COSTELLO
Friday, February 9,1973
Rev. Richard Taylor and Rep. Michael Glover at House Hearing ... "To be consistent, this bill should include both marijuana and alcohol or exclude both" ...
Legislature Debates Funds For Schools
See Story Page 5
He said that public abuse of alcohol was our No. 1 drug problem.
He said that he definitely saw hypocrisy working and that he thought both sub-universities were doing it.
One of the major points in Glover's presentation was that he saw hypocrisy in the present policy of prohibiting the use of marijuana and its derivatives but legally and socially approving of the use of alcohol and tobacco.
Glover Defends Marijuana
"To be consistent, this bill should include both marijuana and alcohol, or exclude both from the bill."
Taylor, an opponent of liquor, said that he was not in favor of legalizing marijuana but that he wanted to "make some statements that were food for thought."
Glover was the only proponent of the bill to testify, although he called as a witness the Rev. Richard Taylor, president of the Board of Dry Forces. No one testified against the bill.
He said that the private use of marj芦芦 would fall within the boundaries of an individual's personal freedom and should thus be free from any legal prohibitions.
Glover said that many people like Taylor, reasoned that legalizing marijuana would be just like putting "a second snake in the grass." But he argued that this reasoning
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN
Korean Staff Writer
Quoting from the essay, "On Liberty," by John Stuart Mill, Glover said, "Over himself, over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign."
In the middle of his 30-minute testimony, Glover presented a substitute bill that would legalize marijuana but place emphasis on it by forbidding its use or sale in place.
His former bill called for the legalization of marijuana, such limitations for its use. He proposed a possession.
TOPEKA-Rep. Michael Glover, D-Davance, argument for passage of his bill to legalize marijuana before a Kansas House of Representatives committee Thursday, by quoting a 17th Century utilitarian philosopher, city council current Richard Baxter, supposing hypocrisies in drug laws and speculating about the social effect of pot prohibition.
Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth, chairman of the Federal and State Affairs committee, said that the substitution would be taken under advice.
Glover based part of his argument on an appeal to "personal sovereignty," a concept that he said grants every person freedom of choice with the sovereignty of others.
did not erase the hypocrisy or denial of personal rights.
"The reason there is one snake in the great that the majority of people use "bobol," is that
Glover said the hypocrisy was heightened by those who argued against marijuana with arguments that it was physically harmful.
He reminded the committee that several years ago the U.S. Surgeon General said that cigarette smoking might cause lung cancer and coronary heart disease.
He quoted a Blue Cross statistical compilation that said alcohol was involved in one-half of U.S. traffic deaths, one-half of homicides in the country and an estimated 10 percent of all deaths that alcohol abuse resulted in an annual $15-billion economic loss in America.
In fact, he said, as alcohol and tobacco are continually found to be increasingly addictive, the more people take it.
But he noted that neither of these drugs was forbidden by law.
the number of people using the drugs is also increasing. On the other hand, he said, while the medical evidence accumulating seems to suggest that there may be no ill-effects from marijuana use, the legal penalties for its use remain.
Glover listed several "myths" that he were perpetuating the opposition to the legalization.
First, he said, there was the continuing belief held in some places that marijuana was a physically addictive narcotic that caused withdrawal symptoms and required a greater dosage each time because of a growing physiological tolerance.
He disputed this by saying that there was actually an inverse tolerance built up and that marijuana could not be grouped with the narcotics.
"No scientific study has been able to prove that marijuana is addictive," he said.
He also dismissed the charge that
See GLOVER Page 10
30 POWs to Return In Weekend Transfer
SAIGON (AP)—The United States and North Vietnam have concluded an agreement on the date, sites and number of American prisoners to be released in the first group, senior American officials disclosed Thursday night.
These officials, who have access to terms of the agreement, would not disclose the terms. But they said that the release would come sometime between Saturday and Monday, and that the first group to be freed in South Vietnam would number about 30.
Asked why the American prisoners were immediately arrested, Mr. Trump's agreement had been official and replied: "What makes you think the other side has any intention of doing anything against us?"
President Nguyen Van Thien said during an impromptu news conference Thursday that there had been disputes in the four-part joint military commission over the number of Vietnamese prisoners to be freed and the number of American officials said any such disputes concerned Vietnamese prisoners and did not involve Americans.
The Americans noted that the Communist side had agreed to a date apparently within the time frame laid down by Henry Kissinger. The Americans also stated that States expected American prisoners to be released at two-week intervals in roughly equal amounts between the signing of the agreement and the 60-day deadline for U.S. troops withdrawal and prison repatriation, respectively.
Under Kissinger's timetable, which is not written into the agreement or any of its protocols, the first group of American prisoners should be released around Sunday. That will be the 14th day since the agreement was signed in Paris Jan. 27.
emeragon sources said Wednesday night in Washington that 27 American prisoners held in jungle camps in the South would be released Sunday near An Loc.
An Loc is a provincial capital 60 miles north of Saigon and 10 miles from the city.
Parking Causes Problem at Hilltop
Kansan Steff Writer
Bv ANN McFERREN
The only access to the front of the center is a drive belonging to the religion school, and the school's staff keeps a chain across that drive prohibiting access by anyone other than staff of the School of Religion, director of the Hilltop Daze Care Center.
The day care center originally had a drive and parking space facing Louisiana Street. However, that area was made into a playground to comply with government regulations, which require playgrounds for day care centers.
Parents of more than 50 small children are forced to walk with their children to the Hillop Day Care Center because of a school closure. Children at the center of Religion and the day care center,
The dispute was renewed last week when the company again put across the drive, Brennans said.
"The chain has been an intermittent problem since the day care center opened," said Ruth Miller, library assistant at Watson Library and mother of a child who attends the center. "It probably wasn't more than a total of three weeks throughout the first semester but it is inconvenient when it is up."
Miller said that parents who take their
children to Hilltop have access to the campus. Once they get on campus, however, there is no place to unload their belongings from the Hilltop and to get to the front of the Hilltop building.
At times it was impossible for the staff of the School of Religion to use the lot at all, and there had been automobile collisions in the lot because of congestion, he said.
According to Taylor, the land on which the School of Religion and the parking lot are located belongs to the religion school. The teacher in the school money for the use of the lot, he said.
Lyn Taylor, dean of the Kansas School of Religion, said the parents' use of the parking area of the religion school had caused many problems.
The small parking lot is limited to 11 parking spaces for a staff of 18, Taylor said. Furthermore, he said, KU had offered use of the limited facilities to the Hilltop Day Care Center without any clearance from the School of Religion.
Also, the use of the lot by parents with children at Hilltop had encouraged the use of bounce houses.
The presence of unattended children in the lot was another problem. Taylor said.
Walking to the day care center is not always too inconvenience, according to a survey by the American Nurses Association.
Harris, who takes a 2-year-old and a 3-year-old to Hilltop every day, said she had trouble getting to the center only on icey days because she couldn't carry both of her children at once.
Delivering children to the day care center is not the only problem caused by the presence of the chain, said Benedicto Mendoza, a manager at Bencoco, up and food can not be delivered, she said.
The day care center claims only one parking space, according to Bencivengo. That space is reserved for an emergency case a child has to be taken to the hospital.
Last week, Bencivengo said, a tow truck came to Hilltop to remove the center's emergency vehicle from the lot. The car was not towed away, however, because it had a legal permit to park in that space, she said.
Taylor would not comment on the towing incident.
Bencivengo said it had been suggested to her that parents of small children park in Xzone, west of the Kansas Union, and walk across the street to the day care center.
Secretary of State William Rogers said Thursday in Washington the United States expected a Laos cease-fire soon and a withdrawal of all foreign troops from the landlocked country neighboring Vietnam and Cambodia on the Indochinese peninsula.
It was also suggested to Bencivengo that
bloodiest and most sustained battles was fought there last summer.
See PARKING Page 10
Indications from the Pentagon sources were that the first POW release from North Vietnam might coincide with Kissinger's four-day visit to Hanoi.
The latest communique released by the Saigon military command claimed 4,774 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops have been killed in fighting since the cease-fire. All the military losses were reported as 794 troops killed, 325 wounded and 820 missing. In addition, at least 30 civilians have been killed and 172 wounded, the Saigon com- mand, the South Vietnamese secured the Command side of 2,04 Nazi violations.
Kissinger, President Nixon's foreign policy adviser, arrived in Bangkok Thursday night on his way to Hanoi and Peking. He leaves Friday night for Vientiane and cease-fire talks with Laotian leaders before飞到 Hanoi Saturday for four days of conferences with North Vietnamese leaders on postwar relations and U.S. aid.
North Vietnam has identified 562 U.S. servicemen as being alive in prison camps and 55 as having died in captivity. Of the 562 identified as being alive, 456 are in the North, 99 in South Vietnam and seven in Laos. The Communists also listed 27 civilians as captured in South Vietnam, some of them State Department officials.
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Congress voted Thursday to send striking Penn Central trainmen back to work immediately for 90 days while the Nixon Administration tries to solve the financial woes of America's largest railroad.
Congress Votes to End Penn Central Walkout
The bill still requires President Nixon's signature to end a walkout by Penn Central employees that officially began at 12:01 a.m. Thursday.
Railroad spokesman said some freight could be moving within four hours after 28,000 striking conductors and brakemen return and service for 300,000 daily passengers could be back in operation in time for today's rush hour traffic.
A new work rule that reduced train crews, and which caused the crippling walkout.
United Transportation Union, AFL-CIO,
has resisted Penn Cent efforts to eliminate
5,700 jobs by 1890, all by attrition.
The department estimates the payroll,
the payroll, which is currently $1 billion.
The House and Senate took less than two hours to pass a resolution to halt the strike.
It was sent swiftly to the White House, but President Nixon already had left for an 11-day trip to California. The resolution was to send by courier for Nixon's required signature.
In Cleveland labor spokesman said A. H. Chesser, president of the transportation union, probably would have no comment until the resolution was signed by Nixon.
"And we'll abide by it then, whatever it is,
the snokesman said.
A Penn Central spokesman said central's gail plant rail system, covering 20,000 miles in 16 states and the District of Columbia, would ride until Nixon signed the resolution.
Congress passed the resolution after members of industry and agriculture warned that the strike could lead to economic catastrophe.
Special action by Congress was needed to end the strike because all legal remedies under the Railway Labor Act had been exhausted.
Automobile and steel companies predicted massive layoffs, affecting several hundred thousand workers, if the strike has not ended by Monday.
farmers and ranchers predicted shortages of beef, poultry, milk, fruits and vegetables in heavily populated northeastern United States.
The walkout was delayed last month for 30 days. Negotiations between Penn Central and the United Transportation Union broke off last Friday.
About 300,000 daily passengers, most of them commuters in major Eastern and Midwestern metropolitan areas, were among the first to be affected by the strike. Also also was halted interrupting shipment of industrial supplies and foodstuffs.
Penn Central's remaining 52,000
See CONGRESS Page 10
TOPEKA (AP) — A Topeka television station quoted Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., as saying he had decided to take preliminary votes before the Republican Sen. Bob Dole next year.
Bill Roy To Oppose Dole in '74
"The decision has been made in the past week to do all we can do in 1973 in order to have an option to seek the Senate seat in January," said Clinton, giving Thursday in an interview by telephone.
Roy was reported to have said he would be in a poor position to announce his candidacy in April of 1974 if he did not begin making plans now for a campaign.
Roy, who is Kansas' only Democratic congressman, has just begun his second term, serving the 2nd District in northeast Kansas. His election in 1790 was considered one of the worst in November without much strain. He has degrees in both medicine and law.
Dole, until recently, was Republican national chairman. One of the reasons given for relinquishing the job that he faced a tough battle for re-election in 1974. Dole is one of the most respected Korean presidents his first term in the Senate after being in the House.
The idea that he would have a tough battle in 1974 has generally been predicted on the thought that his Democratic opponent will be Gov. Robert Docking.
2
Friday, February 9, 1973
University Daily Kansas
THE NORTH SHORE LIGHTS THE STORM AND THE CRASH. A STORY OF HERITAGE, DIVISION 4, A MOVEMENT FOR STYLE AND INDEPENDENCE.
Kansan Staff Photo by DAN LAUING
Injured
Thomas Vaughn, Wichita fifth-year pharmacy student, was injured in a collision about 2:20 p.m. Thursday at the intersection of Alabama and 23rd streets. Also injured was Ethel Jamison, 535
Maine St. According to a Lawrence police report, Vaughn was driving south on Alabama when, as he crossed the intersection, his Volkswagen was struck on the left side by the car driven by Jamison. The report said that Vaughn received leg injuries. He was on Walkins Memorial Hospital, treated and released. Jamison is in satisfactory condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
KU Unemployment High
By GARY ISAACSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The Douglas County unemployment rate is below the national rate announced last month by the U.S. Department of Labor, but the employment status at the University of Kansas is not consonant with the optimistic picture at national and county levels.
The national unemployment rate dipped to 5 per cent last month, the lowest it had been in $2\frac{1}{2}$ years. The rate in Douglas county for December was 9.3 per cent, said Edson Mills, manager of the Lawrence Opportunity Center. The unemployment figures will be slightly above the figures for January are computed, he said recently.
"The national economy was showing improvement in the last half of 1972, and although there will be some seasonal drop, the unemployment seems to be continuing in 1973," Mills said.
Mills said there was a seasonal decline in occupations such as construction, clerical and hospitality.
Bright as the employment picture seems
Douglas County, the job situation at
the county hospital is excellent.
"But the trend seems to be a general pickup in the economy," he said. "As soon as the weather improves there will also be an increase in outdoor work such as construction."
Bernard Taylor, assistant director of the office of Student Financial Aid, said that approximately 620 students had part-time jobs on campus. However, he said, there are
The work-study program, which is federally funded, is currently operating on a budget of $188,000. Taylor said, but could easily use $500,000.
"If the funds were available, we could employ three times as many students as we would have now."
Taylor said funds for the program were allocated to the state by the government. The University's allocation is based on the number of students, minority or low-income families, he said.
Once a student qualifies for the program, Taylor said, he is referred to a department counselor.
"The jobs range from animal caretakers in the various laboratories on campus to guards for the museums," Taylor said. "The salaries range from $1.60 to $3.00 an hour."
Darwin Eads, Lawrence graduate student in counseling and director of the student employment service, said the job market in Lawrence was tight. Job possibilities in surrounding areas, such as Eudora and Ottawa, were being explored, he said.
"I have even done some brainstorming with people about the possibility of opening a co-op gas station or store," he said. "But that idea is not very feasible because of the capital needed to open that kind of business."
Eads said that only three jobs had crossed his desk this week, but there were 75 people waiting for employment. The jobs ranged from baby-sitting to clerical work, he said, and 48 others ranged from $1 to $2. Most people want to work about 18 hours a week, he said.
National Guard Taking Women
TOPEKA - For the first time in its 112
Kansas Army National
Guard in going into war.
Brig. G, Edward R. Fry, Kansas adjutant general, said the National Guard Bureau in Washington had authorized enlistment of women in any positions in the 65th Public Information Detachment and the National Guard's 76 different positions in the 71st Transportation Co. of Coffeyville, Harper and Medicine Lodge.
Some students have found jobs in Lawrence however.
Approximately 15 University students work at Kroger's, according to Kenneth Murphy, store manager. He said all of them were employed and employees averaged 20 hours a week.
"I prefer college kids as checkers and stackers because of their maturity," he said.
Charles Crabtre, assistant manager at Gibson Discount Center 2525 Iowa St., said that 27 college students worked part-time there.
"Our turnover in May and January is very high, but during the semester it usually stabilizes," he said. "If someone does leave, it is usually because of a schedule conflict between school and the job."
Most students work about 26 hours a week, Crabtree said, and starting pay is $1.60 an hour. He said that raised were based on merit and that some of the part-time workers earned more than minimum wages.
Carol Garman, owner-manager of Vista Drive In Restaurant, 1527 W. 6th St., thist 20 college students worked part-time for her. Vista, like Gibson's, suffers high turnover at the end of each semester, she said.
"We start our college students at $1.50 an hour and most of them work 15 hours a day."
Moran said some of the employees were wives of students, others were men trying to earn enough money to return to KU and teach English. Most students wanted to work 14 or 20 hours, he said, and everyone starts at $1.60 an hour.
Wes Moran, general manager of Mc-
Donald's, said he did that when he
employed 40 college alumni.
"We have some part-timers making $2.50 an hour," he said. "The sky is the limit on raises, but it all depends on the volume that we do."
TOPEKA- The pros and cons of a Senate bill to bring the Kansas abortion law into accordance with a recent Supreme Court ruling, received an airing in a hearing Thursday at the statehouse, but no decision was reached.
They usually get what they want," he
said, because we want to have happy
employees.
Moran said that in scheduling the store tried to work around the students' class activities.
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
No vote was taken on Senate Bill 212, which was introduced by the Senate Judiciary Committee last week. The abortion bill was heard by the joint Senate Committees and the Senate and House Public Health and Welfare committees.
Senate Bill 212 allows a woman to have an abortion during the first 24 weeks of her pregnancy. The law also allows an abortion would be allowed only if performed by a licensed doctor who had determined that the abortion was necessary to protect the woman or physical or mental health of the mother.
More than 100 persons attended the morning and afternoon hearing. Many of them were Right to Life stickers. Right to Life is a group that opposed the recent Surpreme Court ruling allowing abortions through the sixth month of pregnancy.
Sen. J.C. Titloson, R-Norton and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, would not allow the Right to Life speakers to discuss Senate Resolution 35, which calls for a possible convention to discuss a possible amendment to overturn the Supreme Court ruling.
Whenever an abortion opponent stepped to the podium to address the committee on Resolution 35 he was reprimanded by the senate bill and five supporters spoke.
Tillotson said there would be no further hearings concerning Senate Bill 212 but there would be a hearing next week to vote on calling for a constitutional convention.
Frances Heese, a Wichita lawyer for the Kansas Catholic Hospital Association, spoke against Senate Bill 212 and asked the committee to take no action to make the Kansas law comply with the Supreme Court ruling.
Tillotson said a vote on Senate Bill 212 should be taken within two weeks by the
Later, he told a reporter that a POW would have had to make more than a statement on Hanoi radio for the government to bring action against him.
He stressed that the official Pentagon decision against bringing formal charges for radio statements did not prohibit individual members of the armed services from filing charges against other servicemen.
"I believe the Supreme Clint will re-hear the abortion issue and decide that its ruling to legalize abortions through the sixth month was wrong." Hesse said.
White Award to Go To Southern Newsman
Kansas Abortions Debated
Some returning war prisoners may bring legal action against other war prisoners, he
The William Allen White Foundation at the University of Kansas will give its annual award for distinguished journalism to Barry Bingham Sr., chairman of the National Journalists Association, Times Co., in a ceremony Saturday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
The award goes each year to a U.S. journalist for service to his profession and community that exemplifies William Allen White's ideals. A similar award goes to a state journalist who will not be named until the award is presented.
Propaganda Statements Not Charged to POWs
Other events in connection with the William Allen White Day celebrations are a reception Friday night for the trustees of the Kansas Union and the trustees meeting Saturday morning at the Kansas Union and luncheon later in the day at which the awards will be given. This is to be followed by a reception by the local journalism society, in the Kansas Room.
"We do not intend to bring charges," he said. "We have some of their statements were made."
He did not elaborate.
WASHINGTON (AP) - No charges will be filed against returning war prisoners for making propaganda statements over North Korea, the Defense Department said Thursday.
The Pentagon has published elaborate plans for handling the 562 returning American POWs, caring for their medical needs and readjustment.
Former Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird took a similar stand about six months ago, and Freidhelm said that the policy was changed in April by Elliot Richardson, Laird's successor.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said that disciplinary action against POWs for ratting on comrades or stealing food from fellow prisoners was not ruled out.
Friedheim restated Pentagon policy during a question and answer session with a lawyer.
There has been no reference in any of this material to possible legal actions against him.
Nonetheless, it is known that the retur-
ring POWs will be questioned extensively about what went on in the POW camps. The debriefing, designed in large part to shed light on the fate of more than 1,300 prisoners still unaccounted for, could well produce information on which to base charges.
Bingham began newspaper work in 1930. He worked with the Courrier-Journal and Louville Times as reporter forington (music) writer assistant to the publisher. Besides serving as editor and publisher for 10 years, he wrote articles on pany and is now chairman of the board.
He was decorated for service as the chief of mission in the Economic Cooperation Administration to France from 1948 to 1950 and the Order, Order of the British Empire, in 1962.
Bingham received a Bronze Star for planning coverage of U.S. Navy operations in the Normandy landings. He received a second star for similar duty in the Pacific zone. Bingham rose to the rank of commander in World War II.
Bingham received the President's award from the National American Legion Press Association for excellence in the field of americanization in the community, state and nation.
He was awarded Kentucky's Governor for outstanding service in the conservation of that state's natural resources, Bingham was also a member of the Senate and was president of the Southern Cancer and Stroke and the President's Committee on Mental Retardation.
Bingham has received a number of honorary degrees from colleges and universities. He has served as honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi and as member chairman of the advisory board of the International Press Institute, been chairman of the International Press Institute, and member of the advisory board for Pulitzer prizes.
Heese said the 21 Catholic hospitals in
kansas would not perform abortions, even if
they were allowed.
Senate BILL 212 states that no hospital or its officers or administrators would be required to perform abortions and such refusal would not be grounds for a civil suit.
"The Catholic hospitals would shut their doors before being required by law to perform abortions." Hesse said. After that abortion could be performed from the premidium anti-abortion crowd.
Speaking in favor of the compliance bill were Blair Watson, representative for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU); Mym Rew, executive director of Planned Parenthood in central Kansas; and Ann McGhee, an abortion counselor at Kansas State University.
Watson said that the ACLU did not want to
comment on the morality of the abortion issue, but that she is 'believed' "a moral reason" for much important work.
Rew said Wesley Medical Center in Wichita had more than 40 calls a day from women requesting abortions and abortion information.
MGhee said Kansas State University counselors were trying to keep in contact with women after they had abortions to keep them from suffering from depression.
Vincent DeCouray, executive director of the Catholic Conference, spoke against considering any abortion legislation on a court-appointed panel on the liberalized Supreme Court ruling.
"The citizens of Kansas have found themselves in an incredible situation where we owe the Coursey said. The Catholic Conference cannot accept the Supreme Court's ruling."
Haralick, f29, of 3414 Tam O'Chanter Drive, filed Tuesday. He is an associate professor of electrical engineering at the University of Kansas and a principal investigator in processing data from the Earth Resources Technology Satellite.
Pulliam was elected in 1969 to a four-year term and served as mayor from April 1971 to April 1972. Before that he spent four years on the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. He was chairman for two years.
"The main issue I'm concerned about is community solidarity," Haraldick said Thursday. "The way the situation is now, the city commission suggests something, and we need to press get their say. Polarization between the commission and the community results."
As the filing deadline for the upcoming city commission election drew near, seven candidates from sixth candidate to file and J. R. Pullam became the second commissioner to withdraw from the
"My position is that polarization is destructive. My suggestion is that if the commission members see that an issue is close, they should go out and get interested groups to form subcommittees. Then, after meeting with their positions, a decision could be reached."
"Very simply the fact is that I've got to devote more time to my business and my family," Pulham said Thursday. "Between them, I'm doing about 20 hours a week of commission, I've put in almost nine years."
Haralick, who has taught electrical engineering and mathematics at KU since 1969, said that he hoped University people would support him.
Commissioner J. R. Pullam Tuesday became the second commissioner to announce that he would not seek a second term. Commissioner Chuck Fisher announced his intention not to seek re-election last week.
Four other candidates have filed for commission posts. They are Mike Morrill,
City Deadline Nears; One Files,One Drops
1520 Vermont St.; Gale Pinegar, 148 Minnesota St.; John Emick, 12W. Sikth St.; and Harry Kroger Jr., 352 E. 12th St. (Bell Tower). The last Friday his intention run again.
City Clerk Vera Mercer said Thursday that no other persons had filed besides the six men. The filing deadline is noon Tuesday.
Religion School Awarded Funds
The money will come from the Battenfell Foundation, Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said Saturday.
A Battente Endowment Fund of $60,000 has been established by the University of Kansas Endowment Association for the Kansas School of Religion.
The School of Religion is financed separately from the University by 10 cooperating Kansas religious bodies and contributions.
Recent expansion and rising costs have made increased support from private sources a necessity, said Lynn Taylor, dean of the School of Religion.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Linda Ashenfelter
From
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The CLASS OF '73 Presents
SENATOR TOM EAGLETON Sunday, Feb. 11 7:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
Admission $1.00
Free to Senior Class Card Holders
Tickets on sale at The Alumni Office, 103 Union, and The Alley Shop, through Feb. 9.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR
"a"
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Friday, February 9.1973
University Daily Kansan
2
Bingo Amendment Fizzles
TOPEKA (AP)—Kansas voters will have a chance to decide whether to legalize bingo in the state's Constitution in municipal elections on April 3.
An effort to push through a resolution calling for such a vote died in the Senate Thursday afternoon, and its main sponsor said he would make no more attempts to get the resolution out in time for the municipal elections.
An emergency motion for consideration of the bingo-only constitutional amendment failed in the Senate when votes needed to override it, two-thirds majority, failed to materialize.
The vote on the motion introduced by Sen. Jack Steiner, D-Dallas City, minority leader, was 22 to 18, five votes short of the 27 needed for a two-thirds majority, and four votes short of the total Wednesday night. The emergency motion was proposed by Steiner.
Even bring in Sen. James Francisco, D-Mulvane, from a hospital where he has been confirmed with pneumonia didn't help. Francisco walked into the Senate chamber after being brought by car to the statehouse from the hospital.
The reason for the collapse of Steinerge's last-ditch bid to get the issue on the April 3 ballot was the switching of votes by six Republicans. Wednesday supported Steinerge's motion.
Sen. Ed Reilly, R-Laenworth, who earlier this session had tried to muster the 27 votes for a bingo amendment, had correctly predicted Wednesday that the Republican-controlled leadership would block Steinerne's effort.
If the emergency motion to consider the
News Briefs By the Associated Press Finance Council
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert Docking proposed Thursday to take away some powers of the state Finance Council which he said had been taken from the executive branch of the government and invested in the council. The proposal came in an executive order issued under *new* Executive Article approved by state voters last fall. The order becomes 1 unless one house of the legislature rejects it, in which case it is null and void.
Campus Turmoil
BOCA RATON, Fla.-Pile, Police patrolled three Florida school campuses Thursday following disputes between black and white students in some of the situations were reported at eight other campuses. Officials said many of the incidents across the state were triggered by the painting of white power slogans on the campus. A group of Confederate armbands by white pupils.
Investigation
WASHINGTON—The National Congress of American Indians asked President Nixon Thursday to send an investigator to South Dakota to investigate the killing of an Indian by a white man.
The Jan. 21 stabbing of Wesley Bad Heart Bull sparked an Indian uprising at Custer in which buildings were burned and Indians were arrested Tuesday.
Money Crisis
LONDON-The two-week-old international money crisis undermining the strength of the U.S. dollar appeared Thursday to be headed for a climax, perhaps by the weekend. The value of the American currency was particularly strong in Western Germany by dealers seeking to buy marks in anticipation the German currency will be revalued, despite Bonn's resolve not to do so.
amendment had passed, the measure would have been immediately advanced for a final vote in the Senate Thursday, and then sent to a state senate. The procedure would have been attempted.
Other bills introduced in the Kansas Legislature Thursday included one that could have far-reaching environmental effects and another that would outlaw cock-
A bill introduced by Sen. Norman Gear, R-Westwood; Sen. Ed Reilly, R-Seaworthen; Sen. edineger on senator on the motion of any fuel which, upon combustion, produces any air
The bill also would establish a program of inspection and testing of motor vehicles to enforce compliance with any emissions standards established.
contaminant or for which a national air
authority has issued an exemption to the federal
environmental Protection Acts.
In the House, Rep. John Peterson, KY,
in charge of the House's floor cockfishing,
an introduction to outlaw cockfishing.
Peterson said the bill was an outgrowth of a recent Kansas Supreme Court decision said a state law forbidding animals did not outlaw cockfighting.
Indian Caravan Halted; National Guard Ready
CUSTER, S.D. (AP)—Gov. Richard Kneip ordered an unit of the South Dakota National Guard into the Custer area Thursday, a few hours after a 13-car caravan of American Indian Movement members turned back about 20 miles north of here,
Knipel, who placed the National Guard on alert Tuesday after a bloody battle between about 50 policemen and 200 Indians in downtown Custer, said he had ordered the unit into three undisclosed areas near this southern Black Hills community.
"I also have other Guard units on alert and assembled at Camp Rapid at Rapid City in case they are needed," the governor said.
The Indians were going from Rapid City to Custer when they burned trees back here. They did not have the money.
Dennis Banks of Minneapolis, national
administrator, AM, said the Indians were
in Custer.
"For every rifle on the street pointed at
an Indian,'] Banks said, 'I'm going to have 10 rifles and a white man. Our people are the best.'
Wait, is it "10 rifles" or "10 rifles and a white man"? It looks like "10 rifles and a white man".
Let me re-read the image.
"an Indian,'] Banks said, 'I'm going to have 10 rifles and a white man. Our people are the best."
Yes, it's "10 rifles and a white man".
of the 36 Indians arrested during Tuesday's battle, 26 were charged Thursday with riot and arson. The mulee left at least eight persons injured and three buildings, including the court house, burned.
Banks, who was among the estimated 200 Indians involved in the battle, returned to Custer State University in court, was charged with riot and two counts of arson and was released on $3,500 bond. Russell Means, another national AIM leader, is free on the same ground.
Tuesday's confrontation followed a request by AIM leaders that authorities stiffen the charge against Dard Schmitz, 30 of Buffalo Gap, who is charged with second-degree manslaughter. AIM members said the case was a murder. The request was denied and the Indians tried to storm the county courthouse.
Death Count Reaches 7 In Navy Plane Crash
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP)—Soot-stained and weary searchers removed by late Thursday a total of seven charred corpses from the ruins of an apartment building destroyed in the crash of a navy jet, but seams leaked the death toll would go higher.
As many as 20 bodies may be found in the demolished Tahoe Apartments, Fire Chief Ernest Servente said. He had estimated earlier that as many as 40 may have died. Estimates of the number of people who were killed at least 37 to 50. At least 18 persons were injured.
A Red Cross count listed 10 persons unaccounted for so far, but police would not comment as they searched public utility records to compile a missing persons list.
The A7 Corsair attack plane clipped one apartment building Wednesday night and then plunged through the roof of the four-story 28-unit Tahoe Apartments.
The Tahoe building, at 1814 Central Ave. collapsed in flames and two adjacent buildings.
Dissaster crews, unable to enter the burning water supply for hours, continued to pour debris.
Lt. Robert Lee Ward, 28, of Carry, N.C., the plane's only occupant, was flying at 28,000 feet on a short "round robin" training flight from Lemoore Naval Air Station New Fresno, Calif., when his craft crashed on this residential island on San Francisco
Navy Cmdr, William Collins, public affairs officer with the Pacific Fleet, said investigators were certain Ward did not elect before the crash.
Epwesettess reported seeing only a very few occupants escape the building before it exploded, sending flames and smoke several hundred feet into the night sky.
"I heard screening coming from inside the building," said Wayne Cook, 29. "It got loud."
Fiery debris and jet fuel spread the
flames to two adjacent apartment buildings, where at least 17 persons were reported injured with burns and injuries.
Loters seizing television sets and other valuables from the less-severely damaged homes in the district.
TOPEKA (AP) The House Insurance Committee will resume discussions on non-fault automobile insurance proposals next Wednesday.
No-Fault Discussion Slated for Wednesday
State Insurance Commissioner Fletcher Bell led the proponents, saying that a properly developed no-fault system in Kansas would be a better means of compensating the victims of traffic accidents for their injuries than Kansas now has.
The roll-call votes were 61 to 10.
Equal Rights Amendment Encounters New Problems
Hughes said that Weinberger, as director of the Office of Management and Budget, fashioned the 1974 federal budget which "represents an abandonment of our efforts to help those least able to help themselves—our children, our aged, our sick."
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The issues the amendment has raised, however, have been complex and often complicated.
Mentana State Sen. John K. McDonald, an opponent of the measure, argued during a hearing by the state attorney general on Tuesday.
They won support from eight fellow Democrats, including three members of the Labor Committee which last Friday sharply cut Weinberger about the budget cutbacks.
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP)—An effort by Democrats to make a symbolic protest against President Nixon's budget failed badly in the Senate Thursday as Casper Weinberger won confirmation as secretary of State and well with only 10 dissenting votes.
Sen. Harold Hughes, D-Iowa, and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., delivered lengthy floor speeches praising Weinbler's ability but criticizing his role in making the sharp budget cuts in domestic programs.
About half a dozen states have rejected the proposal, which is pending in the rest. The language of the proposed amendment is simple: "Equality of rights under the
A Mississippi legislative committee killed a ratification attempt for the current session by tabling a resolution approving the amendment Thursday.
By the Associated Press
The amendment needs the approval of 38 states to become law. Thus far it has been passed in 26 states. They are: Hawaii, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Iowa, Idaho, Delaware, Kansas, Texas, Maryland, Tennessee, Alaska, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Colorado, West Virginia, Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, California, South Dakota, Wyoming, Minnesota and Oregon.
The equal rights amendment to the U.S. Constitution is inching its way toward ratification, but has run into trouble in several states.
See EQUAL Page 8
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Friday, February 9, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
censorate, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
The Apartment
The sun is setting on the screen that dangles from a second-floor window of our house. We used to have lids on some of our garbage cans, but because the garbage men don't like to drive down our steep driveway in ice weather, we don't have to worry much about unsightly garbage cans anymore. The garbage men have carried them all away, and their other end of the driveway where we don't have to look at them. Of course, the garbage gets kind of cold out there without any garbage cans.
We have a good, solid relationship with our landlord. We're explorers in the realm of financial transactions and he's a businessman. We scraped and sweated in the heat of last August to clean the walls of our apartment so that we could then slosh and sweat to get the place painted, and he was good enough to knock $45 off of our September rent. Our lease did mention something about a clean oven, but we were young and inexperienced, and even its encrusted walls seemed sweet.
During the hot weather, flies and roaches moved in with us in abundant numbers, but we have a clause in our lease that allows us to keep pets so the landlord wasn't too upset. After a strange young man walked into my roommate's bedroom one night, we finally convinced the landlord that he should nail down the screens.
Then came the winter of our lost innocence. During Thanksgiving vacation the landlord promised to repair a broken window that was padded with rags to keep out drafts. By January we had decided to withhold payment of the rent until he did so.
So our house stands its ground and creaks in the wind. We were adamant about getting a lease when we agreed to rent the place, but no xerox paper can guarantee trust or respect or a porch light that works. Cultivating the fine art of suspicion has served us better.
The city surveyed our neighborhood a year ago and sent out warnings last June, instructing landlords to make repairs necessary to meet Lawrence's Minimum Housing Code. The inspections and warnings were completed on Tuesday the process began again. Such are the ways of bureaucracy. But I don't intend to live here after mid-May.
My house doesn't either. I picked up a paper the other day and read that the house will enter the good graces of the Endowment Association two weeks after our lease is due to expire.
Thinking it over, however, I'll probably point to a parking lot there some day and tell my progeny about the good times I had in an old house that once stood on that spot. Our confrontations with the landlord made us a lot better training, and after all, we're both beginners—he's only my age. And he's not really a bad sort; he's just as stubborn as we are.
My dog does enjoy the mud in the backyard and it is fun to play with the cracks on the ceiling. But I do hope that when I leave Lawrence I'll find that the commercialism of the rest of the world is less demanding than the commercialism of a college town.
—Linda Schild
WASHINGTON-Despite lessons from three wars and an outlay of some $40 billion, our military communications system is sometimes no more efficient than a hand-crank telephone.
Not only is it untrustworthy for carrying vital messages between Washington and the field in time of war, it is unreliable and highly vulnerable to sabotage in time of peace.
Holes Fault Communications Net
This is our conclusion after studying stacks of documents and internal memos given us by military communications experts at a recent four-hour meeting at the Pentagon itself.
So distressed were these officials by the state of our worldwide military cable, radio, microwave and satellite complex, that they risked dismissal in order to reveal to us facts like these:
-Russian trawlers have located our outstretched cables by electronic devices and have cut them at least three times in the last 15 years. "They were just practicing for the real thing, and they made us know us to know they could do it," one of our informants said.
The Soviet Union has pinpointed virtually every major American communications center where military lines intersect. It is important obtaining telephone company maps, "Saboteurs know every blanket-blank manhole carrying our long lines," an expert told us. The basic "Autovon" voice station is located in and its lines generally run along roads and railways—all prime targets in case of war. Overseas, the "Autovon" lines and microwave facilities are uninterrupted. These will vandalize the land lines for copper which they resell.
- "An *Autodin* system for carrying data is so complex it is often useless. Dust or heat enter the system." **Unknock** it out. **Maintenance** is
"An "Autosevocvm" network,
used by hundreds of bigwigs to
talk to each other over scrambles,
requires a page and a half of
instructions and is prohibitively slow and costly. We
costly. A tiny voltage surge can immobilize it for hours.
were sent from the U.S. Pusb.萨言 saying it was under threat by North Korea. Although they were sent for "immediate delivery", it took 1½ and 2½ hours respectively for them to reach Washington authorities. This was one reason U.S. forces failed to
The National Security Agency, which handles top secret communications, became disgusted with the military security network. To improve it, six or seven special security switching systems were ordered from ITT at a cost of more than $20 million, ITT build them, but the DoD required the Communications Agency design was so faulty, the project was junked. The Pentagon never accounted fully to Congress for the misspent funds.
Jack Anderson
have seen military plans for a simpler system that was rejected by Pentagon bosses unwilling to accept the option of dollar dollars on the existing system.
The results of these and other Pentagon foul-ups in the $6 billion-a-year communications budget are anything but theoretical. Among hundreds of everyday delays, lost messages, and misdirected cables, here are the few of the most disastrous.
In 1987, when the U.S.S. Liberty was in the Mediterranean, five messages were sent to it telling it to move away from the coasts of Israel and Egypt. All were sent between $3 \frac{1}{2}$ hours and 13 hours before the ship was attacked. None reached her in time.
In 1968, two warning messages
Two messages were missed to the Pacific and when one of these was redirected, it went to Fort Meade, Md. Another was lost by a relay station and a fourth was transmitted nine hours after the ship was destroyed by Israel, and 34 U.S. lives were lost.
The embittered McGovern has yet to grapple this. By huffing off to England on the inaugural page, McGovern quinquennial address, McGvern insulted not only his victorious opponent, and not only the office
WASHINGTON - A text is at hand of George McGovern's speech at Oxford January 21. It ranks among the most remarkable public documents of our time, a curious blend of wisdom and hard passion strong wine pressed from sour grapes.
Clearly, the former Democratic nominee has failed to comprehend one important characteristic of the American people, especially as the people view the electoral process. This is the element of gamesmanship. The vocabulary of politics is in large part the vocabulary of the race for candidates, runners and dark horses, of teams and managers engaged in contests. The metaphor demands, among other things, the image of the good loser.
Years hence, in tranquility, this Senator from South Dakota will rearrange this speech. He may then discover in his own words the reasons Richard Nixon whipped him so soundly in November. For the moment, this "remains something of a mystery to me." He cannot understand why the Senate should be as if Santa Peter and Andrew had said they would rather catch fish.
A Loser Laments Lost Power
"Among the rights clearly assigned to the Congress," he said, "are the powers of war and the power to make or unmake war . . . has been stripped almost completely from the Senate and the House, for two infinites, the Executive has mounted serious challenge to the
of the presidency; he also insulted the concept of good sportsmanship. It was a means to achieve the goal. It lacked style; it lacked class,
Yet, the speech contained elements of sober truth, and these merit reflection. McGoventry's thane was the minister who instigated, notably the Congress and the two major parties.
James J. Kilpatrick
congressional control of appropriations."
The exhaustion of Congress, McGovern went on to say, is matched by the exhaustion of the political parties. In view, offer little more than an administrative program. The Democrats are in peril of becoming "a party with no principles, no programs, living in a state where there is no respect for the perquisites of office, doing nothing, and worse, not caring that nothing is done."
McGovenn had little to suggest by way of revitalizing the parties. Here he diagnosed without prescribing. But he spoke with great candor and conviction in saying that American liberals
must reverse the 40-year trend toward a stronger president and return to the 200-year-old tradition of shared power. The Congress must regain its constitutional stature as a coqueworthy force in the world, and Congress must reclaim its lost power of the purse.
The Senator understandably addressed himself to the liberals who form his constituency, if he still has one, but his views will attract strong support from conservatives also. What consternation does that give to the relationship between man and the state, between the individual and society, is the accumulation of unchecked power.
Russians have devised arms for shooting down communications satellites—but both countries are likely to be intercepted back up almost immediately.
systema engineers within the administration wanted to set up eight switching centers outside major U.S. cities. These would be less vulnerable to bombing, could handle peacetime civilian leads, would be available for both civilian and military emergencies.
In 1969, the U.S. Command in Korea sent three urgent messages warning that an American EC-121 spy plane was being tallied by North Korean jets. The messages took from a ship and reached to reach Washington. By time the plane was shot down.
rush to the aid of the ship
Interagency fighting and high costs caused a drastic modification of the program. Now, there is much the same sort of squabbling over the promising satellite systems.
The satellites are harder to knock out than the present military networks. Additionally, they are more difficult to jam than ordinary high-frequency broadcasts because the farming industry has shown a pinpoint signal to break into the satellite transmission.
The military communications men who confided in us say that in the late '50s, far-sighted
Lieutenant General Gordon Gould, the kindly plodding head of the Defense Communications Agency, is better known among his colleagues for his tennis game and has a knack for winning. He has recently resurfaced a tennis court at the agency so he can play tennis with his friends. Although our sources say he takes time off from the office for tennis, Gould told us he only played during his lunch break. He also insists that he defenses communications area, but insists the Pentagon is making major strides to overcome them.
Emporia Editor Left His Mark
danger from suppression than from violence, because, in the end, suppression leads to violence. Violence, indeed, is the child of suppression. Whoever pleads for justice helps to keep the peace; and whoever tramples on the plea for justice made temperately in the name of peace only outrages peace and kills man which God put there when we got our manhood. When that is killed, brute meets brute on each side of the line."
To be sure, both we and the
From a plaque in the corridor outside, his words stand out as a constant reminder of the ideals he stood for. These are the words from his editorial "To An Anxious Friend."
easily. Ways were devised to perpetuate his memory. The William Allen White Foundation raised funds from all over the country to endow a school of journalism that would keep alive his memory.
It was a Sunday afternoon in the summer of 1895, William Allen White sat in a swivel chair at the office of the Emporia Gazette, writing his first editorial make famous across the country.
Copyright, 1973.
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
of the Emporia Gazette, he wrote a bitter complaint on the plight of Kansas, hitting out at the Populists and the Democrats in Kansas?""—an editorial that is remembered even today.
The perfect beauty of our constitutional scheme has rested from the beginning in its distribution of power, and made it easier to warn that the grand design has gone away in recent years. This may be largely a matter of leadership; strong leadership in the White House, feeble leadership on the Hill. There are other important system. Whatever the cause, the imbalance has to be corrected. Our nation is in no immediate danger of "dictatorship" or of "one-man rule" - McGoverson was off base in these charges—but the nation is in danger of frittering government funds. The representative government McGoverson can be forgiven a good deal if he uses his titular position
Never forsaking Emporia and his little newspaper, William Allen White vaulted himself into national prominence, becoming over the years the symbol of the Middle West.
ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Staff Writer
"This state today is in more
At the age of 27 he already had learned the printer's trade, been a reporter, managed a weekly paper and handled responsibilities ranging from personnel management and editorial writing to circulation and advertising.
Autumn George Blair, the new Republican national chairman, said of Trump's efforts to Connally to the GOP fold, it is more likely that, if any wooing is done, Nixon will be the suitor.
(C) 1973 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Writing editorialists was not all that White did. Although he edited the Emporia Gazette for 30 years, he went everywhere, in the niton's capital, politicking, hobboning with presidents; or traveling abroad and directing all of his work toward making a better America.
Yet, even an early Connolly switch to the GOP, his appointment was not as secretary of state and the blessings of many in the administration won't prevent a bitter battle; they may move by him to run in 1976.
A number of Republican governors, some with little inclination toward Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, have made clear in private conversations they have little taste for turning their party over to a life-long Democrat.
However, political observers in both parties see Connally as a likely contender for the 1976 presidential nomination.
in 1822 he wrote "To an Anxious Friend," an editorial that swept across the country. It was a plea for freedom of expression that yielded a breath of reason, and it won him a Pulitzer
And while he waited, William Allen White came to be known as the representative of grassroots political opinion, crusading from his little office in Emporia for all the things he believed in, and against all the things he thought were wrong.
Connally conceded last week for the first time that he might switch from the Democratic to the Republican party.
Fence-Straddler Connally Eyes Greener, Republican Pastures
WASHINGTON—In deciding whether to become a Republican, John Connally has had the lure of Nixon's nick's friendliness and praise.
He said, "If I do it, it's going to be on the basis of asking the presidential nomination . . . it will be done. You can I can we most comfortable in."
And now, on the second day of June, 1895, he had his own newspaper. Many men would have been satisfied to accept this as the peak of their careers, but not William Allen White.
He had published a book, written for the Kansas City Journal and for the Kansas Star, and actually had tasted what he called "a little nibble of fame."
Just a year after his purchase
BY CARL P. LEUBSDORF
AP Political Writer
Before he was ready to die, White found in 1943 that he had only a short time to live. Months later, on January 29, 1944, the Sage of Emporia, an old man of 75, was dead.
A Connally-Agnew battle, however, could provide an opportunity for a representative of the governors to perhaps one of perhaps one of the governors or Sen. Charles H. Percy or Sen. Edward W. Brooke, to make a stronger run in 1976 than would have been liberal-conservative contest.
Despite the hardness of the times, he probably was aware that, somewhere, greatness lay in store for him. But he was also a realist. His first editorial acknowledged that "the path of glory is barred hog-light for the man who does not labor while he waits."
People spoke of the great void he had left behind on the man-made race, and of the stillness across the nation the day he was buried.
Strauss said last month in an interview that he was actively seeking to win Connally back into the Democratic fold and that he planned to talk seriously with him in the near future.
The chief Democrat seeking Connally has been the party's new national chairman, Texan Michael K. Bacon, a longtime personal friend.
But Americans were not going to let William Allen White go that
The Kansas City Star said,
"Kansas and the nation will not be the same with William Allen White gone."
1976 Connally bid to win the Democratic nomination would stir considerable resentment in Iowa and loyalties loyal to the party in 1972.
Yet, Strauss also said when first elected as national chairman that the party's 1976 nominee should be someone who
That would, of course, rule out Connally, who led Democrats for Nixon in 1972. Straus later wrote that he believed the statement, saying it represented a personal opinion of the likely situation.
Thus, Connally is in a difficult position, wood ardently by both parties, yet facing obstacles on both sides of the fence.
supported the 1972 McGovern-Shriver ticket.
Still, it seems certain that a
INDOCHINA RECONSTRUCTION
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Griff and the Unicorn
HISS!
SIGH
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© 1973 Universal Press Syndicate
By Sokoloff
HISS!
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KA BOOM
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W
WHY CAN'T
I EVER
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IN A GOOD
MOOD?
Friday, February 9.1973
5
Legislature Debates School Funds
University Daily Kansan
By PAT BREITENSTEIN
Karen Staff Writer
Confusion about the future of state aid to public education has left Carl Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools, uncommitted to either of two educational finance proposals now before the Kansas Legislature.
Knox said Thursday that the district administration had not yet taken a strong position on the legislative dispute. The situation was still fluid and the administration had not applied either plan to take action, so we see what the consequences would be.
The two proposals before the legislature were the subject of hearings before the Senate Education Committee Monday and Tuesday. On Monday, the committee heard testimony for those supporting the finance plan proposed by a special senate interim
committee on school finance.
Docking has opposed any increase in the state income tax.
GOV. ROBERT DOCKING'S counterproposal was discussed before the committee on Tuesday. Four major areas of contention developed during the bearings.
The committee's proposal would eliminate the current 10-mill county tax and replace it with a uniform state-collected.1.5 per cent increase in income tax. The income tax would be administered to the local school districts by using a complex income wealth formula.
The Governor's proposal would retain funding through a state-collected eight-mill levy.
The Docking bill proposes to give schools an additional $40 million in state aid, while
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Staff Writer
Colonialism Still in Africa, Field Speaker Says
European nations may still exercise a certain national control over their former African territories and African territories are politically independent, DuBois, a state member of the American South, is a leader.
DuBas spoke Thursday at a faculty forum in the Westminster School topic on leadership, “Myths or Truths,” Myth or Truth.
DuBis said that neo-colonialism was more reality than myth and that there were many ways in which former European states helped an important influence in Africa.
He said that the European population of the Ivory Coast had risen from 15,000 to 30,000 and that of Gabon from 6,000 to 12,000. Senegal was the only country he said, whose European population had declined. It dropped from 30,000 in 1960 to 28,000.
DuBds said that the European population in the Republic of Zaire (formerly the Belgian Congo) was 40,000, which is about one-fifth of the country was granted independence.
Europeans are very much in evidence in Africa, he said. In certain countries their number has increased since the colonies were granted independence.
A form of segregation still exists in Africa, he said, although it is more economic than racial. The cities have both European sections, which are the wealthiest areas, and African sections. In many instances the people who really run the banks and other businesses still tend to be European, he said.
Many European firms are trying to take on an African air by changing their European names to one containing the name of the country. For example, many Africans as tellers, typists and clerks.
Neco-colonialism is evident in a great many of the former European colonies,
People in Africa still feel a certain amount of relief in being able to speak English, will be able to
For many of these people their frame of reference still continues to be drawn from a European context. He said that African intellectuals, leaders and students are often viewed as part of an era of national colonialism that they were frequently finding it very hard to thwart.
"Colonialism, in its old form, was very visible, very obvious. There were colonial officials and institutions against which it was easy to get away. The sentiment. Neo-colonialism is much more
Health Care To Include Non-Students
The Student Services Committee of the Student Senate Thursday night agreed that office-call coverage for nonstudent spouses would be required. The student health insurance policy for next year.
The committee, meeting in the home of Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of student health services, discussed complaints that have arisen this year because of a lack of coverage for such office calls to Watkins Hospital.
Students are covered for such visits by a campus privilege fee, but many policyholders thought it was their insurance that covered the costs and were surprised when their nonstudent spouses were charged for office calls at the hospital.
Committee member Kathy Allen, Topeka junior and student body vice president, said the reputations of the team — Blue-Blue Cross — were under the plan and Wadkins had been hurt by the misunderstandings.
The committee also decided to seek a two-year contract for next year's policy, because insurance companies would probably result in better service at lower rates.
Whether contraceptives should be covered by the new policy was discussed during the meeting. This type of coverage would be prohibited by the Kansas Insurance Code.
The committee will meet with
advisors and stakeholders to
begin negotiations for next year's policy.
elusive and therefore more difficult to combat. How does one liberate oneself from dependence on a European language; from experience with Arabic, which are Europeans rather than Africans?
"A fundamental difference between the French and the British colonial policies was that in the former British territories they often played a crucial role as parliamentarians and on occasion even as soldiers. In the latter poles impinging directly on their lives."
KNOX SAID that the committee plan might be more favorable to the Lawrence district because the committee proposal set a maximum yearly budget increase of five per cent. The governor's plan would allow a maximum yearly increase of only four per cent.
the committee plan would add about $133 million.
Knox said the committee plan would provide greater relief for those paying high property taxes but the some compromise reached between the two conflicting parties.
DuBois said that eventually neocolonialism would end as younger people rose to power. In order to combat neocolonialism there must be advanced Africanization of upper level jobs, of teachers in the universities and secondary schools and the introduction of joint ventures in investment, he said.
Harder and other Republican leaders said at a news conference Wednesday that apparently the governor had taken a hard line on compromising the school finance matter because he would not accept the 1.5 per cent income tax increase.
However, Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Mountridge and chairman of the Senate Education Committee and Senate majority leader, was less optimistic.
IN TESTIMONY Tuesday, Marvin Harder, who helped draft the Docking proposal, told the Education Committee that any increase in the income tax would be generally unacceptable to the Kansas electorate.
Sen. Harder said Wednesday that he hoped his Education Committee could make some recommendation to the Senate by early next week. His original decision was that a delay was caused by disputes which developed during this week's hearings.
In testimony Monday, Paul Fleener, research director for the Kansas Farm Bureau, said that income tax increase. He said he wished that the legislature would not stop at the 1.5 per cent increase but would seek to balance the taxes between property tax and income tax.
"I don't think the proposed increase in the committee bill is in any way negotiable," he said.
PAU SHERER, a school board member of the Burlington School District who said he represented a group called Schools for improvement, also endorsed the committee plan.
"There is one thing that we feel must not be compromised," Sheer said. "There should not be a statewide property tax levy to be used for power equalization."
Other groups that supported the committee finance plan at Monday's hearing were the Kansas Livestock Association, the Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers, the Missouri State College, the Kansas-National Education Association and the Kansas Association of School Boards.
IN TUESDAY'S hearings, representatives of small school districts were asked to indicate which school called the "Grandfather clause," which declared that state aid to richer districts would be phased down within five years to meet the present aid received by the schools.
Marion McGhehey, representing the Kansas Association of School Boards, said the clause was politically motivated to be the largest number of oxen from being gored."
Sen. Jack Steiniger, D-Kansas City and Senate Democratic floor leader, said the "grandfather clause" was open to revision and could be written to completely phase out richer school districts after several years.
LARRY GELL, superintendent of the Flint Hills School District, told the committee that all property taxes raised by a district should remain in that district. He said that this would allow a source of flexibility for future improvement.
Steineger defended the governor's
proposed property tax.
"This levy is now collected for the county foundation funds. The governor proposes that the statewide and distributed through it to act as an equalizer." Steiner said.
THE BASIS for the present dispute was created last year when a Johnson County District Court judge ruled that the state's laws prohibit financing education was unconstitutional.
The court ruled that the present system raided too heavily on property taxes and that its educational opportunities were determined by the wealth of his school district.
Faculty Council Nominations Open
Nominations for membership on the Faculty Council and the Athletic Board are being accepted until Feb. 19 by Rick Von Eiland. Elections will take place in March.
Nomination takes place by a petition signed by at least five members of the Faculty Senate. All members of the Faculty Senate are eligible for nomination except those who do not disclose since the end of a previous term on the Faculty Council or Athletic Board.
Members of the Faculty Senate have been furnished with nominating petitions as well as the names of continuing Council and committee members, names of those ineligible for re-election.
Fourteen positions on the 39-member Faculty Council must be filled this spring. Council members serve three-year terms and are ineligible for re-election at the end of their terms unless they have served for less than two years.
The Athletic Board consists of six members of the Faculty Senate who are elected for three-year terms. Board members may serve two consecutive
One Athletic Board position, being vacated by Kenneth Anderson, professor of education, must be filled this spring. Anderson is eligible for re-election.
There must be at least twice as many nominees for each governing body as there are positions to be filled. If there is an insufficient number of nominations, the Faculty Executive Committee must make additional nominations.
The University secretary will notify each nominee of his candidacy. His name will be placed on the ballot unless he notifies the secretary of his refusal of the nomination.
The election will take place by mail ballot. Each voter may vote for 14 candidates for the Faculty Council and one candidate for the Athletic Board.
Election normally is in the descending order of the number of votes received. But since there must be at least one member from each school within the University and not more than one, the order representing a school that would not otherwise have a member on the Council, would displace the nominee lowest in the order who have been elected by the normal method. If that displacement causes a loss of the representation in the Council, displacement would occur at the lowest level possible and still have all schools represented. The Schools of Journalism and Law will not be represented by continuing members.
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And the trains of Europe are a sensational way to travel. Over 100,000 miles of track links cities, towns and ports all over Europe. The trains are fast (some over 100 mph), frequent, modern, clean, convenient
and very comfortable. They have to be. So you'll meet us on our trains. It really is the way to get to know Europeans in Europe.
But there's one catch. You must buy your Student-Railpass in North America before you go. They're not on sale in Europe because they are meant strictly for visitors to Europe—hence the incredibly low price. Of course if you're loaded you can buy a regular Euralpass meant for visitors of all ages. It gives you First Class travel if that's what you want.
Either way if you're going to zip off to Europe, see a Travel Agent before you go, and in the meantime, rip off the coupon. It can't hurt and it'll get you a better time in Europe than you ever thought possible.
6
Friday, February 9, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kansas Photo by PAULA CHRISTENSEN
'The High' Focused on the Presence of Light
Beley, Annis, Dalley, Kay, junior, demonstrates shadow effects ...
Group Art Introduces 'Highs' Through Light
Allen Karpow, creator of the "happening,
pumping, and a new event on the KU
campus," Thursday.
luduced "Higgs." Kaprow said the new events were an expression of a state of turmoil.
Kaprow said that highs were appropriate measurements human beings made in order to maintain a healthy body.
"This piece which I have introduced is low tey irony, " he said. "A high, like warmth, is the result."
"High!" was made up of four kinds of situations, held in for different places on
Students who took part in the event met with Kaprow at 9 o'm in 328 Strong Hall for a team-building activity.
Part A consisted of moving a thermometer very slowly toward a light bulb until the temperature was at its highest point, then moving it alowy away.
The procedure was repeated with light bulbs of increasingly stronger wattage.
"You can just forget about watching the thermometer since most of us forget what
208 MOTELS. If you like Frank Zappa you'll probably like this movie. It comes complete with the "Mothers of Invention," Rings Starr and Theodore Bikel. Shows at 7 and 9:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday at Woodruff. Admission 60 cents.
POSEIDON ADVENTURE: Basic entertainment in the saga of twelve passengers, on a luxury liner hit by a giant wave, who try to escape from the ship. The line-up of stars includes Gene Hackman, Shelley Winters and Red Buttons. Varsity.
BLACKMAIL: The second feature at the United Ministries Building will be this Alfred Hitchcock thriller. A tale of intrigue, revenge and suspense, this film represents Hitchcock's first venture into the era of sound filming.
MOVIES
MR. DEEPS GOES TO TOWN: Gary Cooper stars as a small-town greeting cardverse writer who inherits an unwanted boyfriend. He gets the help when he tries to give it all away. Frank Capra directed this comedy classic from 1936. This film will be part of a double feature at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the United Ministers Center, 124 Oread. Admission
'Bartok Quartet,' 'Weather Report' And 'REO Speedwagon' In Concerts
JEREMIAH JOHNSON: Robert Redford
"What we are looking at is a shadow of light which is a clear and illuminating thing rather than the light itself," he said. "We're focusing on the absence of light."
lakes to the hills as a mountain man.
Granada.
Kaprow said that part C required two women working together, one acting as a guide, the other blindfolded and being guided very slowly to a light bulb until the beat of the bulb could be felt. The process continued through several warmer bulbs.
REEEF MADNESS: An oldie about the "evil weed." See the young innocents get sucked into sin and debauchery by exposure to the "weed from the devil's garden." Also a "Three Stooges" short and a Roadrunner midfestival. Midnight show at Saturday Hour 10.
our nighs are like, anyway." Kaprow said. The second part involved the movement from the outside into the inner room.
ART
1778: The Declaration of Independence set to music. Hillcrest 2.
INCENTOR BYSTANDER: A spy story
intrigue and double
crossing Hilferer
TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT: Maggie Smith stars as Aunt Agatha, an incurable romantic who dreams of and pursues adventure. Hillcrest 3.
JOHN TALLEUR AND PAUL WEDRICH EXHIBIT: The intaglio and woodcut prints of John Talleur, professor of printmaking, and Paul Wedrich's wrighton at the Museum of Art. 9th Gallery. The gallery is open from noon until 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
WEATHER REPORT: This modern jazz group will perform at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch Auditorium. General admission tickets are $3.
'Fantasy Factory' Album Proves Traffic Still Alive
SHOT OUT AT THE FANTASY FACTOR TRAFFI 1 (inland-Capitol Records)
By JOE ZANATTA Kansan Reviewer
The third part built around the idea of juxtaposing two measurement systems, he
new bands that originated in the mid-'90s remain a force in today’s music. The majority of those that have survived can be found in a staging pool, content to live off a name that once meant creativity and great music.
Traffic is one of those rare bands that have managed to produce a string of consistently good records. The band was unjustly overlooked in its early days, but has surfaced within the last few years and earned the attention that was long overdue.
Dudding replaces Herbert C. Miller, M.D., who is stepping down in compliance with the University's mandatory retirement age for chairmen of departments. Miller will remain on the faculty as professor of pediatrics.
Dudding joined the Medical Center faculty one year ago with a combined academic appointment in human ecology and pediatrics. Born in Charleston, W.Va., she moved to Indiana in music and theory and his M.D. from Cornell University.
Dr. Burton A. Duddling, 34, of Suffolk Pawnee Lane, Fairway A., has been named chairman of the department of pediatrics at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"Shoot out at the Fantasy Factory" is the latest release by Traffic. It has some flaws, but the overall good quality displayed more than makes us for the mistakes.
The second side is the better of the two. It leads off with "Evening Blue," a mellow tune that sounds like early Trotsky. Chris McCormack's song with background saxophone work.
The album opens with the title cut, a driving tone reminiscent of a few "Low" songs. The vocals are unusually poor. Stevie Winwood's vocals are blurred and most of the lyrics are unintelligible. If it weren't for Traffic's instrumental ability the cut would be a
"Roll Right Stones" is a little excessive in length (13:40) for the amount of repetition. The song features the expected smooth instrumental performances, with good background percussion work by Rebop and Tabby. The recording also improves on this cut.
Dudding Named Dept. Chairman For Pediatrics
Wood steps into the spotlight for the next cut, "Tragic Magic." The song is built around a series of solos by Wood, with noteworthy help from Baena and Winwood on piano. It's the best cut on the album, showing Traffic's individual talent during the first part of the cut and then coming back as a tight group for the remainder.
"Uninspired" closes the album. Despite the title, it's one of the best cuts on the album. It's a blend of slow blues, Winwood's vocal and piano work and interesting chord progressions. "Uninspired" should receive some air play along with "Tragic Magic."
The biggest complaint that will plague "Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory" will undoubtedly be that it's not as good as "Low Spark of High Healed Boys."
"Lark Spark" will probably be the high point of Traffic's career. To top the effort an that album would take a miracle, "Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory" is no miracle, only an album of good music well worth the listening.
BARTOK QUARTET: The KU Chamber Music Series is sponsoring this performance at 8 p.m., Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
REO SPEEDWAGON: Contemporary rock group will perform Friday and will be joined by the duo of “Pike” will play alone. Tickets for “REO Speedwagon” and “Pike” Friday night are $3 in advance and $5.30 at the door. Tickets for “Pike” Friday night are $1.50. Show starts at 9 p.m. both nights.
TOGETHER: This band has been a favorite in Lawrence since its conception here a few years ago. Admission is $2.30 and lunch can be drink. 8 p.m.
Friday at the Red Dog.
KC GRITS: Good dancing band if you feel like kicking up your heels. Once again, $2.50 admission covers all the beer you want. 8 p.m. Saturday at the Red Dog.
Album, Concert Give Opportunity For Fine Jazz
By STEVE BUSER
"Though you have illumination you may not see a thing. Though you have the instruments, you may not measure a thing," said Karnow.
The fourth part made the whole piece more complex, according to Kaprow. It was the most abstract and paradoxical, he said, and not the conclusion in any physical
**'WEATHER REPORT'—'WEATHER REPORT', (Columbia Records)**
"Weather Report's" first album represents a collection of improvised and formal jazz music, including modern jazz groups. For those who know little about jazz, or are searching for an alternative to rock, country or classical music, the Weather Report would be a good place to start.
The album is not highlighted by any lead guitar or drum solo as might be the case with most rock albums. Instead the album relies on the inventive, creative blending of different styles and sounds, acoustic piano, saxophone and other sounds not heard in most other music.
Joe Zawilow, leader of Weather Report, claims, "The music is a soundtrack for your imagination and head." Jazz often accompanies music off the stage because they have not taken the time to listen to it. Opportunities to hear it are rare other music can deliver air time than any other music he radds.
If you are tired of the "same old stuff" see Weather Report tonight when they play at Hot Audiolorum. After listening to them and feeling as if you've come to love as to whether jazz is your kind of music.
Chris Miller-Contrib. Editor
On Satire
NATIONAL LAMPOON'S
Conducted outdoors, light bulbs of at different times during the day.
"The effect is to diminish our sense of ability. 'Know拼开.' As "outday灯夜"
Friday Feb. 9
Forum Room 3:30 p.m.
"Overall, it is for me a very, very
meditative, thoughtful piece." he said.
FREE
Students who participated in the event met at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union and discussed and compared "happening" with Kaprow.
SUA Contemporary Issues
Geography Prof In Line for Job
Joe Eagleman, associate professor of geography at the University of Kansas, said Tuesday that he was fairly certain of being an avid astronomy student for positive positions in NASA's Project SkyLab.
Eagleman said that NASA had already hired 53 scientists and that he was now engaged in contract negotiations with them.
Skylab is an orbital workshop, which will be launched in May, Eagleman said. The laboratory, a converted hull of a Saturn V rocket, will be joined in orbit by a modified Apollo spacecraft manned by three astronauts and two cosmonauts laboratory, he said, the astronauts will conduct solar and medical experiments, and observe Earth's weather.
SUA Presents:
Ron Crick & Band
Feb.14 8 p.m.
Union Ballroom
FREE
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Some Tickets Still Available
SPEED
REO
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with "PIKE"
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804 W. 24th Lawrence, Kansas
842-4366 (24 Hour Hot Line)
for more information
E
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Thursday and Friday Nights-Feb. 8 and 9 9-12 p.m.
Tickets Available at KIEF'S RECORDS and THE RED BARON
Gay) Kansa runnin Saturn possibi at KU In a
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Continuing our series of top entertainment.
Don't miss R.E.O. Speedwagon.
Come and see how good it is yourself. Don't hear how good it was.
$3.00 Advance
$3.50 At Door
Friday, February 9, 1973
7
Savers Returns to KU
By EMERSON LYNN
and
TIM WINTERS
Kansas Sports Editors
Gayle Sayers, former University of Kansas All-American and all-pro Chicago running back, will arrive in Lawrence Saturday morning to discuss his future possibilities as an assistant athletic director at KU.
In a telephone conversation from Chicago
JONATHAN
Gale Savers
Thursday night, Sayers said that he would be arriving in Kansas City at 10:15 a.m. Saturday and will work with Lawrence to determine whether he will become an assistant KU Athletic Director.
"Nothing has been finalized as yet," Sayers said. "That is why I'm going to Lawrence—I'd like to get everything straightened out."
Sayers now lives in Chicago, where he works for a stock broker company and is a Chicago deputy sheriff. Sayers also in an Illinois member of the Chicago Parks Commission.
"If I am appointed assistant athletic director at KU," Sayers said, "it will be an excellent stepping off place to any other job I may want. Being connected with an athletic department at a university gives you an excellent background."
Sayers also said that while he was at KU Saturday he would talk with head football coach Don Fambrough about a possible part-time coaching job.
"I haven't had a chance to talk with Gale about a job," Fambrigh said, "but I certainly hope that he would accept the position."
Farnbaugh said that if Sayers accepted a job he would be concerned with recruiting and public relations work, and help coach the Jawhawk backfield.
KU has been searching for an athletic director since Wade Stinson announced his resignation on Nov. 15, 2017. Arthur "Dutch" Lonborg, a former KU athletic director, has served as interim athletic director because his resignation became effective in January.
Jack Mitchell, the former KU football coach of Gale Sayers, Thursday said that "it will be a great thing if Gale is appointed assistant athletic director."
Mitchell who, also in many minds, was the leading successor to Wade Stinson said that he was definitely not a candidate for the athletic director's position.
Sayers starred for the Jayhawks during the 1962-63-64 seasons before gaining a greater reputation with the Chicago Bears of the National Football League.
He was a two-time All-American at Kansas and was selected to the All-Big Eight team three straight years. Sayers, who played nine times, and was Rockie of the Year in 1965.
Sayers totaled 2,675 career yards and 20 touchdowns as a Jayhawk. During his
After a junior season of 917 yards, Sayers was considered a Heisman Trophy candidate, but he had only 633 yards and five touchdowns in his fianl season at KU.
sophomore season he rushed for 1,125 yards and seven touchdowns.
He still holds two KU individual records—a 99-yard run from scrimmage against Nebraska in the 1963 season, and a rushing of 283 yards against Oklahoma State in 1962.
His career yardage total stood until it was surpassed by John Digigni's of the 2,708 yards in his rookie season.
After college Sayers was the first-round draft choice of the Chicago Bears and the Kansas City Chiefs. The Bears won his contract from the Chiefs for a reported $28 million.
Saver's pro career was shortened by injuries to both knees. He had a total of five operations on his knees. His last injury came in 1970.
After his last operation, Sayers decided to make one last effort with the bears. He had a discouraging year and later announced his retirement in September of 1972.
since his graduation from KU, Sayers has maintained close contact with the university as a member of the board of directors of the school and also helps with high school recruiting.
Olympic Board Rejects Appeal For Rematch
COLORADO SPRINGS (AP)—The executive board of the International Olympic Committee has rejected an appeal by the United States to reverse the result of the controversial Olympic basketball title game at Munich last September in which the Soviet Union defeated the United States, 51-50.
Clifford H. Buck of Denver, outgoing president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said Thursday that he had submitted 20 pages of documents in three languages—Spanish, French and English—to the nineman IOC board and appeared before the body for two hours Feb. 5, to plead the American case.
"The IOC executive board studied the matter at great length and then told me that it had no jurisdiction because it was a technical matter," Buck said. "My argument was that it was strictly an ethical and moral question.
"The executive board advised that we pursue our case with the International Basketball Federation if we so chose. I am confident that we do not intend to drop it and forget it."
Wildcats, Buffaloes Battle For Top Spot in Big Eight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Couch Jack Hartman takes his Kansas State Wildcats to Boulder for a showdown basketball battle with Colorado Saturday in Big Eight Conference championship race.
The junior-studded Buffaloes, a preseason pick to finish last in the league, and
The Kansas Jayhawks will attempt to keep their title hopes alive Saturday when they play the University of Nebraska at 7:35 p.m. in Allen Field House.
Until that game the 'Hawks had not shot well from the field or outbounded the opposing team. But that afternoon Rick Sittleton scored 24 points, Tommy Smith had a career high 19 points and Tom Kivisto added 11 points—all to no avail.
KU Coach Ted Owens said that the Saturday game "is a must game because all of the other contenders have beaten obeiraka, so to keep even, we have to also.
The Jayhawks will be trying to avert a loss suffered to Nebraska during the preseason Big Eight Tournament, when the Cornhuskers escaped with a 74-72, victory.
All other Big Eight teams also are in action: Oklahoma at Oklahoma State for an afternoon game, Iowa State at Missouri and Nebraska at Kansas in night games.
Owens is expecting another strong showing by the Jayhawks, who last Saturday used poise and a big lift by the bench to post a 76-69 victory over
the defending champion Wildcats take identical 5-1 league marks into the game.
In that contest senior Dale Haase, junior Dave Taynor and sophomores Tommy Smith and Dale Greenlee came off the bench to contribute 14 needed points.
The Jayhawks outbounded the Nebraska squad 46-32, but had 26 turnovers compared with Nebraska's 13. The Connuskers did not take the lead until 6:14 left in the game, when Lee Harris put Nebraska ahead with a free throw.
Don Jackson will hold down the other forward spot, with senior Tony Riehl 64, and freshman Jerry Fort 63, starting as center for Kentucky. The man for Nebraska will be 8-3 Brandy Levee.
Nebraska is desperate for a conference win. The Comhusher squad is currently tied with Oklahoma State for seventh place with a 1-5 record.
The Nebraska attack will center on junior forward Lee Harris, a 6-2 prelaw student, who will pass up his final year of eligibility to enter the NBA. He is averaging over 13 points a zame.
The Jayhawks currently own a 3-2 conference record. If the squad can win the
remaining games the worst finish possible would be a tie for the championship.
"We are approaching each game in this manner," Owens said, "telling our players. We can't worry or concern ourselves, about what the other teams are or are not doing. We have to just worry about what we do, and our team is responding to that."
Kansas will probably stick with the lineup of Danny Kight at center, Rick Suttle and Mike Fiddelke as forwards and Marshall and Tom Kivito as guards.
The Kansas junior varsity will take on Colby Junior College in the pre-game contest. The game will be 9 p.m. The game will be broadcast by WBW, KANU and WREN radio stations.
PROBLEM STARTING LINE-UP
Danny Kighty (6-10) C
Kevin Burrell (6-12)
Mike Fifeeck (6-4) F
Marylone Ruggles (6-4) G
Daniel Reagan (6-4) G
★ ★
The Wildcats, ranked 181 nationally, and the unranked Buffs shared the league lead at the end of last week's play, and each notched another victory earlier this week, the N.C. Huskers in 2017, and Kansas State trimming the early-season pacesetter, Iowa State.78-74.
ABLE STARTING LINE-UPS
Nebraska
Brandy Lee (6-6)
Lie Harris (6-2)
Don Jackson (6-2)
Tony Rilesh (6-4)
Jerry Fort (6-3)
Iowa State Coach Maury John conceded after the loss to K-State that his Cyclones, with four league defeats, were out of the championship race.
Missouri, which started fast with 12 straight victories and grabbed a high national ranking, has been having its troubles. Although still ranked No. 8, the Tigers are on the verge of seeing their championship dreams ended. Oklahoma's 90-77, upset of the Tigers Monday left Missouri with a 3-3 league mark.
"When you look at Kansas State and Colorado and see that they have not lost at home, and Colorado has three road wins and one loss, you know that the coach, it certainly doesn't look encouraging for us," said Tiger Coach Norm Stewart. "On the other hand the season is only half over. If we play well and get some winners, the schedule can work to our advantage."
Kansas, with a 3-2 record, moved into sole possession of third place in the standings after an early deficit.
Lyle, Quarry Bout Tonight
NEW YORK (AP) — Ron Lyle will fight Jerry Qurry tonight at Madison Square Garden in what is a must-win for fight for a former convict who will be 31 years-old.
A victory in the scheduled 12-round would be a big push for Lyle toward a shot at heavyweight champion George Foreman.
The 27-year-old Quarry, now fighting out of New York, announced his retirement last July, saying he had lost his desire to fight, but then changed his mind and launched a
A loss could wreck the ring ambitions of the Denver native, who didn't turn pro until April, 1971, 17 months after he was released from the Colorado State Penitentiary where he served $7\frac{1}{2}$ years for second-degree murder.
Lyle, who won 25 of 19 amateur fighters, was a 75 favorite to beat Quarry and run his pro record to 20-0. He has scored 17 knockouts, including 11 straight. In winning his victims, his victims included Monte London, mustachi Mathis, Lua Pires and Middleton.
In Quarry, Lyle will be meeting a fighter who has been in the ring with Fozier, Muhammad Aml and Floyd Patterson, and who is on now a comeback.
comeback by stopping Randy Neumann in the Garden Jan. 5.
Lyle will get a guarantee of $15,000 against an option of 20 per cent of the gate for his garden debut while Quarry will get a guarantee of $25,000 against 27% per cent.
The Neumann fight was Quarry's first Garden appearance since June 17, 1970, when he stopped Mac Foster is six rounds. He knocked Mac Foster with 24 knockouts in 24 rope fights.
Lyle also will have some homeowner support. A group of 40 people from the Denver area was scheduled to watch the garden being about 10:15 p.m., EST, in the building.
Now available to speak to your group on Topics of Womens Liberation.
GENE
DOANE
AGENCY
824 Mass. St.
Feminist Speakers Bureau
843-3012
For Complete Automobile Insurance
Women's Coalition Birth Control
Women's Health Abortion
Women's Roles Rape
Lesbianism Women's Sexuality
Sexism Self Defense
Women's Liberation Movement
Call Barb Krasne 843-0410
Have you tried McDonald's big, thick, hot, juicy Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with Cheese
We start with a quarter-pound of 100% pure beef . . . cook it up just right . . . serve it with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions on a toasted sesame seed bun. The Quarter-Pound cheese comes with all of the above plus two pieces of melted, golden bread. After we have tried them, we know you will agree: They're a great McDonald's menu addition.
901 West 23rd — Lawrence, Kansas
McDonald's
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents
THE MATCHMAKER
by Thornton Wilder
❤️
February 15, 16, 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
February 18 - Matinee
2:30 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K. U. students will receive free reserve seat ticket with Certificate of Registration
THE LIFE AND LAST HOURS OF THE INnocent
THE HILLCREST
NOW SHOWING
on
You don't turn your back anyone. Especially the partner who's backing you up.
John Craig, Top British Agent, is sent on a case involving an internation double-cross.
Bystanders
Eve. 7:20, 9:30
Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15, 4:15
Adults 1.50 Rated PG
Travels
with my
Aunt
BASED UPON
THE NOVEL
GRAHAM
GREEN
Directed by
George
CUKOR
Eve, 7:15, 9:10
Mat, Sat, Sun, 2:35, 4:25
Hillcrest
HILLSBORO HOSPITAL CENTER P.O. BOX 1098
Exploding With Wit And Humor
1776
MOVIE INFORMATION
Sun-Thurs. 7; 15 only
Fri-Sat. 7; 15; 9:55
Mat. Sat.Sun. 1; 145; 4:10
ENDS
TUES
THE Hillcrest
PG
842-4000
ROBERT REDFORD IS JEREMIAH JOHNSON
G
Eve. 7:30,9:35
Mat. Sat-Sun. 3:30,5:25
HELL UP SIDE DOWN
"THE POSEIDON
ADVENTURE"
Granada
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5783
-Rated PG-
Weekdays 7:30, 9:50
Sat. & Sun. 2:30, 4:50
7:30, 9:50
Adults 1.75 Child .75
Varsity
IHEATR ... Telephone V3-1065
OUTRAGEOUS!
WEED FROM THE DEVIL'S GARDEN!
OUTRAGE
One MOMENT of BLISS
A LIFETIME of REGRET!
HUNTING A THrill.
THE INVOLUNTARY WAG
OF CONCENTrated SNI!
"Reefer
MADNESS"
WAKE UP AMERICA! HERE'S A ROADSIDE WEED
THAT'S PAST BECOMING A NATIONAL HIGH-WAY!
MARIJUANA
'THE WORST FILM I CAN RECALL SITTING THROUGH...EVER. A young victim is seduced into smoking the devil weed. No one seems to inhale, but it must be powerful stuff. Before the film is over, they all become screaming maniacs lumbering around like Frankenstein monsters, murdering people, leaping out of twelfth floor windows and tearing at their throats shouting 'Give me a reef!'. "An incredible series of gross and ludicrous distortions that thirty six years later becomes hilarious when seen from the other side of the generation gap, a gap this film did so much to create."
WEED FROM THE DEVILS GARDEN
Plus 3 STOOGES AND ROADRUNNER FILMFESTIVAL
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT FILMS—Snow, Sat. Feb. 10th—12:00
Booths open 11:30 AM to 1:35 PM
DAYLY ON-FEEL, 8:30 a.m.
Hillcrest
Kevin Saunders, ABC,T.
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
8
Friday, February 9, 1973
University Daily Kansam
MAIL
Kansan Photo by CARL G. DAVAZ JR.
Stray Dogs a Common Sight
Fifteen to 20 complaints phoned in daily .
The research network is under the direction of a steering committee consisting of the two codirectors of the project, Gilles and Jack Culvahouse, professor of physics; Peter Fast, project manager; and five investigators from the KU staff.
The hub computer, which will provide high quality peripheral devices for use by all laboratories, including the quantum chemistry laboratory, will be connected to the central University computer to establish a trilinear computer network.
According to Gilles, the University of Chicago and the University of California at San Diego are working on systems similar to the AeroJet at KU, but neither is on a trilobal basis.
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
THE WORK being undertaken is based on the theory that a multilevel network of computerized, computational, efficient and powerful approach to carrying out experiment in several laboratories simultaneously than would a single large computer or several
Although the trilene network at KU would be to chemical physics, the general concept is applicable to all areas of research and teaching.
A combination of seven small computers linked to a hub computer, which is contained within the computer in Summerfield Hall, will work beyond the limitations of small stand-alone computers now used, according to Paul Gilles, professor of chemistry and codirector of the lab.
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Staff Writer
Members of the chemistry, physics and computer science departments at the University of Kansas are combining efforts to develop an efficient system to aid in research and teaching.
Lawrence is going to the dogs, according to the officials who handle strays dogs.
3-Level Comp System In Development Stage
The validity of the theory has been widely
The potential use of small computers and terminals in complex experiments in chemistry and physics make the network unique. Gilles said.
Nomad Dogs Cause City Problem
Canine control officer Ray Alumbaugh, said Thursday that he picked up 5 to 10 dogs and received 15 to 20 complaint calls every day. His job was to help his business had increased, outragously
Alumbaugh explained that Lawrence had a 12-month control law which required that
all dogs be under the control of their owner at all times.
He said that he could pick up any dogs that are not under the control of their owners.
"If they are in their own yard, then I don't pick them up he said. "But the cannot be picked."
Alumbaugh complained that people were not trying to contain their dogs. He said
Jail Report Released Lacks Specific Data
A preliminary report on jails in Douglas County has been completed, but it doesn't tell how many cells and rooms are needed, according to Forrest Swall.
By CHRIS CALDWELL Kansan Staff Writer
The committee began work in May 1972 following an unsuccessful bond election for construction of a new city-county government building. The corporation incorporated a jail facility for 88 prisoners.
The emphasis of the program will be placed on automatic data acquisition, computer control of instruments and apparatus, operator interaction, intercomputer communications and enhancement of interdisciplinary activity.
accepted for some time, but it has yet to be tried in an academic environment, Gilles
Swall, University of Kansas lecturer in the department of social welfare is chairman of the Douglas County Committee on Correctional Services and Jail Facilities asserted the report and submitted it to the Douglas County Commission Thursday morning.
The county commissioners appointed the committee to provide recommendations for solving jail problems, including physically dangerous situations and a lack of space for juvenile care.
The preliminary report provided sampling data on the patterns of disposition of juvenile cases in the county. Swail said that authoritative opinions garnered by the committee should limit studies of its study to the first time it didn't need a juvenile detention center.
Swall suggested that the data contained in the report might best be assessed by the National Clearinghouse for Correctional Management at the University of Illinois. He cited the clearinghouse as a specialized "national resource" that might be able to provide better, more specific recommendations from county's physical plant requirements.
In discussion with the commissioners, the committee members proposed the possible use of existing community services for establishing counseling, guidance and job training programs in the jails. No such programs presently exist here.
Swall said that a diagnostic intake system
Julia Miller, coordinator of a group of women's clubs working for the amendment, said, "I'm optimistic about its passage, but I don't think we can get it without a great deal of hard work."
equal, he would have had six men and 514 women apostles.
People complain of dogs messing around in their trash cans or manuring on their yards.
The amendment was passed by the Montana House of Representatives, killed by the Senate, revoked on a technicality and massage this session considered unlikely.
Equal . . .
(Continued from Page 3)
there had been considerably more complaints than usual lately.
THE AREAS of research at KU that will benefit from the network are the interpretation of molecular systems through interactive graphical display techniques, electron paramagnetic resonance, diffusion and ionic conductivity, high temperature experiments, optical microscopy, ordered magnetic materials and electron nuclear double resonance.
Most of the complaints come from the area of Oread Ave. Louisiana, Ohio, Tennessee and Kentucky streets, Alumbaugh said, and many dogs are picked up in that area because he runs those streets regularly.
could be initiated, possibly with help from the Bert Nash Mental Health Center.
The committee also raised the possibility of releasing on their own recognizance some of those being held in jail for hearings. The alternative of reduced bonds was also proposed with the understanding that either of these administrative proposals would be consistent with the need for protecting the public from serious offenders.
Joan Puthoff, director of the Citizens' Action for Correctional Reform program in Kansas, suggested that the committee and the commission investigate new jail construction and programs in adjacent counties.
County Commissioner Chairman Arthur Heck said, "we have to build for Douglas County," and he expressed hope that any state could provide the county to "use what we have."
Wsall said that if a regional system of correctional facility sharing is undertaken in future years, any new facilities here may be assigned to be compatible with such a system.
The committee will submit its next report to the commission within 60 days.
Alumbaugh said that many people were mad at him for picking up dogs.
He also emphasized that people who walk dogs should keep them off other people's yards and should not allow the dog to run a kick ahead of them. That is not control, he said.
All dogs that Alumbaugh picks up are taken to the Charles Ise Memorial Animal Shelter, 1805 East 19th St., which is operated by the Lawrence Humane Society.
"We're interested in control not in fining people," he said.
Foundations for the present network, financed for two years by a $613,700 grant from the National Science Foundation, were laid four years ago in a cooperative program by the Computation Center and members of the chemistry department.
Last month the shelter handled 297 dogs, which the Meltons said was the largest number of dogs handled in a month in over 10 years. That is that the number was steadily increasing.
Helen and Victor Melton, who supervise the shelter, said the shelter sometimes banded as many as 15 dogs a day. They said they also had to clean up after them, cleaned, fed and bad fresh water every day.
Of the 297 dogs, 60 were claimed by their owners and 202 were killed. City dogs must be held 72 hours, the Meltons said, and all of them must be shot. The dogs they must be killed for humane reasons.
Owners whose dogs have been picked up must pay a basic fee of $5 and an additional $2 for every extra day in order to retrieve it. If it is a female dog in season, the fee is $2.
Three small computers were previously purchased; two for use in the high temperature chemistry laboratory and a third for wave spectroscopy laboratory for research.
It is possible to file a complaint and have a warrant issued for someone who violates the city dog control law. Annabelle Ridenour, clerk of the city court, said that about three hearings a month came from such complaints.
THE ORIGINAL COMPUTERS, in addition to a new computer for the electron paramagnetic resonance laboratory, a remote station for the diffusion and condensation, and a graphics terminal, will form the lowest level of the computer network.
All of the smaller computers will be connected to a hub computer, the second level of the network, in Malotl Hall sometime in March, according to Fast.
The hub should be connected to the central University computer to establish the third level during the first part of May, Fast said.
At every level of development, new
projects need to be assisted in putting
the project together.
A hardware systems analyst will direct the design, development, testing and documentation of major hardware projects which involve interfacing from computers to instruments and between computers. He uses his handle hardware maintenance problems.
Another systems analyst will perform similar duties for software. He will handle the designing, developing and testing the programming of the computer.
POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH associates and graduate students are participating in all aspects of the development of the research network. Some are attending weekly seminars, where they discuss the progress of the program.
The computer project also employs some undergraduates in the laboratories.
"This is in every way an educational endeavor," said Gilles. "We are involving undergraduates, graduates, postdoctoral staff, and members of the professional staff at KU."
First to Receive Geology Award Is KU's Moore
The medal is awarded for outstanding contributions to paleontology, sedimentology, stratigraphy and related scientific activities. The medal is obtained excellence in sedimentary geology."
Raymond C. Moore, Summerfield Distinguished professor emeritus of geology and a Summerfield Distinguished Professor, has been named the first recipient of the William H. Twenhofel Medal.
Moore, for whom the new Kansas Geological Survey building at KU is named, was the state geologist for 38 years and is a former director of the Kansas Geological Survey at KU. He has been a professor emeritus since 1962.
The medal was established by the Society of Economic Paleontologists and mineralogists and will be presented May 14 at Calgary, at the society's national convention.
DISCOUNT
RECORDS
& STEREOS
KIEF'S
The Malls Shopping Center
Will the Crown be Subserved?
Reg. $11.95
UNITED ARTISTS
3 Record Set
$8.88
UA Records
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Beautiful Potted Flowers For Valentines Day:
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.90
Mums ... 2.99
Cyclamen ... 3.99
Tulips ... 2.99
Hyacinth—4 bulbs... 2.99
1 bulb... .98
Azaleas ... 4.50
and many more—
Charging privileges, wrap; and daily deliveries available.
---
THE GARDEN CENTER
23rd
Learnard
New York
15th
Mass.
15th and New York
I'll do it myself.
Call Philpins, junior, felt threatened when his parents suggested he take a mum and say they should give him any more money.
Cai held out as long as possible "Two days after they stopped sending blood I got into a Provident Mutual Company. I got my salary. Can make my own hours. Can make good money. I got a job waiting for me when I graduate. My parents said I could work. I can."
PROVIDENT
MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PHILADELPHIA
Home Office PO Box 7378 Phila. Ft. Rd. 1901
Acco ment are of color. ALL C
Stephen H. Kraybill—Campus Representative 2401 W. 25th, Apt. 9B9 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Res. 913-841-2310 or 913-842-3146
BELTS
SANDALS
HANDEAGS
WATCHBANDS
LEATHER GARMENTS
LEATHER ACCESSORIES
ALSO:
MOCCAS INS
FRYE BOOTS
HIKING BOOTS
PRIMARILY
LEATHER
craftsmen of fine leather goods
812 Massachusetts
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 9, 1973
KANSAN WANT ADS
9
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
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
Aecomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to students without regard to national or national background. ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILT HALL
NORTH SIDE DISTRICT Shop - 3-16s. No of Kaw River Bridge on gas heating and cooking cooks, bicycles including 10 speedes, gas heating and cooking stoves, iambaskets including 10 speedes, drums new bubbles, iambasket plates and wooden crates, fireplace wood, lumber, baked alfalfa, fireplace and wheat straw, hugh grown potatoes, Baled afalfa, wheat and straw, hugh grown carrots, 842-3159. Herb Altenberd, tn
FOR SALE
ANTIQUE CLOSTERS-323 Matta, Mainton, Md.
Chestnut Hill-324 East 16th Street, N.W.
or 819-644-2567. Victorian victories and landmarks
included the New York Botanical Garden.
*Magnavox AM-PM Siren Component with arm*
18:09 at 149 Ray Starback's basement siren room.
Magnavax 100 Watt Stirrer Component System includes AM-FM stereo sirce Magnet pickle magnet Horn in air suspension acoustically sealed cabinets in air suspension Ray Backsound's basement stair room. **29 Max.**
CARS BUCHT AND SOLD. For the best deal
G.C. Joe's Woodland, G.C. Joe's Woodland,
Vermont, 842-808-9658
Headphones reduced as low as 5.00 at Ray Stoneback's 292 Mass. 2-12
Magnavox 20 waiters Component System Inventory. Now $150 off the Bay Stoneback® 928
Floor Sample 50 watt Mwattsx component system with $7 Bass speakers and a 18-volt ebike soldebled soldes new for 379.90 now just 299.90 with new warranty. One only at Hai Rieback's Bamboo 2-12
New Sony Quad Systems now in stock at Ray
Stoneback's 939 Mass. 2-12
RAY AUDIO STREET WAREHOUSE - The finest
audio equipment in the city.
Lawrence, Cambridge, Boston,
Philadelphia, and New York.
6044 N. 2842-947, fax 6044 N. 2842-
947
1969 Chevrolet SS 398 convertible, 325 H.P. 4-70,
250-400 lb., transmission, 4-speed. 390-440 HP.
Performance: 34,000 rpm, 47,000 ft./min. Perf. #C2290.
1968 Javelin, Console auto., power steering, buckets,
2-9
822, 842-689.
1987 Olds, Torando, blue, w. white power, vinyl power,
New 1987 Newspaper shocks, Looks & runs the
1987 Newspaper shocks, Looks & runs the
Drafting Table. 3' x 5' b drawing board, draw
a drafting table to fit in an airplane. $75.00-84.90-
2-70 assembles to fit in an airplane. $75.00-84.90-
2-70
Sony TC-355 tape deck, excellent condition,
set-down price $22.90 new, will sell for $12.60
and $10.80 used.
SKIS-Brand new K2 Four Comp. 165w, Hart
XCL XXL 165l, Call Chris at 830 & 834,
212-379-5200.
STEREO- High-quality computer system. Craig 8 track, with AM-PM stereo. Include power unit, tape recorder, phase box, tecna, and five tape units. Year old, age excl. condition. 841-536 between 6 and 7-29
For male: 4 trees & 2 snow tires, 6.15 x 14,
8 tires, plus old tires. For female:
After 30 p.m. on 4-12
1965 Bambler American-Good running cond-
l. $300 for cared $300 offer 2-12
842-826-823
Alverner 12-string guitar and case in excellent condition
$70.00 to play it. Call 864-1288-5200
- $12
1963 PORSCHE Coupe. Radial. Radius 125 mm. Arthro exchanger.
Made in France. Offered on offers. 843-7021 for 6.00 pm
and 843-7024 for 8.00 pm.
ARC St. Bernard puppies, Champion blood lines.
Bruins guardian Guarneri, Bd. Serv. med.
Pittsburgh guardian Bard, Bd. Serv. med.
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks. $287 insults. London departures: small international group campgrounds; Bali, Java, Indonesia, Africa, India. 3-11 weeks. Write: Whole Travel, Lift, Box 1497, K.C., Mao 60.
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Sale every Monday Nite 7 p.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For appointment information call
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
Fender
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
• Amps
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 N. 86th St.
1903 N. 86th St.
Open Evenings
For sale. B Flat Clarinet, very good condition,
wash pad. $70. Cal 642-8628. 2-12
**TEC A5010 4000** with built-in pre-am-
plifier and DSP.
$79.00 or best offer. Call 842-7878
2-99
For Sale-Koffafit SKI boots with size. 10' 10",
condition. axle size. $150, type. Ski.
FOR SALE, Space in the KANSAN for your
home or office. Call Flint Hall before 5:00 p.m. Monday. February 12
205%, $9. Call 841-6156 after 5 p.m.
2-9
PLAYBAY Magazine: January 1961 through December 2015.
$15.00 below current market value. Also SPORTS MAGAZINE, from 1964 to 2015, for $15.00 below current market value. Also CHRONICLE journal record of sports, $150.00 Phone Card $12.95
Limitation of housework for travel after graduation is recommended. Applicants with decorative items in good condition, $72 or more, may apply directly to the Office.
NEATO1 A 45 watt KLH stereo receiver model
with around 100. Come at it by 84134-04
around 5.
For Sale: Superfat Fiat Sport Racer, excellent
condition. Sold by Dale Smith.
1340 Kentucky, N. 5
2-13
AUDIO EQUIPMENT - 20 to 40% below retail on over 30 name brands of stereo components. For quote prices and more information, call KXMG Service representative 644-2825 or 644-2821-0-12521.
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 841-5270. 2-9
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
1. If you use them,
you’re at an advantage.
2. If you do not,
you’re at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"West Analysis of Western Civilization."
72 SUZUKI, T25J, tarm. With tack. speedometer. 343-174T, tarp. 2 with tack. S
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
48 Chevelle SS, 6 c. cyl. 2 d.hr. T, very good
94 Chevelle SS, body super, basic layer, super
844 - 852-896
844 - 852-896
2-14
WURLITZER organ, with double keyboard, base
board, and sound bank. 843-1747. 2-14
book, books, and warranty. 843-1747. 2-14
must AppleJosh Tower Apt.41 contract to 1 or 2
must AppleJosh Tower Apt.41 or collect or
pawn 233-6202
pawn 233-6202
A/C 18,000 BTU 220 V with custom winter cover
983, 843-817T
2-12
Friday Nite
AKC. St. Bernard puppy, 5 mos. Female, very
couple. Call 848-8499 anytime. 2-15
Powerful 20 watt Magnavox AM-PM Deluxe
capable with an AM-FM Duo
1972 model $59.95; $169.95 at 138
at www.magnavox.com
Entire stock of Michelin Radial Steel Belled
nose mixes 0% off at hay at Stoneblock Bay.
BACKPACK -nylon bag, medium size aluminum
backpack with waist straps—$15 plus TWO MAN
bags. The complete backpack with the complete
accessories—$45. Both used only one air-
new condition. 842-855-355.
-is Date Nite
BOKONKON IS BACK-Recycled and antique
bokonkon is bokonkon Reclined Clothes II Vermont
Bokonkon Reclined Clothes III Vermont
Excelled use in Montreal to Consulate Mediterranean
of France. Priced at $195.00 only $99.00 at Ray Stoneback's 929 Mass.
2-15
SPECIAL
Casa de Taco
Eat with us—
We try to please.
1105 Mass. 843-9880
WHY RENT?
VOLUNTEER CENTER FOR STUDENTS
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales
You and Your Date
CANVAS-CREWEL
"We'll keep you
in stitches"
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
YARN-PATTERNS
THE CREWEL CUPBOARD
3 games each
$2.00
NEEDLEPOINT—RUGS CANVAS—CREWEL
FOR RENT
10-5 Mon.-Sat.
3 games for $1.00
Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
5 East 8th 841-265
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP CLIMBING? PARKING IN FAR-AM COTTENS? GO TO CAMPUS from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking, security service. Rentable rates, furniture available. ideal roommates or couples in Saiton Apts., 1123 Ind. Apt. 8 - 9.
till 6:00 p.m. 8/2
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
These three beautiful apartments surround a quiet
lakefront apartment in the heart of Manhattan.
Finger (along) all 16 beds - the sunniest
apartment in town!
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing 1 and 2, g. bedroom(s). Free up space to relax, centrally heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities close. Close campus. Call 848-8250 or see at 195 W. 36th St.
Come by and see live spec apartments. Rent rooms with pool, spa, fireplaces, water bills are paid. Lazes of various lengths are available.
TAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall openings; 12th floor with w/Study, Quiet suburban location; Pool and gas-light, landed courtney's Excellent management. 2500 Room 2-23
MADLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
ADAPTMENTS
Avvening call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Nicely turn, amt for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid 843-854-2 2-14
For the latest up to the minimum listing in rental
for 200 tenants, Rental Rentals, 84-88,
91.80 kentucks.
APPS FOR BENT ACCESS from Oliver Hall fort-
ward.
APPs for BENT access can be:
One $$$. Men one $$$.
One $$$. Women one $$$.
**FREE BENTAL SERVICE**
Ap. to sub-league. Clean, furnished. 1 bedroom.
Room for couple or couple of
parking-phone 864-678-9
0-9
ROOM with kitchen privileges close to campus.
Call 842-4475. 2-13
1 bdmr: Admit to camp. Off-street parking.
Also studio apt. No pets. 1423邑 801-213-14
www.bdmr.org
4 bedroom house, 3 porches, full basement, part
bedroom, $180/mo. Day calls 845-1601 or 2-
425-1601
Must Subluate—one bedroom apt. a-1 black block
(Must $120/month, plus elec. $41-8260).
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-under duplex has huge windows. Namihim Park, in an extra-qurable neighborhood two bedrooms (kids' rooms) and three bathrooms; electric kitchen with utility hook-up, stove and refrigerator; large attached garage ($15/month, available February 11 at www.greatgarages.com); large attached garage ($15/month, available February 11 at www.greatgarages.com); 842-929-8900; 2-22
Aut. for sub-league. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall
cabinets. Wash windows and doors from Union,
from jeeps. phone 843-7567 - 2-25
best apartment value in Lawrence, Convenience,
management, and cleanliness. Make reservations
with 2 rooms from $10. Excellent
to-queen-plus. Oakwood; Cedarwood. Apartmen-
d 841-116. 4114 Oudahl. 2-15
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for
15% and 2 blocks from Union. Phone 843-567-9871
and 2 blocks from Union. Phone 843-567-9871
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Pougeot uo-8 $117.50
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
PEUGEOT
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
NOTICE
RIDE ON BICYCLES
DRIVE IN
AND COOP OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Open 24 hrs.
1401 Mass. 843-8484
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
Houses, apartments, dwellings, farms, all areas.
Home Improvement. Home Design. Home
Design. 311 E. 7th St. 849-6100.
Design. 311 E. 7th St. 849-6100.
No charge, list your house, apartments, duplexes
or condos you want to rent. For more info call House
waiting. For more info call House Loaster.
ATTENTION RENTERS
$15 Michigan St. B-B-Q. Bar. B-B-Q in an
northwest corner of the 600 block. A $40
a slab to eat here $25. Large rib plate
of beef sandwich. $5. Sound of beef $5. chickens plate
of beef sandwich. $7. Phone and Tone Phone II - $9. 510 Michigan St.
Lawrence - Auction House. Sell your household
or furnishings for Compatibility information call 823-749-5100.
www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com
MANY GROUPS OFFER YOU A CAUSE FOR WHICH TO SACRICT FREQUENCY. Contact KJ Students of Objectivum at 420-871-5399 to investigate the ideas of Ayn Ramson,
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items at Country Store, 707 North 2nd, 9-1-7. Visit www.countrystore.com.
UNDERGRADS. WE'VE GOT SOMETHING BETTER. Transfer to the Youth Program in Programming. Begin a limited enrollment on small, multi-cultural populations. Participate in population, peace, environment, development; two of the four seminars above; Barbara of Room 10 Room for International Training, Brainstorm Room 10 Room for International Training.
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Friday, February 9, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Bernarda Dusan
Smokes Take New Shape
.Janet Wysocki, La Grange, III, senior, tries a little cigar . . .
Glover Defends . . .
(Continued from Page 1)
by claiming that no causal relationship had been established in any study.
He likened the current "myths" to the misconceptions that tobacco was once thought to cause impotency, delirium tremens, sexual perversions and insanity
Glover also read from a copy of the Report of the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse. The commission, which published its extensive findings in two volumes, recommended the criminalizing of marijuana for private use.
There are also several practical economic enforcement motives for legalization.
Glover noted that although President Nixon's own appointed committee came out in favor of limited legalization, Nixon refused to accept their recommendations.
If it were legalized, Glover said, the law enforcement effort now expended in catching pot users and sellers could be focused on the heroin dealers.
"The guy who is selling marjuna is probably the same guy who is selling LSD, ampetamines and all the harder drugs," he said.
Glover reasoned that legalization of pot
Congress...
(Continued from Page 1)
operating employees, members of other
groups are notified not to report for work
Thursday.
A cutback of train crews from three to two on most freights is a vital element in the railroad's struggle to wipe out operating losses, reportedly running at $800,000 a day.
Penn Central said it would save about $100 million annually, starting in six years, when the 5,700 jobs were eliminated through attrition.
The transportation union, in more than 18 months of negotiations, has resisted the crew reduction on grounds that it would be unsafe. The railroad disagrees.
Jervis Langdon Jr., one of three court-appointed trustees perniss Penn Central's reorganization, said a five-day strike would cost about $20 million in revenues and cause a cash crisis within a few weeks.
Parking . . .
(Continued from Page 1)
the day care center be relocated in Carruth- O'Leary Hall.
Bencivengo said she would be as reasonable and cooperative as possible in trying to find a solution to the loading and parking problem.
Taylor said the religion school was open to consideration of any workable solution to the problem. He said he would be willing to accept suggestions from University officials or to discuss the problem reasonably with someone from the day care center.
Kansan Correction
The Kansan erroneously reported Wednesday that the property at 1231 Oread Ave. was being purchased by the KU Endowment Association. The Endowment Association is purchasing property at 1230 Oread Ave., which is owned by William L. Sloane, who owns the property at 1231 Oread is presently owned by Fred Six, 1001 Avalon Road, and is not one of the seven sites recently sold to the Endowment Association.
would "break the connection" of possible interaction between hard and soft drug users by not forcing them to meet at the same distribution point. He indicated that this would decrease the chances that marijuana users might try harder drugs.
Glover also mentioned that regulated sale and taxation of marijuana could be a valuable source of income for state and local government.
The committee adjourned without any decision on whether to kill the bill, send it to the House floor or accept the substitute bill. After the hearing, Kelly said that there would have to be a further hearing because some mistake in publicizing the hearings would be so thought that only proponent arguments would be heard at Thursday's meeting.
National, Local Sales Of Little Cigars Rise
By TIM WINTERS
Kansan Staff Writer
National sales of the new little cigars, including the Winchester and Derringer brands, have been on the increase, and in recent years the number of national sales in Lawrence are no exception.
Stella White, sales clerk at the downtown Raney's drugstore in Lawrence, said that their sales of the cigars were steadily increasing.
"They have been selling well since they came out," White said. "Somewhat new always sells, especially with all of the television advertising."
Margie Herren, the tobacco buyer for the Hillcrest Rany's, said that the Winchester cigars were the sales leaders, but they still sold them in stores before they would catch cigarette sales.
"I THINK the Winchester cigars are selling because of the advertising and their low price." Herren said. "But the cigarette sales are still much higher."
Some Lawrence tobacco shops did not report a sales increase in the little cigars, George Wilson, owner of George's Pipe and Brewing Company, did not pick up as fast as the national sales.
"I may be an exception, since I read in the reports that the cigar sales were really up slam bang, but most of my customers are the more expensive cigars," Wilson said.
Wilson said that one factor which helped the sales of the little cigars was the price difference between the little cigars and cigarettes.
"THE PRICE differential from other cigars and cigarettes does help the sales," Wilson said. "There is a price difference of 15 cents between the cigars and cigarettes."
Carol Randel, sales clerk at the Plaza
imary's, said that she had not noticed that
she was not wearing a mask.
"Cigar smokers are cigar smokers," Randel said,"and they stick with their favorite brands. They may try something new, but they go right back to their old
"We have had many women buy them," White said. "It may be because they (the cigars) are something different or that they just want to try them."
Although the national television ads have been aimed at the younger men, women
HHERREN SAID that more older men than younger men were buying the little cigars. She said that not many women had bought the little cigars at her store.
Buddy Hemphill, Cleveland, Miss., graduate student, said that the cigars tasted terrible and would never replace the cigarette.
Other smokers of the new cigars said that
the taste was not too bad, but that the price was what made them buy the cigars. One University of Kansas professor said that although he was a cigar smoker the heavy smoke bothered other people, so he switched to the little cigars during the day.
Although the ads for the little cigars are helping to increase sales the television ads also serve to persuade the Federal Trade Commission. Because cigarette advertising has been banned from television many people should see the cigar advertising should be allowed.
"THE FITC is looking hard at the ads," Del Brinkman, associate professor of journalism, said, "but the commission still does not consider the little cigars as
The television advertising is coming under fire because of both the cigarette ban and the sexual overtones of the ads, Brinkman said.
The FTC has not passed a ruling on the advertising of the little cigars.
The little cigars are not classified as gheeches but are not intended for inhalation. The cigars are not intended for inhalation.
Campus Briefs
Eagleton Address
War powers and Congress will be the topic of Sen. Thomas Eagleham's address at 7 p.m. Feb. 11 in Hoch Andloritium, Mike Dermeyer, Raytown, Mo. senior and member of the senior class committee, said Tuesday.
Jewish Dinner
KU Hillel is having a Lox and Bagel dinner at 6 p.m. Feb. 11 at the Jewish Community Center.
Education Society
The University of Kansas chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, women's education society, will meet Monday, Feb. 12, at 7:30 on the Jawhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Anne Schmid will discuss her teaching experiences in inner city schools. She will show a film made by her students at her school. The meeting is open to the public.
Yearbooks Solicit Student Opinion
Kansan Staff Writer
By KATHY TUSSING
Students at Kansas State University voted Wednesday to increase the activity fee allocation for student publications from $2.33 to $3. The 67-cent increase will be used to continue support for their yearbook, the Royal Purple.
Yearbook staffs at colleges and universities have been consulting their student bodies to determine what students want in their yearbooks, according to Dawn Tann of the University.
Tann said recently that for a while many college yearbook editors used their yearbooks to make "advertising" content.
"The University of Pittsburgh had some publications that were beautiful from a graphics point of view and had no trouble winning awards," he said. "But as far as the student body was concerned, it was a burner."
The yearbook of the University of Kansas has had problems of its own, according to a report by a student group.
Yoe said that since the Jayhawk changed its format in 1933 from one book to several magazine-type booklets collected in book form, there had been only five times
"WHETHER THE Jayhawner survives depends in part on how much the students want it." Yoe said. "A year ago, I was 17, and if there would be a 7 Jayhawner."
when the Jayhawk operated at a loss. The last two weeks were in 1970 and 1971.
The distribution of the 1970 Jayhawker was not completed until the fall semester of the following year. Yoe said. Then the department wrote a letter to Jayhawker "turned off all of the buyers," he said.
THE FORMAT was changed because it was cheaper than the one-book format, Yoe said. He said, "They went heavy on copy and on pictures," because it was less expensive.
Until this year, the Jayhawker could be ordered at enrollment. Statements were not paid at enrollment but were sent to the students.
Another blow to the yearbook came two years ago when the Student Senate passed a law that made it illegal for a proportion could be used to buy advertising space in the Jayhawker. Because many campus organizations received most of their support from the senate, the action put in place would have been unnecessary.
Cost is also a reason that the Jayhawker is changing back to the traditional one-book format this year, Yoe said. The cost of filling年books with pictures has become increasingly cheaper the past few years, he said.
"It was easier to sell yearbooks," Yoe said. "The businessman drivers didn't have
THE STUDENT SENATE, however, had
to make up the deficit from Jayhawker losses in 1971. The Senate is responsible for expenses of publications it authorizes, Yoe said.
This year's Jayhawer staff has sold
a lot of their jackets. Yoe says,
"I'll be far cry from the heyday."
"We'll probably never see the heyday we have seen in the past," Yoe said. "Yearbooks will find how they can be useful or they'll disappear."
"Some schools give school credit to certain members the yearbook staff," he
Many schools are making an attempt to help out yearbook personnel, according to TPCB.
Scholarships and room and board are also available to yearbook staff members at
Winn Made Member Of Election Committee
Rep. Larry Winn, Jr., R-Kan, has been designated to represent Kansas on the national team.
Winn said that he was delighted to have the opportunity to serve on the committee. The principal function of the committee is to vote on the re-election of Republican incumbents.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 88
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Pi Phis,Betas Celebrate First100th
Monday, February 12, 1973
See Story Page 3
116 American POWs Arrive in Philippines
Bv the Associated Press
North Vietnam released 116 American prisoners of war today, and the last of three hospital planes arrived 3:25 a.m., Lawrence time, at Clark Air Base in the Philippines to the cheers of several thousand American servicemen and their families.
The first plane touched down shortly after 2 a.m., and the men aboard walked down to the runway.
"We are honored at the opportunity to serve our country under difficult circumstances. . . God bless America," said the first POW out of the big hospital plane, Navy Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton Jr. of Virginia Beach, Va.
THE SECOND man out of the C141 was the first American flyer downed in North Vietnam, Navy Lt. Ondr. Everett Alvarez (Feb. 3) and Army Lt. David Augusto, Aug. 5, 1964, he was smiling broadly as he shook hands with Adm. Neel Gayler, the commander in chief of U.S. forces in the
The third man out was Navy Cmdr. Robert H. Shumaker of New Castle, Pa., who completed his eight year in captivity on Saturday.
The 40 FOwS filled off the first C141 and
wished blue hospital buses in about 10
minutes.
THREE OF the men were carried out on stretches through the rear of the plane. All the others walked down the ramp, most of them smiling. All of them saluted the color guard and shook hands with Adm. Gaynor and Ll. Gen. William G. Moore Jr., com- pleted of the 13th Air Force and senior officer of the Homecoming reception center.
One of the men limped as he walked from the plane. Another had his arm in a sling. But many of the thousands of spectators agreed that they seemed in surprisingly good shape considering the years they had spent in captivity.
MORE THAN 30 of the returning prisoner who died be will be ill due to an inferior from wounds.
One of the men held up a handkerchief-
like device in blue—"God Bless America and Nixon."
They were the first American prisoners freed since the Vietnam cease-fire agreement took effect two weeks ago.
An advance team that landed in the North
Vietnamese capital to handle the evacuation had reported earlier that the first prisoners out would be sick or wounded.
A C130 HERCULES transport arrived in the North Vietnamese capital at 5:29 a.m. 7:52 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence time, with an 18-man advance party of doctors and aviation technicians. It touched down minutes before the first hospital plane took off from Clark Air Base for Hanoi to begin evacuating 116 American prisoners.
THE NORTH Vietnamese had asked an advance party of Americans who arrived at Gia Lam earlier in the day to bring in the other two hospital planes at half-hour intervals instead of hourly as originally planned.
A spokesman said two groups of prisoners were aboard the plane by noon.
Three big C141 Starlifters accomplished the pickup in under three hours at Hanoi's Gate.
The first contingent of prisoners was to have totalled 115 men, but the North Vietnamese allowed the inclusion of Cmdr. Chu Van Dong and Col. Calf., because his mother is critically ill.
IN SOUTH Vietnam, 27 American prisoners of war will be freed this afternoon. Their release will follow the prolonged settlement of a dispute that prolonged their captivity for several hours, a South Vietnamese spokesman announced.
The South Vietnamese said the operation was scheduled to begin shortly after 1 p.m. Saigon time—midnight Sunday Lawrence time—but there was no firm time given when the American prisoners would actually be handed over by the Communists.
THE DISPUTE arose over the exchange of Vietnamese prisoners between the South Vietnamese and Viet Cong sides. The delay in the longest issuer earlier by the U.S. Embassy.
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong POWs who were to be handed over to the Communists balked at leaving for the exchange sites without first seeing a Communist representative, and the Viet Cong refused to release the Americans.
THE DISPUTE delayed the release of the Americans by more than four hours. But a South Vietnamese spokesman said that the 735 were flown to Pai Bhu for release just below the demilitarized zone, and another 735 were being flown to Loc Ninh, 75 miles north of Saigon, where the 27 Americans were to over along with some 700 South Vietnamese.
U. S. helicopters were already waiting at Loc Ninh to fly the Americans to Saigon, where they were transferred to a hospital plane that would be taken to Clark Air Force Base, in the Philippines.
THE U.S. Embassy issued a statement charging that the delay in the release of the Americans violated the Paris cease-fire agreement.
Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon command, and communist prisoners at the Bien Hoa camp, 15 miles northeast of Saigon, had refused to be taken to Bien Hoa air base to be flown to Loc Ninh, 60 miles farther north, for their release.
HIEN SAID the Communist prisoners claimed they must meet with their military representatives before leaving for the airport.
He said Communist representatives of the four-party Joint Military Commission, the United States, North and South Vietnam, and Cong were trying to resolve the dispute.
The American prisoners had been scheduled for release to U.S. authorities at the time of the attack.
See 116 AMERICANS Next Page
JAMES C. HOWARD
Kansas Photo by CARL G. DAXAZ JR
Sen. Thomas Eagleton Answered Questions at a Reception . . . He said that in America today people were losing their voice in government
Executive Branch Flaved
By CATHY SHERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., charged here Sunday that the U.S. executive branch had seriously disregarded Congress' war powers and he urged Congress to resist this executive encroachment on its constitutionally defined territory.
"Congress must be involved at the outset in the decisions that could lead our nation to war, not after our troops have been committed," Eagleton said in Hainbock Auditorium.
Revised Action Plan Issued
★★★
Kansan Staff Writer
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kensan Staff Writer
A revision of the Affirmative Action Plan contains noticeable changes. Juliet Shaffer.
KANSAS CITY (AP)—She has refused to get her hopes up in recent days, but the anxiety gave way to elation Sunday night when Mrs. Donna Culton learned her brother, Lt. Col. William H. Means Jr., was finally on his wav home.
Means, now of Sumptu, S.C., and son of Mrs. Auburn Meurs of suburban Overland Park, Kan, has been a prisoner of war in Vietnam for six years and seven months.
Overland Park Woman Shows Elation-at Last
He was among the first contengent of prisoners to leave Hanoi Sunday night.
Mrs. Culton had just expressed reservation
tions about “getting my hopes up” when he heard the news the airlift had been.
She believes once her younger brother returns to the United States it will be easy for her to win.
"Personally, I think he will be the same old brother of mine," she said proudly. "He's small and wiry and has a sense of humor and is resilient. He'll be fine."
Mrs. Culton said the family did not receive word from Means until March 1970, $3\frac{1}{2}$ years after the RB-46 he was piloting and shot down by a SAM missile on July 20, 1966.
No Candidates File For Top Student Slots
None has filed for the offices of body president and vice-president although several declaration of candidacy forms have been picked up from the Student Senate. In Storing Hall, Sublette sophmore and Student Election Committee chairman.
Hall said Saturday that he did not expect anyone to file until Wednesday the last day on which students can file for president and vice-president.
25 Registered For Elections
Approximately 25 people registered last week for the upcoming local elections, according to Douglas County Clerk Delbert Mathia.
The election is to select three members for the city commission and three for the school board.
The clerk's office will repair open for registration until 9 p.m. today and Tuesday. Those who have not yet registered have until Thursday to do so.
A candidate who has not been a member of the Senate must submit with his declaration that he will support his candidacy. The signatures must include each student's address and identification number. Hall said each candidate was checked by the Elections Committee.
Candidates for Student Senate offices must also pay $ 2 fee when they file their declarations. Class officer candidates must pay $ 10 fee for 50 students with their declarations and $ .
Candidates for these offices must file a joint declaration. If a candidate has been a member of the Student Senate he need only pay a $5 filing fee.
Ballots will be counted by computer. Hall said the Computation Center had estimated the cost of computer time at $300. Advertising is expected to cost about $85.
associate professor of psychology and chairman of the Affirmative Action board,
The filing deadline for Student Senate and class office candidates is Feb. 21.
Hall said a complete list of candidates for president and vice-president would be announced at the Student Senate meeting Wednesday night.
The elections will be March 14 and 15.
The revised version of the plan was released Friday.
"I think it's quite different. We've added quite a number of things, and a number of words have been changed and added to make it more specific." Shaffer said.
The greatest number of changes will be in administrative procedures, she said, but it is also important that the plan is a section requiring the University to work out a proposal for the Kansas Legislature requesting additional funds to support the Affirmative Action Program.
THE SECTION states that the request for funds would be made within 60 days from the date of adoption of the plan. The document also states that if funds are available, the policies would be fully implemented within 60 days.
Major Marts Close Today; Dollar Shaky
BONN, Germany (AP)—Major foreign exchange markets were closed today to give government leaders time to counter rampant speculation in the U.S. dollar.
A private emergency meeting of finance ministers from France, Britain, Germany and Italy was held late Sunday at the Paris home of French finance minister Valery Giscard d'Estamp. U.S. Treasury Undersecretary Paul Volcker joined the talks later.
There was no official word on what was discussed, but it was evident frantic efforts were being made to repair the monetary system. A hearing of U.S. dollars in the past two weeks.
West Germany, Britain, France, Italy and Japan ordered their foreign money markets closed. There were reports that a monetary conference would be held soon.
in a speech sponsored by the senior class.
About 400 persons attended the speech.
William Eberle, President Nixon's trade ambassador, was reported to have left Tokyo for Washington after warning the Japanese of possible unilateral U.S. actions that could charge, unless Tokyo helps American goods get free access to Japanese markets.
Pressure intensified on Japan to revalue its yen upward and take other steps. Washington wants within 90 days to help America get its trade balance out of the red.
"The time limitation was added at the suggestion of the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights," Shaffer said, "and we feel this strengthens the plan."
Shaffer said that some of the guidelines within the plan were already in operation throughout the University but that they did not provide guarantees to their effectiveness in the future.
"We didn't really worry about what was in effect now," she said.
"The plan was truly a cooperative effort by everyone on the board." Shaffer said, "No one person could have known about all the areas."
SHAFFER SAID she thought the revised plan would influence the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, which currently is investigating complaints with a complaint charging sex discrimination. The complaint was filed by a group of University of Kansas Women's Center.
The major elements of the plan would affect the University on a long-term basis, she said, but they could become visible within the next year.
"We do suggest that the goals and timetable be set for next year's recruiting so that there should be a noticeable increase in the number of staff and minorities on the faculty," Shaffer said.
The biggest change resulting from adoption of the document at the University would be in the monitoring of hiring and retention policies, a director of Affirmative Action for Women.
Gilham said she thought most of the changes in the plan involved writing rather than reading.
"ONE THING that that's missing from this plan is a set of goals and a timetable," Gilham said. "We've had some faith that the Department of Health, Education and Welfare must to KU to establish the goals and timetable, since the goals must be added before final approval is given by the Chancellor."
"I don't think that the revised plan is all that different from the original," she said.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said she taught the major change in the plan was in her early 20s.
nat different from the original," she said. Gilham said the plan was prohibitive because it was expressed in negative terms and Affirmative Action was a positive plan.
“Perhaps the most awesome responsibility assigned to Congress is that of deciding whether our nation goes to war. This power was abrogated in the years that preceded Vietnam in the face of overwhelming presidential initiative,” he said.
"We removed some philosophical phrases from the original and converted it to an English translation."
Eagleton said that the executive branch had also encroached on other constitutional rights.
Some serious examples, he said, were what he termed the unprecedented use of executive privilege, the impoundment by Congress and the need for Senate ratification.
EAGLETON BRIEFLY summarized a bill he introduced in the last session that would require specific authorization before military forces and send armed forces into a hostile situation.
He said the act would also grant the President authority to take emergency action to defend the United States or U.S. forces and citizens abroad, but only in three carefully defined emergency situations: an attack on the United States, an attack on U.S. military forces stationed abroad or the threat of threatened American citizens abroad.
If the President invokes any of these provisions, Engleton said, he would have to come to Congress immediately with ample justification for his action. His authority to act in an emergency would not extend beyond without congressional approval, he said.
THE ACT would allow Congress to decide whether to authorize hostilities before they occur. (The state of Louisiana is a contested one.)
in the difficult position of either ratifying or
rejecting presidentially initiated hostilities.
"The War Powers Bill would encourage the President to examine carefully with Congress any agreement that might indicate a future commitment to war," Eagleton said. "The President, knowing that the American public support, would be less willing to consult America without prior consultation with the representatives of the people."
He said that Congress should also assert its review powers by reaffirming or recommending rejection of existing treaties and commitments.
In a 45-minute question-and-answer session after his speech, Eagleton said presidential impoundment of funds might in turn lead to more spending priorities and budget ecology.
EAGLETON WARNED that if Congress continued its reluctance to use its constitutional power and if citizens remained unconcerned," then the Constitution of the United States will be compromised and the voice of American people may well not be heard."
He said that although senators had initiated law suits this year to force the President to spend money allocated by Congress, he thought the courts would be likely duck the problem. It's basically a fight between the President and Congress, he said.
**enacted, the War Powers (Bill) will also work to encourage the President and Congress to participate together in determent of insurgent or combat commitments should be." Earleston said.
Eagleton squelched rumors that he might run for the Presidency in 1978 but tabbed Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., as the probable Democratic candidate.
Budget Cuts Confuse Local Loan Situation
Domestic budget cuts proposed for next year by President Nikon could hamper Lawrence's N neighborhood Development Department (NDP), according to Mayor John Emick.
By CHUCK POTTER Kansan Staff Writer
Emick said Friday that federal loan money formerly available to persons participating in Phase 3 of the NDP may be cut off this year.
"I think we'll get our grant for the NDP, but it appears that loan money may not be possible."
"We're not expecting any cutback in the grants," Schaake said. "Hopefully, additional loan money will be available. If it is available, it will be less than needed."
Phase 3 of the NDP involves the renovation of houses in East Lawrence to bring them in line with Lawrence's Minimum Housing Code standards, Emick said. Each homeowner in the program is given a grant of up to $8,500 for home improvements.
If additional money is required to bring the house up to the standards, federal loan money at an interest rate of three per cent may be requested, he said.
Don Schanke, NDP director, said Friday that the city would apply within the next several weeks for approximately $395,000 in federal grant money for Phase 3.
Schaake said that he did not believe city
officials would make revenue sharing funds available for loan purposes under Phase 3.2.
"If federal wheels weren't available, we would have to go to local lending agents, in which case interest rates would be higher," Schaake said.
Ernick said city officials had not decided but费226,800 in revenue sharing funds for the new hospital.
"I can see that the government expects us to use revenue sharing money in areas where federal aid was available before, but he won't set any avenues for it, he said."
"Right now Lawrence is in financial limbo. We don't know whether the Legislature is going to extend our half-sales tax, so we don't know where we are."
The half-cent sales tax, adopted in 1971,
resulted in $450,000 in funds for the expansion and improvement of the police and
fire departments.
"Last year the legislature extended the sales tax through 1973, and right now we're trying to get it extended indefinitely. Buford (Bufford Watson, city manager) and Nancy (Nancy Hambleton, city commissioner) are in Topeka right now working on it.
"We're all trying every way in the world to get the sales tax extended." Emick said. "If it's cut off after this, we might have to raise the property tax levy eight mills to get the money we need for the fire and police departments."
2
Monday February 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Co-op Faces '75 Deadline
The Lawrence Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association (CFCA) plant is following a compliance schedule to meet federal and state air quality standards by a 1975 deadline, according to the U.S. Department of the Air Quality Control Advisory Commission.
Gray spoke夕阳 afternoon at a fifth public information meeting in southeast Dallas, at South
Park Recreation Center.
Gray said that CFCA was leading its in-working research to combat its impact.
The plant has placed on one small tower anti pollution equipment that meets the statutory limit on particulate emission, he said, but so far no device has been developed to control emission opacity, which also is regulated by statute.
116 American ...
(Continued from page 1)
8:30 a.m. Saigon time - 6:30 p.m., Lawrence
time
THE U.S. prisoners to be freed at Loc Ninh include eight civilians. A U.S. Air Force hospital plane stood near the Saigon on March 27 to Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines.
According to Tin, the Viet Cong was ready to send a team of representatives to Bien Hoa on this morning at 5 a.m., but the South Vietnamese did not arrive until 9:30.
"There are always new problems from the Republic of Vietnam," he said. "The release at Loc Ninh will not take place as originally foreseen."
HE ALSO said the senior Viet Cong representative, Lt. Gen. Tran Van Tra, would bring up questions at a day before the meeting of the chief delegates to the Joint Military Commission.
"On our side we would like for the American prisoners to be released as soon as possible." "Tin said, "but we must follow our commitments on the release of prisoners of war."
There was no immediate indication of the suit being intended to resolve the dispute at the Bun Hon prison.
The prisoners on board the first plane out of Hanol were:
L. Cmdr. Alvarez, Santa Clara, Calif;
Capt. John W. Anderson, Portland, Orle;
L. Cmdr. Phillip N. Butler, Tulsa, Oka; L.
Fred V. Cheery, Suffolk, Va.; L. Coli.
James Q. Collins, Concord, N.C. Sgt;
James R. Cook, Wilmington, N.C.; Cmdr.
Render Crayton, Lagrange, Ga.; 1st L.
William Y. Arcuri, Yuba City, Calif;
Maj. Robert N. Daughrey, Del Rio, Tex;
Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton, Jr., Virginia
Beach, Va.; Capt. Terry M. Glenokee,
Decatur, Ala.; Capt. Peter J. Giroux,
Trunsburg, N.Y.; Col. Lawrence
Gueßner, Glasgow, Mont.; L. Col. Carley
S. Harris, Preston, MD; Capt. Edwin A. J.
Hawkeye, Birmingham, Ala.
L. Kenneth H. Higdon, San Francisco,
Calif.; Capt. Charles A. Jackson.
Charleston, W. Va; Ma; Paul A. Kari.
Columbus, Ohio; Capt. Thomas J.
Klomann, Onk Forest, III.; Cmdr. Rodney.
A Knutson, Billings, Mont.; Capt. Galand
News Briefs By the Associated Press Albert Speech
Newsman Dies
WASHINGTON-House Speaker Carl Albert summoned Congress to the battle of the budget Sunday with the charge that President Nikon has acted callously and irresponsibly in some of the cuts he has ordered. In a nationwide radio broadcast responding to Nikon's Jan. 28 budget speech, Albert said the cuts proposed by the Administration would hurt the poor, the disabled, the elderly and the disabled. He called it a budget "with its hands in its pockets and its eyes on the ground." with no compassion for the down-and-out citizens of this country,"the Oklahoma Democrat said.
SARASOTA, Fla.-David Lawrence,
editor and founder of U.S. News & World
Report and a widely syndicated columnist,
Sunday at his winter home here. He
was 83.
Lawrence, whose news career in Washington spanned 60 years and 11 presidential administrations, suffered an apparent heart attack, a spokesman said in Washington. He was dead on arrival at Sarasota Memorial Hospital.
Violence Stilled
NEW YORK CITY, NY -- Indiana Movement leaders have called a halt to violence in the Black Hills of South Dakota and indications Sunday were that members in Rapid City were obeying. Previously 37 Indians were arrested in nearby Caster for protestting waktu they considered仁慈 treatment a value an ion-changed with the desire of an enlisted three days later in Rapid City 40 Indians were arrested and charged with inciting to riot in an incident that led four mainstreet bars wrecked.
Tank Explosion
NEW YORK--The rubble covered pit of a gas storage tank on the Staten Island yielded Sunday the bodies of 28 out of the 40 workers presumed lost when the tank, a cone-shaped structure blew up. Firemen put up powerful floodlights on the rim of the giant tank to continue their search through the debris of the concrete roof that blew off and collapsed Saturday afternoon. The cause of the explosion is still unknown.
D. Kramer, Norman, Okla; LLroger G. R
Kramer, Norman, Wasj, Maj; Warren R.
Lilly, Dallas, Texas
Maj. Hayden J. Lockhard, Springfield,
Ohio; Cmdr. John B. McKayney, Filmore,
Ind.; Col. George G. McKnight, Berkeley,
Calif.; Col. Roy Madden, H., Jayward,
Illinois; Col. Joseph W. Madden,
Col. Herschel S. Morgan, Asheville, N.C.
; Col. Armand J. Myers, Eugene, Ore;
Cmdr. Dale H. Osborne, Salt Lake City,
Tahawaii; Col. Mary P. Memphis,
Tahawaii; Col. J. Pitford Jr., Nachach,
Mass.; Lt. David G. Rehmann, Lancaster,
Calif.; MaJ. Wesley D. Schierman, Lancaster,
Wash.; Cmdr. Robert H. Shumaker,
Wilmington, Pa.; Cmdr. William M.
Schumaker, Wilmington, Pa.; Vohden,
Springfield, N.J.; Capt. Walter E.
Wilber, Miltena, Pa.
Susan Jackson, an employee of the air quality control division of the Kansas Department of Health, explained that opacity meant the ability of light to pass through the emission particles. She said that although a plant could meet the particulate要求 as much as the particles could be so small as to not meet oasis standards.
Gray said CFCA would not put control devices on the towers until it could develop equipment to control opacity. They are doing so on their own, he says. They must also be provisioned on meeting opacity for having compiled to particulate emission standards.
Gray also discussed two bills currently before the Kansas Legislature which concern disclosure of emission data. At present, Gray's division cannot disclose any data which would identify the company involved. One bill would require full disclosure of all data and the other would protect trade secrets.
Gray said that if environmental control records become open to public scrutiny, the division would anticipate a hardship in management, especially from private industry.
She compared the emissions of the CFCA plant, 70 per cent of which are micronic size, to talcum powder and said they tended to float and remain visible longer than larger particles which had a greater velocity to fall.
Coed Hall Applications Accepted Again Today
Applications for residence in a coed scholarship hall planned for next year will be considered again as of today, in accordance with a decision made Friday by students who have already signed contracts for the hall.
Applications are available in the Office of
the Dean of Men and Women and will be due
The students met at Sellards Hall to discuss the problem after the University Housing Staff gave them the option of finding enough qualified people to fill the hall or dropping the coed hall proposal for the 1973-74 school year.
A shortage of people to fill Stephenson Hall for next year necessitated the decision by the students. Forty-three persons, 19 women and 24 men, have now signed contracts to live in the hall which has a capacity of 800 boarding students staff. Stephenson could not be run at the present rate per student if the hall was not full.
The selection process will be reopened for both men and women. Although there is now an alternate list of 11 men, it is not known whether all of these men are still planning to sign contracts if contracts are offered. There is no alternate list.
Applicants will be judged on the same basis as those already selected. All applicants must have had at least one semester of residence in a scholarship hall.
A committee composed of students from the eight scholarship halls, Lourna Grorn, assistant dean of women, and Frank Bencivengo, assistant to the dean men, interview each applicant, and proctor or housemanager of the applicant's hall.
The selection committee will then judge the applicants on performance in their present halls and the interest they show in the coed hall.
The students who have already signed contracts will meet again Feb. 22 to discuss the results of selection and to take final action on the hall.
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA
Night of the Hunter
directed by Charles Laughton Warriner Starring Robert Mottley Peter Graves Shelley Wintner-Lillian Gish
Classical Films
Classical Prints
Woodruff 7:30 & 9:15
Wednesday, Feb. 14 75c
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Woodruff
7:00 & 9:30
February 16 & 17
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75c
King Kong
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Episode three of
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directed by
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music by
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Woodruff
Monday, Feb. 12
Ballroom
Tuesday, Feb. 13
Science Fiction Films
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Officials Clarify Night Parking For the Union
Inquiries about parking and access to the Kansas Union in the evening have prompted Mike Thomas, director of traffic and security at the University of Kansas to offer several suggestions for Union natrons.
Thomas recommended that those who drive to the Union in the evenings use the parking lot at 13th and Oread street (R) between Water Street and Union behind the Union (X Zone). No permits are required to park in these two lots after 3:30 p.m. weekdays and any time on weekends. Both lots have lighting recently was added on Jayhawk Boulevard to
Additional parking may be found after 3:50 p.m. in T Zone, located on the east sides of Danfort Chapel, Fraser Hall and Blake Hall. This parking area is restricted during the day, but any motorist may use these lots after 4:45 p.m. weekdays and any time on weekends, according to Thomas.
ENGINEERS
The Peace Corps can snow you how to use your knowledge where it will do the most good. Recruiters at Engineering Placement Office (Marvin Hall), Feb. 21 (Wed.). Sign up for interview.
Although R Zone is closest to the Union, X Zone is much larger and is connected to the Union by a well-lit and heated Annapurna tunnel under Mississippi Street.
HIKING BOOTS
For the finest in lightweight trail boots, see the Alps from Fabiano, a durable yet flexible boot that features a sturdy midsole for long wear and padded lining for comfort and warmth. The gray for men and women. Also red and green for women. $25.
assist pedestrians approaching the front of the Union.
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1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
To become a candidate:
Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 14.
In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate.
On March 14 and 15, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected.
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
---
Monday, February 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
ALEXANDER J. BARNARD
Kansan Staff Photo by DAN LAUING
Chancellor Raymond Nichols and Honoree Barry Bingham Sr.
Bingham was the recipient, on his birthday, of the William Allen White Foundation Award for service to journalism . . .
The oldest University of Kansas sorority and fraternity will celebrate their first centennial this year, according to officers from the Phi sorority and Beta Theta Pi fraternity.
Pi Phis, Betas Observe Centennial
Both local chapters sprang from the Degree of the Oread Society, a coeducational organization founded in the early days of KU.
Palmer said that the celebration would include a buffet dinner at the Pla Beta Phi house and a luncheon in the Kansas Union, but that the plans were not definite.
Neither Palmer nor John Brooks,
Leawood junior and historian of Beta Theta
Pi, knew of any combined celebration being
planned by the two organizations.
Both plan celebrations. Three hundred alumni are expected to attend PBI Beta Phi activities March 31 and April, according to the group's annual budget, junior and president of the local chanceler.
The national sorority treasurer will attend. Palmer said.
Brooks said Beta Theta Pi planned a celebration with no fewer than 200 of the local chapter's 600 to 800 aluml. He said his work was done by the Ima Im and the Ramada Ima in Lawrence.
The Alpha Nu chapter of Beta Theta Pi was founded January 8, 1873. In 1912 it became the first fraternity at KU to move into a house, he said.
Editor Supports News Council
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Staff Writer
Barry Bingham Sr., national honoree of the William Allen White Foundation for distinguished services to journalism, made a strong plea Saturday to major news media for their endorsement of a national press council
Bingham spoke at a luncheon at which a William Allen White medallion was presented to him by Edward B. Bassett, an attorney in the county of Danaudation and dean of the School of Journalism.
Bingham, chairman of the board of directors of the Louisville Counter-Journal and a fellow at 150 guests that there had been a decline in the public's confidence in the news media. He quoted statistics from Harris Poll that, "The average age of a gate, that had widened in the past six years,"
This growing public skepticism about
Voice Recital
Campus Briefs
Maribeth Kirchhoff, instructor in voice at the University of Kansas, will present a recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall, as a part of the Faculty Recital Series. For her recital, Kirchhoff will sing works by Bach, Brahms, Humperdinck, Delibes, Puccini and Ives. The recital is open to the public.
Rights Hearing
Lawrence women's groups will provide transportation by car to Topeka Tuesday for a hearing before the House Federal and State Affairs Committee on a motion to repeal Kanas' ratification of the equal rights amendment. Cars will leave at 1 p.m. from the United Ministries Center, 12th and Oread. The hearing will be at 2:45 p.m.
The Lawrence Corvette Club will meet at 7 p.m. today at Towner Chevrolet店, 738 New Hampshire. Movies from the B. F. Goodrich Company will be shown.
Corvette Club
Music Therapy
The Music Therapy Club will meet at 8 p.m. today in 344 Haworth Hall. The purpose of the meeting will be to work on public relations information.
news disseminated by both print and broadcast media has to be counteracted by visible and dramatic steps to win a decent public trust," he said.
BINGHAM SAID HE rejected the idea that public disillusionment with the press was part of a general disillusionment with religion, government and education.
"Agnew didn't create anything new with his speech—he just sparked off a powder bag of public mistrust that was already on the way to him." Agnew's attacks on the press in 1969.
Stating the case for a national press council, Bingham, a member of the Twentieth Century Fund committee, which is working for the establishment of the council, was an ardent supporter of nationals who opposed the idea of a council were ignorant of how it would operate.
The proposed national press or "news" council would concern itself with complaints regarding fairness and accuracy in news reporting in the United States and would involve only the wholesalers of news, Bingham said.
HE NAMED SUCH national suppliers of news as the Associated Press, United Press International, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times and major television networks. Bingham said that reactions to a national council had not been enthusiastic in all instances.
Decrying what he called "an instant defensiveness" on the part of some of the news media that would be reviewed, he said. He noted that the news examined complaints regarding news content, would have no power to compel the divulging of information and would not seek
All council hearings would be public, be said, and no punishment of any kind would be meted. The council would obtain a legal warrant to disorientant so media would be protected he said.
Bingham had be stressed that the council would accept no financial support from the government.
an independent and privacify body, seeking nothing from the media except a certain message.
THE COUNCIL would comprise 15 members, he said, six of whom would be newsmen and none of whom would be lawyers. He also appointed whose work the council would review
the proposed council a chance to prove itself. If it proved unworkable, the only loss would be to foundations sponsoring the council, be said.
Bingham called upon news media to give
If, on the other hand, the council restored public trust in the news media and brought about better journalism, "this is a historic historical breakthrough," Bingham said.
Watkins Museum Drive Exceeds Phase 1 Goal
The fund drive for the Elizabeth M. Watkins Museum has surpassed the goal for its first phase by collecting more than 50,000 items, the chairman of the drive, said Friday.
However, about 70 of the 350 pledge cards for phase one have not been turned in, Andrews said. In phase one, the drive was made up on people believed most able to contribute.
In phase two of the campaign, he said, the drive will be opened to the entire community. He said about 600 pledge cards naming persons thought to be possible contributors would serve as a core from which the solicitors would work.
No goal has been set for phase two of the campaign, Andrews said, because the total cost of the museum is not yet known. The first $200,000 was for the basic renovation of the building, he said. The building is situated at 11th and Massachusetts streets, which once served as the city hall. The cost estimate for the project, cost estimate have been made, will be funded by the second phase of the campaign, Andrews said.
After it is completed, the museum will contain the Douglas County Historical Society Museum and the Kansas All-Sports Hall of Fame.
County Heart Association Needs Campaign Volunteers
Curtis Biesinger, professor of architecture and urban design, is the architect for the project. The displays will be planned by Charles Eldredge, director of the KU Museum of Art, and Philip Humphrey, director of the Museum of Natural History,
Humphrey said that Watkins Museum would borrow displays from the KU Art Museum and the Museum of Natural History. Other displays would come from the Douglas County Historical Society Museum, which is now housed in the Lawrence Police Station, 745 Vermont, he said.
Engineering
Marcum said the Heart Fund volunteers will also distribute heart information in the city in an effort to help the death rate from heart attacks. He said that 53 percent of all deaths in the United States are caused by heart diseases.
The Douglas County Heart Association has set a goal of $12,000 for this year's fundraising effort.
Interviews
Marcum said that businesses would be contacted by mail and asked to donate. Mailers will also be sent to all University of Kansas professors.
The Heart Fund will be assisted by two
Larry Marcum, campaign chairman, said Sunday that the Heart Fund volunteers were still in the process of finding more donors for the campaign drive later this month.
Engineering students may sign up for interviews with any of the following companies in Room 113 Marvin H. Jackson (Xumbe Hill), Ofl, Ecxon, Harmark Carr Company
"Our drive will end on Feb. 25, which is National Heart Sunday," Marcuccar said "On Heart Sunday we will have a door-to-door campaign to solicit donations."
KU Greek houses, Marcum said. The Alpha Phi sorority and the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity have volunteered to help with the campaign.
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Eve. 7:20, 9:30
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Brooks said that the present house, at 1425 Tennessee St., was built by John Palmer Usher, Secretary of the Interior under Abraham Lincoln. Before moving into the present house, the Betas lived at 1537 Tennessee. Brooks said.
The Alpha chapter of Pi Beta Phi, the third oldest chapter of the national sorority,
was founded on April 1, 1873, with eight members. The chapter met in the music room of old Fraser Hall until 1906 when it became the first sorority at KU to build a house. The house, situated at 1246 Oread, became the Continuing Education Center when the sorority moved to 1612 W. 15th Street, in 1962.
Feminist Speakers Bureau
Now available to speak to your group on Topics of Womens Liberation.
Women's Coalition Birth Control
Women's Health Abortion
Women's Roles Rape
Lesbianism Women's Sexuality
Sexism Self Defense
Women's Liberation Movement
Women's Liberation Movement
Call Barb Krasne 843-0410
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Salutations at the Supremest Lotus Feet of Compassion, Wisdom and Purest Love
His Disciple Mahatma Ji Parlokanand will speak.
Guru Maharaji Ji, 15 years old Perfect Master has given His Mercy for a Most Holy Satsang discourse.
MONDAY NIGHT 7:30
Forum Room Kansas Union
February 12, 1973
SENATE TREASURERS OFFICE
ATTENTION!!
Organizations Funded by Student Senate Activities Fund
The President, Vice President and Treasurer of all organizations funded by the Student Senate Activities Fund MUST sign a Capital Disposition Contract in the Senate Treasurer's office (104 B Kansas Union) on February 13, 14, or 15, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Organizations which fail to meet the 5:00 p.m., February 15 deadline will have their funds FROZEN.
4
Monday, February 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Shield Newsmen
"In this question, therefore, there is no medium between servitude and license. In order to enjoy the instressible benefits that liberty of the press ensures, it must be submit to the inevitable evil that it creates."
The "inestimable benefits" that liberty of the press provides are being challenged today, a result of the recent Supreme Court ruling that the First Amendment does not protect newsmen from being forced to divulge information or sources. Information gained in confidence by members of the press will no longer be protected from forced exposure in Kansas if the legislature does not pass a proposed shield law.
A bill now under consideration in the Kansas Senate would completely protect persons employed by or connected with the news media from being forced to reveal confidential sources in testimony to a grand jury.
A house shield bill, however,
would provide only a qualified
protection. No reporter or editor
would be forced to testify unless the
party seeking the information could
demonstrate that it was clearly
violating the constitution of law, that it could not be obtained by alternative means and that it was of compelling and overriding public interest.
The senate bill appears superior because, lacking qualifications, it would guarantee that newsmen could continue in their most important task—seeking the truth. Access to the truth, no matter how ugly the truth may be, is vital to our society. Because they live in a democracy, citizens of the United States need to know the truth to
Alexis de Tocqueville
formulate accurate opinions and to make responsible decisions.
Sometimes a news source offers to give a reporter certain information crucial to a complete story only if the reporter agrees not to reveal his identity. Without a shield law, such sources may risk their jobs, reputations and even their lives by giving information if the reporter is later forced to divulge their identity. A news reporter or citizen would jeopardize a relationship with a news source to gain this information. And even fewer could afford to go to jail to protect their sources.
John Stuart Mill, in an essay on liberty of thought and discussion, struck down the notion that truth will always triumph over persecution. "Men are no more zealous for truth than they often are for error," he wrote, "and a sufficient application of legal or even of social penalties will generally succeed in stopping the propagation of either." The real advantage truth has, he wrote, is that it may be extinguished many times, but generally will be rediscovered until it reappears and is revealed under favorable circumstances.
Therefore, we must not put obstacles in the way of those whose business it is to seek the truth. The failure to pass a shield law would make the search for truth almost impossible.
James J. Kilpatrick
—Barbara Spurlock
Sen. Buckley Visits Wonderland
WASHINGTON—Janes Lane Buckley came to the United States Senate two years ago, until that very day, hour, and hour, he attended the office of any sort; he had never even camped before, except to help brother Bill in his quixotic bid to become mayor of New York. The unthinkable: Running on the uninhabitable: Running on the Conservative party ticket, he had won the seat held in other years in luminaries as Robert Kemped.
in the current issue of the National Review, commenting upon the institution of the Senate. He likes it. But after two years, he left. But then, with the grave perplexity of Alice playing grovet with the Queen.
Now Buckley has written a small reflective essay, published
Buckley's piece is certain to become a classic in his field. He is aided by the Senate, but it is the proaches his elders as innocently as Little Miss Mark invading a crap game. What, he wonders, is going to happen? James, that is called a unanimous consent agreement.
WATERGATE
WATERGATE
WATERGATE
WATERGATE
Hanoi Plotted Post-Truce Push
WASHINGTON - In secret testimony, Adm. Thomas Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has told how the North Vietnamese assassinated village leaders in the South, deployed to protect and prevent for "military action" to exploit the cease-fire.
Jack Anderson
His testimony dealt with preparations made in October when the North Vietnamese first anticipated a cease-fire. But he indicated tersely that similar preparations had been started before the final signing last month.
action when the cease-fire was achieved.
Testifying behind closed doors on the eve of the signing, he told the House. Appropriations Committee discussions that in some areas, they (Communist forces) have received instructions to go out with their maximum capability until a cease-fire is signed."
He described how the Communists had reacted in October. "Just prior to the Oct. 31 proposed cease-fire," he said, and he urged the redresses their forces in such a way that they could exploit the cease-fire by such things as assassinating the leaders in the villages throughout the area so the local control of the local governments.
"The heavy resupply of water materials was apparently from Soviet Russia as well as from China. They began to expand their storage areas, step up their production and begin to deploy about 120 tanks and a large amount of artillery and anti-aircraft."
Later, Rep. Elford Cederberg,
R-Mich., questioned him about
the tanks." You said there are 100
people killed by the tanker that
is correct?" he asked.
"Yes sir," agreed Moorer.
"At the same time, they proposed to retain the areas they had captured so far and hold their main force units in such a way that they could reft them and prepare them for further military
"Are those tanks that were there before the closing of Haiphong," asked Cederberg, "and they come down through China?"
"I think," said the admiral, "they could probably have come down through China."
nutuer warfare in South Vietnam" asked Rep. William Minshall, R-Ohio.
He then gave more details about the flow of supplies from China. The North Vietnamese, he said, sent assistance from the Chinese."
"As a matter of fact," he said, "north of the border at Ping Hsing just inside China they receive just mountains of supplies . Then they feed them across the border."
"What is the capability of the North Vietnamese now to conduct
The stocky, grazing admiral was less concerned about revealing this in secret than he had to tell his captain a short answer to your question," he replied, "by saying I do not think that they, as of this moment, have the capability for them to call main force unit action."
"The they are now conserving their resources, protecting main force units which comprise about 15 divisions and simply devoting themselves to harassment and actions of that kind. We find, for instance, that many of the battalions are at half strength, and the effects of the heavy ground fighting since the overtaken allotted their overall capability."
the legislative business as possible on a two-year cycle: Let committees work on bills in the odd-numbered years, affording ample time for hearings and for public education; and let the two houses vote upon the reported bills in the even-numbered years. Such a deliberate pace might not be sufficient for members to return to their States "to listen and to observe."
"I would like to show the committee now some pictures of the POW camps in Hanoi, because there was quite a bit of the effect that they had been attacked. This is not the case."
Moorer showed the congressmen classified pictures of the POW camps in North Vietnam which contradicted reports that they had suffered bomb damage from the B-52 raids.
territory. Of further significance,
they went down in the immediate vicinity of Hanoi, because that was where the concentration of surface-to-air missiles was found.
Referring to the 15 big bombers shot down in the raids, he said, "Five of the crews bailed out in the war." He went down in North Vietnam.
The pictures showed no bomb craters or other damage.
"MIGs did not destroy any B-52s. Neither did anti-aircraft fire. We have only one indication that
In the thickets of the committee system, the junior senator from New York came to appreciate the staggening volume of business that coursed through the building he learned. newcomers have learned before him, the pervasive influence wielded by committee staffs. He discovered that the focus of a bill could dissolve like the smile of a child, and that the mind that bills did not always mean what they seemed to mean.
a B-12 may be damaged slightly by anti-aircraft. I would point out that the SA-2 was designed to shoot down the B-2S. Over 1,000 SAMs were fired during this period. These SAMs are over 30 feet long. The pilots call them telephone poles."
Buckley, "will be enacted with little real examination by most of the senators who will have to vote yea or may on them, and with less than adequate comprehension of what the bill involves." All too often a senator's vote is based on an inadequate summary position, he said, plus whispering to colleagues who may be qualified to the dark. The bell rings for a rollcall, and votes must be cast.
Copyright, 1973.
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
In Alice's Looking-Glass World, as the Queen explained, "It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place." So, too, with the Senate. Buckley remains amazed at the success of the flash-flood. One day the floor is quiet. The next day some bill comes along that may involve "new programs that will have an enormous impact on American society, on the states, or on the economy, programs that in time will multimillion-dollar commitments."
Buckley is among the most modest men in public life. Respectfully, as becomes a church solitary officer 99 prima donna, he pleads for the assistance of office space. "At the root of most of the problems of the Senate is the enormous expansion of federal activities in recent years." The senator who consciously tries to keep up with the demands that a woman of only seventy has to handle He needs help that the present system does not provide.
"Yet many of these bills." said
Buckley advances a novel suggestion, to place as much of
For all the frustrations—Buckley finds his days are splintered every morning before he has time to look at them—the Senate offers even the new public policy. To be sure, it "is not an institution to which the impatient should gravitate." But the senator who masters his job can feed his ideas "into the nation's informational blood," including, is all in all, "a good place to be." And those who know this quiet and thoughtful senator from New York may agree that it is good to have him there.
Couple Taxes IRS's Patience Ferrets Out Doubtful Methods
(C) 1973 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK—The merits of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Long's case against the Internal Revenue Service will have to be decided by the courts, but in the meantime Mr. Long is giving them an irritating, frustrating and costly time of it.
Frustrating the IRS is only fair, said Long, a Bellevue, Wash., real estate man, because that same technique has become one of the specialities of the IRS and it should not be so. He's out not only to prove his case but also to restrain the IRS.
"It's all we do," the Longs said in an interview. "It's bad to happen to us today or to you today, but it is worse for it to me."
And so they are determined to make a case for themselves and the pubile.
Ever since he and his wife, a 30-year-old graduate student who specializes in analyzing data, were informed by the IRS more than once, they earned $8,144 in taxes, they have been on the trail of the IRS.
In pursuit of their goal they
already have spent $10,000 of their own money in publicizing the case, in newspaper ads and research, in trips to Washington, in postage for letters to others who have been "clobbered by the IRS" or in digging up information about the IRS from its own files.
Their search into IRS files followed a court ruling in favor of the Longs last September that opened sections of the Internal Revenue Service to public scrutiny. The Longs had been denied the information.
In their research, the Longs already have revealed IRS procedures and practices that help prevent serious problems. Among them are:
—In contested cases, percentage of tax settled for in 1974 and not paid in 1971. How you fare may depend upon where you live. In Newark, N.J., settlements averaged 50 dollars; in Washington, 24 cents.
—On the average, settlements with individuals were for 34 cents on the dollar in 1871 compared to the dollar on the dollar for corporations.
Smug '50s Bred Social Casualties
WASHINGTON — Things are better for Sandy now, but a few years ago she was describing herself as a 37-year-old virgin with five children. After 17 years and seven months, her marriage
couldn't drive a car; I was terrified to get out of the shower. Some day I wish I could write a handbook for women who get this type of depression. I went to my intermist and he made a pass at
---
Nicholas von Hoffman
had broken up when her husband married an 18-year-old Miss Doodles.
"I was a basket case," Sandy says of that period of her life. "One day I was afraid I was going to die and another day I was afraid I wasn't going to die... I stayed in bed for a year. I
me. To show you how low my ego was, I was flattered."
apart later. She, by her own estimate, is more fortunate than other women she knows who are in the same fix. Sandy can see no future for herself except money or low-paying, dead-end jobs.
Sandy (not her real name) is a casualty of the early 1950s, the Eisenhower years of togetherness and commercial domesticity. She was born to marry too soon, have too many children and see their lives fall
She points out that, although she gave up a career to get married and put in her whole adult life being a wife, mother and housekeeper, she isn't eligible for Social Security and she now has no readily available job that allows her. Most tangible assets are what she and her ex-husband may realize on a partial equity from the sale of their suburban salt level.
A woman of throat-voiced vitality, Sandy says, "happen to be lucky. I am still good-looking in spite of having five children and I've got my confidence back."
"Lacky" is the word to. In the course of coming out of what she refers to as her trauma, Sandy went through a number of shrinks
At length she lucked into a miraculous young shrink who understood it was her life situation that kept her in a state of mad lethargic depression. He actually made house calls, got medical care and helped her to deal with her unloving children.
who she says were crazier than she and who did nothing for her but give her pills. "I 'want physically activated but I panicked if I didn't have them in the house."
They were reared in the ambiance of Dr. Spock, the Little League and slumber parties, and it turned out that Sandy rues every one of the 20,000 dipens calculated that she had washed.
HI, UNICORN!
HOW ARE YOU,
TODAY?
OH, ABOUT AS
WELL AS CAN BE
EXPECTED, I GUESS
HE KIND OF
BRIGHTENS
UP YOUR WHOLE
DAY, DOESN'T HE?
Griff and the Unicorn
By Sokoloff
HI, UNICORN!
HOW ARE YOU,
TODAY?
HE KIND OF
BRIGHTENS
UP YOUR WHOLE
DAY, DOESN'T HE?
Long is an outraged man. He said that the IRS, as a matter of policy, challenges many individual and small business returns, "not because there is a question of them being wrong but simply to obtain additional funds for the IRS."
The oldest son, an unfocused 21 year old, does nothing. After repeated attempts to drive him from the house, she changed the locks on the doors. He still comes around for money. Another son was sent to his father in hope he would come home and help him from becoming a drug addict. Sandy says that one of her daughters is a slob who spends her days washing her hair, cooking, eating what she cooks and never cleaning up after herself; a second daughter went to see her father on a holiday and he kept her. She has disappeared and hasn't been seen by mother with one grade-school child upon whom she still dates, but you get the feeling that one day that child tow will fall Sandy.
The two of them go on together, while Sandy picks her way through the leaver to the kitchen to her to be a procession of alcoholics, sexual impotents, women-haters, mama's boys and playful kiddos "who never held a job and mooch food," I mooch my booze and mooch food."
In doing so, he said, the IRS uses arbitrary interpretations of its rules and then attempts to deny the taxpayer access to those rules. It harasses, and perhaps even threatens jeopardy assessments, he said. That was so in his case. he added.
For the rest, Sandy is a member of one of those parents-withpartners clubs. She hopes she is of the last generation to get trapped by playing model American wife and mother.
Long, long slight and grazing at 56,
owns, rents or manages duplex
houses, most of which were built
in the 1970s so do so, he has set
up corporations
]
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
As an officer in the corporations, he has for the past 12 months been a full-time financial month. In addition, he has been deducting such costs as insurance, telephone charges, education, financial publications and the like.
The IRS viewed two of these corporations as personal holding companies, and high taxes because they often are used, in the words of an IRS spokesman, "as incorporated poketbooks," mainly by the
Long said that in restating his tax return, IRS agents had reduced his wages to $150 a month and had denied him many complaints. "In fact," he said, they threatened to seize his property if he didn't agree.
Concerning the threat of a jeopardy assessment, or seizure, the IRS said. "The last thing we try to ever do is set property, make account or things like that. We do it only as a last resort."
Amplification of the details must await a court case, but the basic dispute appears to center on Long's decision as head of the own salary and then use it as a deduction on his corporate taxes.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas, 1907 N. Broadway, year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates $8.50 for a paid address, paid postage at Lawrence, KA. 60044. Accommodations, goods, services and students without regard to color, race, gender or nationality are not necessarily those pressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State University of Kansas.
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor .. Suanne Shaw
Editor .. Joe Yeerman
Editorial Editor .. Bob Simpson
Campus Editor .. Bob Simpson
News Editor .. Duncan, John
Ainta Knopf .. Jo Zauza
Copy Chiefs .. Jozanna
Ginnio Mike .. Linda Schidt
Assst. Campus Editors .. Rohm Groom
Feature Editor .. Kevin Shaver
Entertainment Editor .. Emerson Lynn
Features Editor .. Kevin Shaver
Wire Editors .. The Writers
Makeup Editor .. Ginnio Mike
Makeup Editor .. Rohm Groom
Picture Editor .. Hal Hatters
Photographers .. Ed Lallo
Cartoonists .. Laing Chris
Carpenter .. Steve Carpenter;
Editorial Writer .. John Ballow,
Christopher Reiss; Rowan
Eric Kramer; Linda Schidt.
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Advisor Mel Adams
Admin Merging Manager Chuck Gillespie
Ant Bus. Manager Chris Gillespie
Ant Adj. Mgr Sue Wood
Adj. Mgr Kate Willebrand
Promotional Mgr Mike Hilarlea
Promotional Mgr Michelle
s
st e g r o d s.
s n t y o t o
e r e m n d i s o u t o b l e d n c e s i m is
University Daily Kansar
Monday, February 12, 1973
5
'Bartok Quartet' Displays Virtuosity
By ROGER OELSCHLAEGER
of
demic-
lation
$6 a
class
60044
and
to all
color,
a ex-
se of
State
The Bartok Quartet was received by an enthusiastic audience last Friday night in Swarthout Recital Hall. Formed in 1924, the quartet champion the works of the late Hungarian composer Bela Bartok, the quartet has become one of the foremost on the international scene, and, judging from its self-recognition, is certainly deserving of this recognition.
1915
Dirks
dossell
nosser
Wood
unders
drethr
wysart
Volinists Peter Komlos and Sander Devich, violist Gema Nethm, and cellist Karoly Bolvay are all technical masters of their instruments, but their ability to play as an ensemble is what makes them a great pleasure to hear.
The first work on the program was better. Quarter G. M. major. Milbaugh place, pieces.
represents Mozart's first attempt in the medium, it is not without the marks of genius in both design of melody and counterpoint. It is a piece of charming subtleties, which the Bartok Quartet played with exceptional deftness and sensitivity. The group gave the Andante cantabile a quintetting quintet that leaped and was with a youthful exuberance, although it never lost its air of dignity for a moment.
In the finale, however, the tone became one of a cheerful Allegro Hungarian style, which the quartet played well in a solid testimony to its flexibility.
The final offering of the night which, according to the quartet, was supposed to have been a piece by Bartok but which the program said was otherwise, (to the initial disappointment of myself and many others, the program was triumphant in its charge)
1978
Kansan Photo by CARL G. DAVAZ JR.
'Weather Report' Performed at Hoch
. . . Sparse crowd gave warm response
After being called back for bows three times, the musicians played an encore of Mozart's Minutoft from the "Hunt" Quartet. They displayed virtuosity on a set of loops, perfect intonation, and above all feeling for ensemble that is extremely rare.
'Weather Report'Plays Unpunctuated Sentence'
If there was a disappointment to the concert, it was only that they did not play the music of their namesake. What they did not do was give the audience. There cannot be any disappointment in that.
There are pleasant surprises in life and the Weather Report concert Friday night was one of them. The loyal juju buffs and adventurous newcomers who didn't quite know the floor of Hoch responded warmly to the best performances given here this year.
The sami crowd waited patiently during a 50-minute delay that was caused by a transportation dilemma in New York. The anxious listeners shouted a spontaneous chant as they wandered through the stage. Leader Joe Zawinul stick a lit of incense and placed it on his electric piano while the other checked the working condition of their instruments. Weather Report amazed the crowd with its creative and intriguing early an hour before taking a short break.
By STEVE BUSSER Kansan Reviewer
While sipping on a little scotch and soda, Zeinil described what Weather Report was.
"What ever happens, man, we just play. We don't think about living or doing anything when we're out there, we just play as it comes," he said. Wayne Shorter, who played reeds, said the group's musical efforts were like an "unpunctuated sentence." Our music is a growing and building
quick departure from them," added Waveney.
THE SECOND SET was loaded with more improvisation by the talented artists, who kept the audience members enthralled with their intense sounds. Percussionist Dom Baker played instruments during the nights. He randomly picked up and shook, wiggled, scratched and scraped weird looking things spread on a table before him. Drummer Eric Grafft held his own superbly as the others blended their instruments to give a creative mix.
This began with two live, flirtatious movements full of surprising rhythms and impressionistic colorings. The third movement was a thick, night, was a thick, languid song of quiet lament, played flawlessly with a tone which filled every pore in the room. The final music is passionate and passionate, and at what the quiver set could have done I played it Bartok.
was the Quartet in G minor, Op. 10, by Claude Debussy.
Miroslay Vitus swapped back and forth from bass guitar to bass fiddle to supply the group with his own inventive efforts. Shorter and Zawiml complemented each other's playing as they filled in the rest of Weather Reef's explosive performance.
For those who were missed the concert or don't intend to look into this group your email address is not yet available.
WEATHER REPORT come their third album three days before Friday's concert. Much of the material they played Friday was from the album. When it is released on March 10, 1973 there will be quite a few albums sold to those who went to the concert at KU.
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Singer and songwriter Ron Crick will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Ballroom in a free concert sponsored by SUA.
"Crick's performance will be a come and sit on the floor affair," said Kenku-
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Crick is not new to the area. After completing college in 1969, crick became half of a folk duo in Kansas City, known as "Kelly and Crick."
You Say Your Knits Are All Bent Out of Shape?
schek, shek sophomore and SUA board member. "His style is very relaxed."
For baggies pleated pants and 40"" bells there's only one store in town.
Showing the wrist and hand gestures.
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THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents
THE MATCHMAKER
by Thornton Wilder
❤️
February 15, 16, 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
February 18 - Matinee
2:30 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K. U. students will receive free reserve seat ticket with Certificate of Registration
X
6
Monday, February 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
'Hawks Suffer Third Big Eight Loss
Nebraska was supposed to be easy. Kansas coned Ted Owens knew it. His players knew it, too, but the action probably worked. But the way things rolled, the Cornshucks weren't.
They out-shot, out-played, and more importantly, out-scored the Jayhawks Saturday night at his Duluth house before the Hawks lost their third loss in the NLEE race. 59-46.
KU now stands 3-3 in the conference and 7-11 overall going into Tuesday's contest in Texas.
The thing that most likely killed the Jaylwhacks was the fact that they were really afraid of him.
'Hawks had played the toughest five teams in the Big Eight and beat three of them. In doing so they had established themselves as a title contender. They were also beginning to play up to their pre-season team as a young, but highly talented team.
But, Saturday night they took Nebraska too easily and things changed.
"You know it's funny," Owens said after the game. "I worried like every thing about this. We aren't at that point that we can be ready to win and win at this level. We aren't that good.
5
"It just always happens in sports this way. If you don't have respect for the other team, it hurts."
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Wilson Barrow (44) Scrambles for Points
His second half scoring was not enough for Jayhawks . . .
Palmer Wins Classic; Victory Drought Ends
He bolted past Nicklaus—the man who's replaced him as the game's premier performer—with a two-stroke swing on the first hole of this fifth round in the 90-hole classic.
PALM DESERT (AP)—Arnold Palmer, drawing on the well-remembered skills of an earlier decade of golfing greatness, shouldered his way past old foe Jack Stokes and stroked an stroke end to his victory famine Sunday in the Bob Hope Desert Golf Classic.
The 43-year-old master, probably the most popular player the ancient game has ever known, secured his first triumph since July 25, 1971, with a final round 69, three under par on the rain-soaked, wind-whipped Bermuda Dunes Country Club Course.
He finished with a 17-under-par total of
Records Fall In Dual Meets For Trackmen
Fifteen University of Kansas track men placed in two different meets last week.
Thursday, in Pittsgrove, Kan., Randy Smith, McPherson sophomore, set a Pittsgrove field house record in the high-jump with a 8-foot-6% mark. Also at Pittsgrove, Doug Todd, West Covina, Calif.,Junior, took first in the long-jump with a 20-foot-2% leap over Berglund, Kansas City, Mo., freshman man captured first place in the pole vault at 14-foot.
On Saturday, at East Lansing, Mich,
Barry Schur, Tucson, Ariz., junior, broke
his own KU induction high-lamp record and
had previously held the record at 7-foot-0.
Jim Euell, Norwich, Conn., junior, qualified for the NCAA finals in the 1,000-yard run with a time of 2:10.0. Euull finished in a dead heat, but was awarded second place. Also qualifying for the NCAA finals was the KU mile relay team made up of four players: Matt Lutz, Rochester, Minn., Juniper; Tom Scavuzzo, Denver, junior; and Phil涛, Tulas senior. The relay turned in a time of 3:16.4 and placed sixth.
Delario Robinson, Los Angeles junior,
and Gregg Vandaveer, Shawnee, Okla,
sophomore, finished second and third in the
league, hurdles with times of 8.2 and
8.3 seconds.
Fourth place in the long-jump was taken by Danny Seay, Shawnee, Kan., sophomore with a 23-foot-8% mark. Terry McKeon played in the two mile run with a time of 8:06.6.
Team point totals were not kept at either meet.
ne secured his fifth Classic title
value of $32,000 from the total purse
of $160,000.
Nicklaus, the 1972 winner his last time out, had a run at an eagle three on the finishing bole. The bull-strong blond from Columbus, Ohio, reached the green with an iron second shot while Palmer was just short after two wood shots.
What happened to the Jahyawks was that they got behind early and stood around. The offense, as the 46 points reflects, was ineffective.
But Jack missed the 36-foot putt. The ball just slipped by as he dropped his putter and clutched his hands to his blond, rain-damened mane in dismay.
"We just weren't sharp and it didn't seem as if we could do anything to regain our sharpness." Owens said. "We didn't move ourselves."
The result was the offense that had scored at least 75 points in each of the last four games shot 36.7 per cent from the field and hit only two of nine free throws. The shots that the Jayhawks usually never miss were one to three, as the game, they weren't even beating shot.
In spite of everything, the Jayhawes were never really out of the game until late. They survived barrages from the outside by Jebras for a few minutes, but and although they were never closer than five points in the second half, looked like they were ready to take on on
When it finally looked as if the Jayhawks had caught fire, they came down the court twice only to throw the ball away and give Nebraska two easy baskets.
Regardless of the KU performance, the Huskers come to play and probably put together their best effort of the year.
"I still thought we'd pull it out when we were nine points down," Owens said. "Then we went down two straight times only to be intercepted on the wings."
The loss has to be extremely disappointing for Kansas. It came at a time when things were going well for the team and, if the Hawks are to be serious contenders for the Big Eight championship, a loss at home is unforgettable.
SUA Presents:
"I thought this week we'd really start to
mature. "Owens said. "I could see signs of
it."
footstompin! lightening pickin! Good old country fun! Y'all come & bring your sweethearts too!
KANSAS (46)
IUA Presents:
Ron Crick & Band
Feb. 14 8 p.m.
Union Ballroom
FREE
| | PGA | FT | R | F | Ftls |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Fildeske | 8.5 | 19 | 2 | 3 | 13 |
| Suttle | 6.15 | 13 | 12 | 1 | 13 |
| Robgen | 7.17 | 0.2 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| Robgen | 5.17 | 0.2 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
| Hasse | 0.2 | 0.1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Hasse | 0.2 | 0.1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Samuel | 1.9 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Barrow | 1.1 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Barrow | 1.1 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Barrow | 0.1 | 0.2 | 97 | 17 | 3 |
NEBRASKA 32 27 -59
KANAS 21 23 -46
NORMALIZED TEAMS
Harris 8-15 F 4 F 6 Pts. 16
Erwin 4-15 0-9 F 3 F 2
Jackson 2-4 0-0 F 3 3 4
Klein 0-14 0-3 F 3 14
Rush 2-8 7-8 3 1 1
Christine 1-2 0-6 4 1 7
Christine 1-2 0-6 4 1 7
Total 35-37 9-16 3 16 29
Officials: Buford Goddard, Kent Kurtz and Dick Sanders
14.300
TEACHERS
Get to the heart of education problem can home or overseas, and you can show you how. Education Placement Guide Job Lab. Use this guide for interview.
RON CRICK
SINGER/SONGWRITER
TACO GRANDE
TA.
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1 FREE!
Except on Wednesdays.
And now?
(National Taco Day)
Offer expires Feb. 28
1720 West 23rd Street 1973-Year of the Taco
"I still have confidence that we can have a good team," Owens said.
Derrick Glanton, St. Louis, Mo., freshman, paced the University of Kansas Junior Varsity to a 64-1 overtime victory over Missouri at Gage Saturday night in Allen Field House.
Overtime Needed In Javvee Win
Cold shooting and sloppy floor play plagued KU throughout the game. The Jayhawks were successful on 34.9 per cent from the floor. Colby hit 30.8 per cent.
Glanton was the game's high score with 22 points. He and teammate Drew Rogers, Kirkwood, Mo., freshman, tied with Colby's Rex Whale for rebounding wins with 13.
Glanton's two free throws with 2:42 left in the overtime period gave the Jayhawks a 60 lead and put them ahead to stay. Gplanton made with 0:49 showing put KU in front 6:35.
The victory was KU's fourth in a row without a loss. The 'Hawks next outing will be Tuesday when they meet Kansas State at Manhattan.
The game was close most of the way. Colby jumped to an early 12-lead. KU rallied and seemed ready to make it a rout. The Cincinnati team threw a clutch shooting of guard Dave Lowenthal.
Lowenthal just missed a 26-foot jump shot which would have given Colby the win, with 0:03 left in regulation play. He finished with 14 points.
Kansas held a 54-10 lead with the 3:20 left in the overtime and seemed to have the game in control, but four straight points by 42, tied it the score with 2.54 remaining.
Rogers missed two shots from point blank range in the waning minutes to give Colby a chance to win.
Sayers' Acceptance Expected Tuesday
University of Kansas acting athletic director Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg said Sunday that Gale Sayers would not announce his job intentions with the University of Kansas Athletic department until Tuesday.
Lomborg said that Sayers had wanted to discuss his present job options with Chicago Bears owner George Halas and had left for Chicago Sunday.
Sayers is expected to announce his acceptance of assistant KU athletic director and possibly a part-time role as KU assistant coach.
”
I am trying to bribe you with uncertainty, with danger, with defeat. .jorge
jorge
luis
borges
That's mostly what you'll find if you commit your life to the millions in the hunger of the in the hunger of their hearts. That...and fulfillment too...with the
Over 1,000 Catholic missionary priests at work mainly in the developing nations.
names — "foreign dogs" ,
-moke-makers ' , "capitalists" ,
-hard-nosed realists'
COLUMBAN FATHERS
Read the whole story in our new.
180
180
FREE 16-PAGE BOOKLET
---
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Columban Fathers
St. Columbans, Neb. 68056
Please send me a copy of your
booklet. No strings.
Name
Address
City
State Zip
College Class
College Class DK
Stinson Takes Bank Job
Wade Winston, former University of Kansas athletic director, said Sunday that he would start work today with the Kansas City Bears, formerly known as City National Bank.
Stinson said that he would be working in the business development department and that his job would entail working with commercial accounts. He also will travel to various cities in the six-state area including Chicago.
Stinson resigned his KU athletic post November 15, 1972. He became an athletic director at KU in July of 1964 after working as an insurance man in the Chicago area.
"Ive decided to stay away from sports for now," Stinson said.
Sinson said that he would commute to Kansas City from his home in Lawrence until school was out, and would then eventually move to Kansas City.
FREE: all the dope you'll need for a Europe trip.
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Sofa Travel Centre Ltd
18 East 21st Street, Suite 100
1800 21st St, Suite 100
Tel (212) 751-8000
843-1886
809 W. 23rd
Monday Night
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
KU Night 5pm-8pm
Large Pizza ... $1.89
Small Pizza ...
.89
Plus Salad—FREE with Pizza
Order added ingredients extra
Pizza Supreme: Small $1.25
Wild Large $2.15
Coupon Not Valid Large $2.15
RICHARD McKEON will speak Tuesday Feb.12
8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium
'The Humanities; Technology and Philology'
Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weaver'S Inc.
Gering Lawrence ... Since 1857
a loverly valentine
JOCKEY
Jockey Valentine Briefs
Smooth, comfortable, 100 per cent acetate tricot in the colorful, luxurious design of this packaged in a special "Love contract" gift giving box.
BEST FRIENDS
BRAVE
BRAVE
BRAVE
Jockey Valentine Boxers
Tailored construction with comfort waistband. Full proportioned seat.
GAMEPLAY OF RAGGLEE (Ragglee) (Ragglee)
(Video) Right Handed Backhand Forearm Backhand Left Handed Backhand Righ
$2.00
and $3.00
Valentine Bath Kilts . . . $4.00
Valentine Bath Kilts ... $4.00
Arrow Valentine Shorts ... $2.50
Valentine Heart Embroidered Socks ... $2.00
Arrow Valentine Motif Shirt ... $9.50
MEN'S SHOP-MAIN FLOOR
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 12, 1973
KANSAN WANT ADS
7
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
Five Days
25 words or fewer : $2.50
each additional word : $0.03
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan booklet will be available to色领 or color sign, or national origin. PLEASE RESPEND ALL CLASSIFICATION TO 111 FLINT HALL.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE DISTRICT Shop-3 blks. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Ivy River, adjacent to cooking and cookware stores, bicycles including 10 speeds, sliders, old pot baby dishes, sandwiches and cakes in hula baskets and wood creations, hula baskets and wood creations, fireplace wood, large alfalfa, brome and wheat straw, home grown vegetables, also fruits and vegetable stores.
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Component with air
conductors and 360° speaker. In 1930 at 150
W at Ray Stoneback's chamber store system
ANTIQUE CLOTHES - 823 Main, Weston, Mo.
406-571-7900; antiques@westonmo.com
or 818-646-8324; antiques and India
406-571-7900; antiquesandindia.com
Magnavox 100 Watt Stirrer Component System include a high-quality 60W power supply and 1000Hz Horns in air suspension acoustically sealed cabinets. In air suspension acoustically sealed cabinets, the Rock Star Backstage's basement room. 292 Mass.
CARS BUYH AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vermont, 842-600-9888
Cars J.G. Joe's Carriage
Carpenter, 842-600-9888
Magnavox 20 wired Stevie Compton Compact System In-
ternational 62" TV. $1,495 New $1,490 at box $75 Stormback 728 Magnavox
TV. $350 at box $75
Headphones reduced as low as 5.80 at Ray Stone-
back's 292 Mass. 2-12
Floor Sample 50 watt Magnavox component system
Floor Sample 60 watt Tweeters in Air Suspension acoustically backfaced for $79.90 now just $29.90 with new war-
ment package. Backboard is Stormback's B-212
Storm Room 200. B-212
New.Sony. Quad Systems now in stock at Ray
Stoneback's 923 Mass. 2-12
RAY AUDIO STREEO WAREHOUSE - The finest
audio equipment in town is worth its worth.
Ray Audio, Kawasaki, Kanagawa 482-847-194,
fax (866) 232-2566.
AKC St. Bernard puppies. Champion blood lines.
1985-06-23 1985-07-01 1985-08-14 1985-09-04 29:19
www.akcpuppies.org 985-283-282
1965 Bambar American-Good running condi-
tions 842-825-3600 $30 and offer 2-12
842-825-3600
Alvarez 12 string guitar and case in "excellent"
Alvarez 12 string guitar and case in "$25.00 to"
to play it. Call 844-1638-2.
2-12
For sale. B Flat Clarinet, very good condition,
new pads. $70. K肥 642-8628. 2-12
For sale. 4 trees & 2 snow trees. **6.0 x 13, 4**
trees. After $50. 30 old trees. Call: **3-812** **4-12**
PLAYBOY Magazine: January 1961 through December 1961. Price $10; includes $100 below current market value.) Also SPORTS ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE from first issue through the latest edition. Also chronological record of sports, $150. Phone Dick at 800-232-7941.
Fur Sale: Superfat Fiat Sport Racer, excellent
ride for the hardest rigid tires. Delivery
as at 1345 Kentucky.
2-13
AUDIO EQUIPMENT - 20 to 40% below retail on over 30 name brands of stereo components. For price quotes and more information call or visit Service representation at 844-536-8213 or 8-213-3221
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't,
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing-
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
"There are two ways of looking at it."
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
72 SUZUKI, T25J, street J, speedp.
speedp. tarm, 2 htarm, 2 hturt.
843-173-6, 214-2
483-173-6
40 Chevette SS, 6 c yvl, 2 d hr H,T, very good
41 Chevrolet SS, body super, bcep, new,
42 800-855-8890, new, 2-144
WURLITTER organ, with double keyboard, base panel, and eyepiece -ryllium-cylons film, and warranty, and warranty.
Lawrence Auction House
642 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
7 a.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous For consignment information call 842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
Must sell Jejusha Tower apt. contract to 1' 2"
Must sell Jejusha Tower apt. contract to 411-6783, collection to
pa23 232-2002.
A/C 18,000 BTU 220 V with custom winter cover
843. 843-493 2-12
Powerful 20 watt Magnavox AM-FM Deluxe
powered by AT&T 1972 model. $189-$35. only $19 in
delivery. (Federal tax credit)
AKC. St. Bernard puppy, 5 mos. Female, very
called. Call 848-8499 anytime 2-15
Entire stock of Michigan Rail Steel Bled
three nos% 2019 off at lay at Rocky Mountain's
Bled 350 yards.
BACKPACK -nylon bag, medium size aluminum frame with waist straps>$15 plus TWO MAN wrist straps >$35, 3 hooks, 5 six pieces with accessories=$43 Both equipped only once in new condition. $84-955. 2-15
BOKONON IS BACK-Recycled and antique
bokonon jackson Reclaimed Clothing B19 Vermont
bokonon jackson Reclaimed Clothing B20 Vermont
Excellent used Magnavox Console Mediterranean Style Stereo with APR-MP stereo radio—like new.
1970 bevel VF, good condition, belted radial belts AM, FM (RFM), Best offer 842-4358 2-15
Mibuola single line hard tape (no proscen) "Journal"
50 MB/s / 480 KB/s / 128KB/s / 64KB/s / 32KB/s
quation 152 / 157 / 169 / 178 / 187 / 195
question 152 / 157 / 169 / 178 / 187 / 195
Call 888 call 888 call 888 call 888 call 888
1967 Chevy Impala convertible, air conditioning;
five power, good tire, low mileage. Calibre 84-216
Ford Motor Corp.
MUST SELL. Mini-hike, new laid advertisement,
must be signed by manager or retailer that retails for $950.-Make offers.
Delivery not available.
Mobile home for in box Benzer Springs, 20 min.
Bachelor's, 46 + 60 years of experience.
Bachelor's, 46 + 60 years of experience.
Bachelor's, 46 + 60 years of experience.
88 Jawlin SBT. Respondent metallic green, full
cup of steel with a fine white coating.
basket nest excellent condition. Asking $1300
per ton.
For Sale Used Armstrong Flute in good condition. $90 Call Us: Susan Luninza 2:41am 2:46pm
$850 Audint America. Forced to sell. Good shape
$150, negligible 316 King. No. 4, 811-342-332
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
FAR TO CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
2 bed room bathroom, directly across MAS-
sion from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus, swimming pool, fitness center,
recreation, gymnasium, security service.
reasonable rates; furniture available. ideal roommates
SANITARY: Saints Apt. 1123, Ildr. Apt. 9 or
bath 85-211-786.
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over duplex has huge yard and only one large, extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms stairway to a large kitchen with utility hook-up, stove and electric kitchen with utility hook-up, stove and large attached garage. $10/month, available 846-496-096 or 843-825-8900. Avenues: 846-496-096 or 843-825-8900.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
SPECIAL
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Shrimp, Sausage, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our menu is and has always been There is no substrate for quality serving at the table.
1' ; Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843-1431
Sirloin
OR
Friday Nite
is Date Nite
You and Your Date
3 games each
$2.00
Open 4:30 Closed Monday
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon till 6:00 p.m.
KANSAS UNION
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
928
Mass
843
8500
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
96
Come by and see three room apartments. Rent
the 1200-square-foot apartments are paid. Leaves of various lengths are included.
These beautiful apartment surrounds a courtyard with 16 bedrooms. The Power Hotel is only 16 blocks—on the main street, just a few steps from the water tower.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now a new building designed in an updated appa. for the Spring season, Central heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities are on site. Call 843-8220 or see at 11 am. W9th, abt 3p.
EWavings can 842-7531
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
TAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings; 1 bedroom; 1 bedroom w/ Splash pad; 2 bedrooms; banan location; gas-and-gas-light, landed residence - 2006 West Bend - 845-753-7239; Libby Cook.
Nicely furn. apt, for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-8534. 2-14
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
APTS FOR RENT ACTS from Oliver Hall; fur-
rials paid (can be shared) One $60; meals on
weekends (can be shared) One $60; meals on
weekends (can be shared)
DUAL SERVICES
For the latest rental services in rental
centres, visit www.rentalcenters.com/
200-914-Kentucky Rental Exchange, 5-8
4 bedroom house, 3 porches, full basement, part furnished. $100/mo. Days call 816-361-061 or 816-296-7498.
Ant, for sub-lease. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, panicked wheel deck, tree parking, 2 blocks from office building.
ROOM with kitchen privileges close to campus.
Call 842-4475. 2-13
Must Sublease—one bedroom apt. one block
Mut Union $120/mo plus elec. $41-$580. Aware
of 20% discount for rooms under $7,500.
alarming rooma, single and double furnished for
11 rooms, 12 bedrooms, 11 and 2 blocks from Union. Phone 843-7867.
www.utilitycenter.com
1 b军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Ciso to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$ 军人.粘上 Cisco to c伞麻。Of-星校平制 $1 \mathrm{~b}$
best apartment value in Lawrence, Convenience,
management, and cleanliness. Make reservations
now for 1 and 2 bedrooms from $10. Excelent
room, $30. Oakwood Cedarwood. Oakwood
3114, 3116, 4144 Oudahl. 2-15
Room for rent with kitchen privileges, $45/month; guest campus, call 843-2832, occupy room 106.
NOTICE
ATTENTION RENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms all areas,
the situation does not difficult Home Loc-
ations, 311 University Ave.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
RAMADA INN
Figure Salon
642 7233
- Featuring McLeady exercise equipment
513 Michigan State, Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Qu in an
chair. A stab to our table. Large, 240 lb. large
bar. A stab to our table. Large, 240 lb. large bar.
Bee sand, sfe. Found of beef $ 1. Ichicken plate
bread, sfe. Found of beef $ 1. Ichicken plate
bread, sfe. Found of beef $ 1. Ichicken plate
bread, sfe. Found of beef $ 1. Ichicken plate
bread, sfe. Found of beef $ 1. Ichicken plate
图
- 9 to 12 Saturday—Swimming privileges
9 to 9 Monday thru Friday
Ph. 842-2323 Suite 125-f, Ramada Inn
- Locally owned and operated
No charge. Dip your LANDROCK device, duplexes
and call 817-420-5763 or wait for a waiting.
For more info call Home Locator
Lawrence. Auction Home. Sell your household
home on the market for $159,000 or less.
For compartment information call 842-769-0000.
Click here to place an order.
Discount prices with saving up to 80% on some items. See details below. Country Shop, 70 North 2nd, Open 9-7, 7 days a week.
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
Would the person who lost $20 outside the U.S. book for firearms, Jan. 30, contact me, U-12790.
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for airline tickets)
Bone and cake may be sweet, but a Valentine
bread is the manly gift in a's very special
'West 14th St.
2-34
WANTED
GAY LIBERATION ACTIVITIES: Monday-bus-
tness, 7:00 p.m. Union; FRIDAY-SOCIALIZING,
8:30 p.m.; WEDnesday, 9:30 p.m.
RAP-664-3266 for referrals OFFICE-B1-12,
864-4089, Box 224, Lawrence. 2-14
Want to send a special Valentine to a special
boy? Send a singing Valentine! For details:
842-6822
2-1^1
Want to move into China? Need more to
move from Union. Come by & see at 1331m or call
(862) 745-3890.
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
autosizes. 843-7098. tt
Desperately need someone touter me in Math.
I am a high school math teacher and any reasonable amount of money if you could help me with my homework would be greatly appreciated.
WORK ABROAD! International jobs-Europe,
South America, Asia, Australia, UK A Openings
for Business and Management Engineering, Education, etc. Pay expenses bo-
side, travel to New York, Guatemala, U.S.
Guide to overseas U.S. U.S. Government,
restort area and construction work. Ideas for part-
time school-year jobs. All new 1972 application
forms submitted online. Apply to best opportunities—write now! Internati-
nal work is required. Schochus sachuches 01960. (No an employment agency)
Make Your Spring Break
THE HILE in the WALL
Maupintour travel service
If You're Planning on FLYING,
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Alexander's
—Wide selection of gifts
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7485 — We Deliver — 9th & III.
DICK MILLS - OWNER
724 N. 2ND ST.
WRENCE, KS.
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
CAR WASH
826 Iowa
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
TOWING
PHONE 843-1211
TREKKER
KU Union—The Mallis-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
You have the right to call the wrecker of your choice in case of a wreck or just need a tow. Keep this in mind—call me anytime.
28½ HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
EXPERT BODY & GLASS REPAIR
20 YEARS SAME LOCATION
KAW BODY SHOP
REPAIRING
IF IT'S DAMAGED
WE'LL DO IT
UTV
DAY 841-2800
NIGHT 842-0131
Two codes DESPERATELY need tail to SUI-
lance. One code PING can use. The other
code PING can go way? (frog) rise tide.
(horse) fall tide.
K. U. Grad student wants ride to Lawrence from Raleigh a week ago call 341-528-6154 318-1674 a few days ago call 341-528-6154 318-1674 a few days ago
Wanted- Please to fill position of roommate. No
permission needed. For more information 244-
812-110
Wanted: Roommate to house lps 2-3 bedroom
Wanted: Roommate to house lps 2-3 bedroom
$40.50/month & mit. $84.167/month
2-12 months
$25.00/month & mit. $84.167/month
Wanted: female roommate to live in house with 4 girls; private large room, campus rent; up to 2.5 bathrooms; small apts.
LOST
LOST-One snow chain (tire chain). If found, please
843-2540. 2-12
Cairn terrier, male, off-white, dark muzzle and
female, pet family named Cycre. 882-4130.
Coyote, female, off-white, dark muzzle and
LOSST - Much loved child. Short hair, grey with a white band on the back. (Yes, I can!)
WYEA - (Yes, ee-na). Please help me find her here!
RHOB - No. Not in our collection.
Least-Main's black "dattier" wallet, possibly a 1950s Vanguard in Feb on Ebay. Reward: 2-16
843-225 or 843-287.
Reward for return of small black and tan mixed
pillows or pillowcases to your place of residence.
Midstayside call or dwell on call #431 or 845
or 900.
HELP WANTED
Dancers wanted for afternoons. Must be 18.
Dancers wanted for evening. Can be
January 2-14 and Haskell between 11 & 4.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses
Weeknight and weekend Nours. 842-556-0550
Weeknight and weekend Nours. 842-556-0550
Cocktail Hallway, wanted. Afterwards and
walks Call The Flaming Club. 843-980-2-
12-12
Employment Opportunities
Saleem wanted. Sell advertising in new camp magazine for an commission basis. Gave him at least 10% of the budget.
"JOBS IN ALASKA"
PLAN YOUR adventure! $3.00
Available now. This handbook covers all fields, summer & career opportunities; qualifications, employers.
JOBS IN ALASKA, Box 1565,
Anchorage, Alaska 99510
2-12
PEUGEC
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
101 Mass. 843-8484
WHY RENT?
Product Development Assistant. Rapidly growing department has to support the personal, creative, understanding, mechanical and electrical engineering. Must be able to assume responsibility and direct activities of the company. Must have a chine shop production techniques. Need skill in working with people. Only qualified need apply. 2-15
BUCKNER COUNTY SCHOOL FOR ADVANCE EDUCATION
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 lowa (South Hwy. 59)
If you know farming, talk to the Peace Corps Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fraser, and Strong Hall.
PERSONAL
TYPING
Come sit out our store! 20 new fragrances have been installed on our original店 7 at Waxman Hall. 7 West of 16th Street.
UP YOUR ALLEY—a coffee house. The pleasant place to escape what he's hashing you or meet friends in a entertainment Wed, Pt. Sat,
Sunday, of week Open 6-12pm in Lennox Hall in Lewis Hall
SERVICES OFFERED
Experienced in typing these, distortions, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accelerate and prompt service. Proof reading/signed corrections. Phrase 843-954. Mrs. Wright
FOUND
Sewing and altering for the college ditch Pick up 1975-76; coats costed $20; coats costed and relined 1984-85-1986; coasts costed $15.
DRIVE-IN
AMC THEATRE
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
FURNITURE
843-5304
ADVERTISE
K ADVERTISE
Found Friday. February 2. female miniature poultry
back at 92 Knutskuch. No. 4. 4-214
ADVER U
RNR-PATTERNN-NEEDLEPOW
THE CREWEARD
THE CUP BOARD
10-5 Monday-Saturday
D
Open 24 hrs.
Fender MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
Amps
Recorders
Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass.
843-3007
Open Evenings
DATSUN
IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATSUN
500 E. 23rd
842-0444
Independent
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Coin-Op
Laundry & Dry Cleaners 19th & La. 843-9631
7 days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 4th
842-9450
8
Monday, February 12; 1973
University Daily Kansan
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Magazine Lampoons All
By KATHY TUSSING
Kansan Staff Writer
Nothing is sacred to the editors of National Lampoon, Chris Miller, a contributing editor of the magazine, told more than 200 persons Friday in the Kansas
Miller said that although nothing was sacred, some persons misinterpreted such Lampoon articles as the magazine's sermonettes.
"We aren't making fun of God," Miller said. "We aren't making fun of Jesus; we're making fun of Jesus."
Lampoon has been sued by Charles Schultz, Walt Disney and Archie Andrews, but those are the only law suits the magazine has had. Miller said.
"None of the suits have been or are close to being tested," Miller said. "Chances are that someone will be."
"The National Lampoon is labeled a humor magazine and you don't see a humor novel."
Miller talked about the hate mail that the magazine received. Letters have come from the Catholic Church, Jesus freaks, four G.I.'s in Vietnam and a battleship captain who wrote of the Lampoon's "treasonist publications and what you should be doing for your country," Miller said.
The editors also have received one borris
camera, Miller said. A package containing
eight sticks of dynamite came to their offices. It was dangerous only because it was live.
A NOTE ENCLOSED with the dynamite
issue. 'Maybe now I'll send me my back
issue.'
A week later, blasting caps were sent to the office with a similar note, Miller said. The sender of the packages was found, he said, and no charges were pressed after the editors found out that the subscriber had no charge to the dynamic was really dangerous.
Miller said the circulation of National Lampoon was about 700,000, but he estimated that the magazine had approximately 4 million readers. The current issue of the magazine has been banned in Cleveland and Atlanta, he said.
When asked what the editors of Lampoon thought of their readers, Miller said, "I guess they must think you're a bunch of sickies just like they are."
THE NEXT ALBUM from the magazine is expected to be released in March, Miller said. It will be the National Lampoon Road Show's production of "Lemmings." The show opened in New York in January and will go on the road in March.
The second half of the show is about the take-off on the Woodstock Festival of 1970.
Miller read two stories to the group. The first, entitled "The Sexualization of Veranda," has already appeared in Lampoon. The second article, "A Thanksgiving Memory," will appear in this year's November issue.
Miller said his parents weren't allowed to read. National Lampoon.
Before contributing articles to Lampoon, Miller said he wrote commercials, among them ads for Coca Puffs, Johnny Light-Up Homemaker, Frigidaire and Oxydol.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
Fully accredited, 20-year UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Guadalajara Summer School offers July 2-August 11, anthropology art, education, forklift, geography, history, government Tuition $165; board room $211. Write: International Programs, University of Arizona, Upson $8721
"The letters will be followed up with phone calls" said Thomas. "I wanted to know if anyone else had been present."
A form letter of invitation will be mailed to all state legislators before Feb. 14, Thomas said. Letters written by individuals living in the residence halls will follow.
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
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Delivery Hours: 5:00-Midnight Daily
Good thru March 1, 1973 843-1886
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Alex Thomas, president of AURH, said the dinner was an effort to improve the University's image and keep in touch with members of the legislature.
Kansas legislators, but we're hoping for about 25 to come." he said.
"It's more of a public relations project," he said. "It gives us a chance to talk to them, and it's a chance for them to see us on a more personal level."
The dinner is tentatively planned for 6:30 p.m. in Templin Hall. After the meal, legislators are scheduled to attend a play in Hassinger Hall at 8 p.m.
The Association of University Residence Halls and the Students Concerned about Higher Education will entertain Kansas legislators at a dinner March 8.
A FLOWER CAN SAY
I Remember.
Owens
FLOWER SHOP
9th and Indiana
843-6111
"We're issuing an invitation to all the
Use Kansan Classified
Cynthia's initial reaction was bitter. "At what?" she said. "Women's work is a drag."
Two weeks later I found a great job I joined Provident Mutual's Campus Internship program. I can have my own business, work on my money! I have a job waiting for me when I graduate. By the way, I have an insurance program that will be per season.
PROVIDENT MUTUAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PHILADELPHIA
Home Office (Broadway) Fax 503-741-2200
Insurance. Doctor Home Management Company, PA 19017
Cynthia Brane, junior, was elected Girl Most Likely to Succeed
Students Seek Rapport Ask Legislators to Dine
STEPHEN H. KRAYBILL /C.R.
2401 W. 25 Apt. No. 989
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
yes. 913-841-2310 or 913 842-3146
Let Your Love Shine On With a Valentine Candle
from
Waxman Candles
7 West 14th St.
7 West 14th St.
from
PEACE CORPS-VISTA
We are looking for seniors and grad students with backgrounds in agriculture, business home ec., law, architecture, liberal arts, teaching, and the sciences for
FEB.19 THRU 23
RECRUITERS IN THE UNION
FRASER & STRONG HALL
also in:
Business Placement Office—Feb. 19
Education Placement Office—Feb. 19
Liberal Arts Placement Office—Feb. 20
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 21
(Sign up for interview.)
---
It’s a Sweetheart of a Deal!
LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS
Send A Valentine In Print This Year
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
This Year Will
Have A Special
Valentine
Classified
Section on Wednesday February 14th
Send A Message to Your
Special Friend.
IF SHE’S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS
or
TOO FAT FOR CANDY
a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY
Let Someone
Know How
You Feel
About
Them.
ONLY
$1.50
for
25 Words
Bring Your
Special Message to
111 Flint by 5:00 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 12
Your Message Will
Appear Wednesday
February 14.
IF SHE'S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS or TOO FAT FOR CANDY a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY
Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them.
ONLY $1.50 for 25 Words
Bring Your Special Message to 111 Flint by 5:00 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 12
Your Message Will Appear Wednesday February 14.
Professors Feel Pinch of Minimal Salarv Increases
Editor's Note: This story, the first in a two-part series, examines the impact of minimal salary increases in the past several years on professors at the University of Kansas. Wednesday's story discusses how professors have meant for the professors. Hearings for the fiscal 1974 budget will start Thursday in the Kansas Legislature.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
The professor who must pay rent, feed and cloth his family and send his children to school is facing hardships now because of appropriations for faculty salaries in the pax.
During the last several years, salary increases have been minimal or nonexistent. You are not sure that their money problems are not as great as they might seem and that
moral problems created by low salaries hurt more.
"It's really not something that I think about an awful lot," said Philip Pakhan, assistant professor of history. "What it means in my terms is that you don't buy a house just when you'd like to, or take a vacation when you want to. It's simply not having enough to do what you want when you want to do it.
"DON'T FEEL done in by the people of Kansas. I wish they were more generous. I don't feel resentment against the people of Kansas. I feel a little restful toward the legislature for not leading the people of Kansas a little more in that direction. It makes you less loyal, but you don't lay around saying, 'How can I get those guys?'"
grocery bills and at the end of the month, he said.
Palladian said his purchasing power was less than it had been in 1968 when he came to work with the company.
Other professors have to worry about sending their children to college, Paludan said, and this creates pressure to eliminate fees for faculty dependents and to increase salaries. Other staff members currently receive reductions in tuition costs, but fees are no eliminated.
HOWARD MOSSBERG, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said, "My wife tells me it just costs more to do the same things we've always done. I can't give a percentage or dollars-and-cents figure on what we've had to cut out.
"Over the last three or four years there hasn't been an individual around here whose purchasing power has increased with the rate of inflation. Several faculty members say the discrepancy has reached the point of being intolerable."
The decrease in purchasing power is felt
most acutely, Mossberg said, when it is time to replace a car or a major appliance that is several years old. Faculty members who work in the factory make of car they have now, he said.
A PROFESSOR IN THE COLLEGE of Liberal Arts and Sciences said, "We survive. It's as simple as that. I have two older brothers in different fields. Both have received larger degrees. They can change their style of living—have more expensive cuts of meat, dress better.
"But we're not at the starvation level. If you're not from a really wealthy background, that's perfectly okay. Teachers don't have to live that well. But it's a bad attitude that people think that teachers don't have to live that well."
By most people's standards, more income means that a person has higher prestige, and less faculty and low salary facilities indicate the
RAY HINER, associate professor of history and education, said that tight budgets had increased the percentage of his income spent on such essentials as food, clothing and shelter. Interest rates and housing costs have risen greatly, he said.
teachers are not as highly regarded as members of other professions.
"I needed more space, so I bought a house. But I had to spend a lot more for it than I would have several years ago," he said.
Hiner said that the decrease in purchasing power and standard of living during inflation happened: to everybody, not just to professors. It is hard to make long-term plans such as education for children, he said. He was on luxuries is not extremely difficult.
Teachers often find themselves unable to afford books in their field of interest. The teachers in the school district
one professor, who wished to remain unidentified. So if a faculty member does not buy the books, he is unable to keep abreast of his field.
HINER SAID he could not afford to attend as many professional meetings as he would like to. A trip costs between $150 and $200, a lot of money to a low-salaried person, he said. He said the University paid travel expenses for one meeting the faculty at the university had arranged; an instructor attending merely for his own edification had to foot the entire bill.
COLD
"I average one meeting a year," he said,
"I would like to go to two meetings a year because of my joint appointment, but I could give up something else and go."
d Clark, dean of the School of See FACULTY Page 8
COLD
WINDY
Rainy
SNOWY
Too much wind!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 89
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
Wanted:
American Homes
For Foreign
Students
See Story Page 5
Influx of Bills Overwhelms Legislature
**TOPEKA (AP)**—A bill bizzard swept the Kansas Legislature Monday at the start of the sixth week of the 1737 session, promising to hold a hearing in January until the end of the session 7½ weeks away.
Shaking his head at an influx of 70 new bills in the Senate alone, President Pro Temp Robert Bennett, R-Overland Park, said, "If we have plans to we discuss to the future in this," he told.
The Senate bill total hit 402.
Another 48 bills were introduced in the House during the morning session, and that body was scheduled to go back into session late in the day for introduction of more bills.
Most notable of the Senate bills were two which would provide the mechanics for implementing the executive article approved by Kansas voters last fall.
The reason for Monday's glut was the deadline for introduction of individual members' bills. Committees still will be able to introduce bills until later in the session.
The Senate gave final approval to three bells and one concurrent sentiment and sent
The executive article provided four-year terms for four state officers and required the governor and lieutenant governor to run as a team.
Most controllive among those bills was one which would require livestock owners to submit to the county assessor each year a list of the livestock he owned or controlled by the preceding calendar year, providing an average value on that livestock.
The resolution approved would set an election on a constitutional amendment to provide county officers with four-year county commissioners with six-year terms.
Among those bills given preliminary approval was one to establish a statewide program of blood tests for sickle cell anemia.
The Senate also gave tentative approval to seven other bills, which will come up for fini firing in early January.
The Senate also advanced to final roll call vote today bills to amend the state's pest control act, to allow state banks to invest in stock of Minnibank Capital Corp., to provide money for minority banks and to provide special license plates for disabled veterans. The bank bill will go to Gov. Robert Docking if it passes today, the others to the House.
IS BY
FET
Kannan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
mercury will drop to the lower 30s today,
with a 50 per cent chance of light intermittent rain mixed with snow, then dropping tonight to the lower 20's, with a 50 per cent chance of light snow flurries.
Damp
Monday, this traveler, like many others, found the walk, on campus to be rather exciting.
U.S. Devalues Dollar, Raises Price of Gold
WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States devalued the dollar by 10 per cent Monday night, the second drop in a little more than a quarter of its previous raging international currency crisis.
Treasury Secretary George Shultz, flanked by other top administration officials at a news conference, said President Nixon had approved the move and predicted that workers, consumers and businessmen would benefit.
Shults disclosed a number of other moves, including a floating of the Japanese yam, and the use of the Japanese yam's own market value. The German mark, another currency under intense pressure, is also the world's largest
The dollar was last devalued on Dec. 18, 1971, by 8.57 per cent against the price of gold. That devaluation, part of a worldwide downturn, became uninjured in the past two weeks.
Monday night's announcement was made as most of the world's major money markets had already been prepared to pressure on the dollar. In places where the market had opened earlier Monday, the dollar fell again in value, as it has during recent weeks, and markets are expected to open again Tuesday.
Schultz announced that the United States would phase out by the end of 1974 the use of nuclear weapons.
Shultz said other nations may make changes in the values of their currencies after announcement of the American devaluation. Such currency changes would have to be announced by the countries involved.
But he said it was likely that countries with floating currencies, such as Canada and Great Britain, would continue with the float.
Monday's devaluation was the second major change in world currencies since December 1987 when major non-currency adjustments need a currency alignment following a conference
As for the Japanese currency, the secretary said, the United States expects the yen will rise in value against the dollar over the 10-or-cent change.
Shultz announced that the United States would ask Congress for trade legislation that would lower trade barriers; raise tariffs on imported goods; and fair access to foreign markets; provide methods, such as import quotas, to guard against rapid changes in foreign trade, and to protect the United States from large and deficits in the balance of payments.
Although the effect of the U.S. devaluation is to make the dollar 10 per cent lower against other currencies, the effective change when viewed against gold prices is a little more than that because of the fundamental technical methods of figuring exchange rates.
Snail says the crisis should make other nations realize that speedy reform of the U.S. government is vital.
at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part series dealing with the duties of KU's top student officers. Kathy Allen, vice president, talks about her work load. Tomorrow, Dave Dillon, president, discusses his job.
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
Kathy Allen, student body vice president,
says the volume of her work is too much for
her to manage.
"Progress in the work of reform has been too slow and should move with a greater speed."
Allen: Demands of Job Hamper Effectiveness
The capital controls being phased out include the interest-equalization tax and money controls on direct foreign investments. Also, the Federal Reserve Board plans to驻 an voluntary program to restrain foreign credit.
Her job includes working on nine student and administrative bodies of the University in addition to the academic responsibilities of a student.
POWs Revel in Life Out of Prison
Allen, a Topeka junior, is director of the KU Reclamation Center and a member of the Student Executive Committee, the Executive Committee and the Board of Directors of the Union Memorial Corp. and the chancellor search committee.
The dollar has been falling in value in recent days, and as a result, Americans traveling abroad found their dollar wasn't having as much as before.
Monetary experts from the big western nations had been searching for ways to halt the crisis. They were talking in terms of fiscal measures, such as bank and the Japanese yen revalued upward.
A total of 143 military and civilian prisoners flew away from captivity, 116 from North Vietnam and 27 from jungle prisons in South Vietnam. All but one, who was a U.S. sign-in hospital, were forded to this U.S. base for the first step on their way home.
She is a member of the University Senate, the Student Senate Committee Board and the Student Rights Committee. She is presiding officer of the Student Senate. All these duties are automatically assigned to the vice president of the student body.
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (AP)—The first American war prisoners to gain freedom since the Vietnam peace agreement experimented Monday night with some pleasures of life outside Communist prison carsms.
The secretary said the United States was not obliged to intervene in foreign exchange markets to support the value of the dollar, as it had been doing in recent weeks.
Back under the U.S. flag, the POWs telephoned their families in the United States, tinkered with the TV sets in their cells, and used them as base Hospital and dured on stock and skes.
Only four of the 143 were sick enough to be brought back on beds. Many others looked pale and wan, particularly those released at Loc Ninh in South Vietnam.
THE LOC NNH POWs flew into Clark after their release was delayed 11 hours by
Left behind in North and South Vietnam and Laos are 419 other countries, mainly military personnel, who are scheduled to be moved more groups during the next six weeks.
a dispute between the South Vietnamese government and the Viet Cong.
The commander of the Clark Air Base Hospital, Col. John W. Ord, however, told newsmen that the general physical condition of the personnel was good.
Those in the first group wolffed down ice cream, steak, corn on the cob, chicken and strawberry shortcake for their first meal in freedom. Most had requested—and got—more than either the bland dishes planned by doctors to ease their transition from prison life.
THE FIRST of four hospital planes, three from Hanoi and one from Saigon, ferried in 40 prisoners. It brought them from the North Vietnamese capital, where they had filed through a wire fence and moved 50 yards across the tarmac to board their
Gayler, commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific,
During the 2½-hour flight, they appointed Navy Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton Jr. of Virginia Beach, Va., to express their sentiments to the cheering U.S. base personnel, families and newsmen on hand at Clark to greet them.
Gayler and LJ, Gen. William Moore Jr., commander of the 13th Air Force, stood on the runway to greet the men: 41 from the first plane, 39 from the second and 36 from the third, from Hanoi. They returned later to greet the 26 who flew in from Siau.
NEXT TO DESCEND from the C141 was Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez Jr. of Santa Clara, Calif. The first American fyer who was in prison was a prisoner since Aug. 5, 1964.
"We are profoundly grateful to our commander-in-chief and to our nation for the success we achieved."
flight to freedom. Most walked aboard; a few were carried in beds.
"We are happy to have this opportunity to serve our country under difficult circumstances," Denton said as he stepped first from the plane.
The 27th prison released in South Vietnam after a day of waiting in the jungle best retained in an Army hospital at his request, the U.S. Embassy in Saigon said.
Alvarez walked with determined steps down the exit ramp and flashed a bread board to Mr. Gomez's eyes.
Arriving at Clark, the Air Force and Navy aviators from Hanel briskly emerged from the hangar.
The PRISONER was identified as Richard George Waldhaus, 25, of Pittsburg, Collin, a civilian with no known government affiliation was listed as captured Feb. 4. 1969.
The late-night arrival of the prisoners from South Vietnam contrasted sharply with the scenes in New York.
In addition, Allen serves voluntarily on the Student Senate's Transportation Committee and Student Services Committee. She carries a 14-hour class load.
Allen says she thinks that both Student Body President David Dillon, Hutchinson senior, and she do too many jobs to be as hard as they would like to be in any of them.
"I think David and I are spread too thin," he says. "Everything has been compromised."
"I think it's the responsibility of the president and vice president to see that the committees are meeting and that they are working," David and I have fallen down this year.
Allen says she believes a large part of the responsibility placed on the executive officers of the student body is the organization of students. The administration, particularly the standing committees,
"I see those two people as being coordinators," she says. "They are very much to blame if their committees are not functioning."
"That is the one area that I do not feel I was effective in, and that is because I perhaps let myself get too bogged down in it." "I can't look at the overall committee system."
The senate must provide leadership for committees that don't function properly, because of a weak chairman, improper communication or confusion about their roles, Allen says.
"It is important that the president or vice president take that role," she says. "You need to do that."
The senate has been marked during the past year by committees that did not meet, met once or twice in a semester or met but failed to function in an organized manner and consequently unstudied, confusing bills to the senate floor.
Allen says that such behavior should have been averted by action from the executive
Kathy Allen
SARAH MARTIN
officers. Either Dillon or herself should have acted personally or through the chairman of the Student Executive Committee to reorganize the problem committees and get them functioning again, she says.
Allen says one of the things she has had to learn to do as vice president has been to compromise her efforts in what she was doing
"I think that's one of the hazards of being in the position, and I think that's something that anyone who is in this position, if they want to effective, that's a lesson they
See OFFICERS Next Page
2
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence Minimum Housing Code Applied to 44 Houses This Month
By CHATHY SHERMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence Building Inspection Department is inspecting 44 houses this month in an area directly east of the University of Kansas to determine where the buildings compete with the city's minimum density. Ed Wilson, city attorney, said Monday.
The 44 houses are part of an original 77 in an area between Louisiana, Kentucky, 10th and 14th streets selected more than a year ago for inspection by the city. Wilson said. This inspection is the city's third inspection of the houses.
Wilson said that during the past week he had inspected seven of the houses, but only one of the landlords had made the necessary repairs to comply with the minimum
He said several other landlords he had contacted this week for inspection appointments had indicated that the required work had not been completed.
THE INSPECTION of the 44 houses has been completed by the end of the month, but no repairs have been made.
Campus Briefs Glover Speech
Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, will speak to the College Young Democrats tonight at 7:30 in the Pine Room at the University of Chicago Law School's Veteran's Bill and the National Guard Bill.
Phi Chi Theta
Phi Chi Theta, women's professional business fraternity, will have spring rush tonight at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. Beverlee Anderson, 3460 Tam TAm O'Hanter. Shurp is open to any woman majoring or planning to major in business or economics.
Brazilian Film
A Brazilian film, "Land in Anguish," will be shown tonight at 7:30 in Dyche Auditorium. The film is the third in a series sponsored by the Center of Latin American Studies. It is in Protuguese with English subtitles. Blauer Rocha, a leader in Brazil "Cinema Novo," directed the film. Admission is free.
Wilson would not release the names of the landlords.
City officials will meet personally with those landlords who still have not complied with minimum housing requirements upon third inspection to determine whether they had any intention to make repairs City Manager Buford Watson said Monday.
Watson said the city preferred not to serve notice to vacate the property to landlords who refused to make the necessary repairs, although, he said, this was a basic way the city could enforce compliance with the housing code.
"We would rather work with the landlords at the least inconvenience to the tenants."
Some of the minimum standard standards required by the code, Watson said, were that dwellings must have vented stoves, hot and cold water, screened windows, a minimum ceiling height, adequate toilet facilities, and adequate trash and garbage receptacles. Electrical wiring must be in proper order, he said, and baggages must be stored properly. Exterior of buildings must also be in good repair, he said.
The first inspection of the area began in January 1973, according to Gary Montague, Chief of Building Inspection, who was then in charge of the inspection.
Montague said the area was first brought to his attention by the findings of a University team of the Institute of Social Environmental Studies (ISIS).
There are 182 dwellings in the area. Montague said.
The first inspection made by Montague was a "windshield" survey from which he made a list of 77 houses. City inspectors then personally inspected these houses.
This inspection narrowed the number of buildings that needed repairs down to about 60. Montague said, Letters were then sent to the county sheriff and he made to repair within about 60 days.
A FOLLOW UP inspection began in September, Watson said and another letter was sent to landlords in December. In this second inspection, the landlords of 4 dwellings had either not completed or not begun repairs to comply with the code.
The general inspection was the first the city has undertaken, Watson said. In the past the city has usually just inspected vacant and abandoned buildings or made inspections when persons registered complaints.
He said that in the near future the city planned to make general inspections of other areas but had not yet selected the areas.
Women's Convention Urges Political Gains
Achieving political power for women was the major goal of the first convention of the National Women's Political Caucus last fall. It was a demonstration by the Lawrence, representative said Monday.
Robinson, of 1230 Mississippi St., was one of more than 1,500 women who attended the convention from every state in the district, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
Robinson said the convention had reached agreement on three major points:
- Politics means women. Women must get away from what Shirley Calison called the 'bake-me mentality' and start launching campaigns for women candidates.
—Women have to rely on grass roots organization. Power should flow through the local organizations up to the national level and not the other wav around.
The National Women's Political Caucus should be an umbrella organization enveloping all of the various feminist movements. The Caucus should cut across all political and philosophical divisions and provide a focal point for the feminist movement.
Carpenter, former member of the Johnson administration, Rep. Shirley Chisolm D.N.Y.; Bella Abbrig representantative of the writers Bettie Friedan and Gloria Steinem.
Speakers at the convention included Liz
The National Women's Political Caucus was formed in July 1971 to organize the political power of women. The organization is a coalition of women from various backgrounds, economic levels and political affiliations Robinson said.
"The goals of feminism are not just women's goals, they're humanist goals," Robinson said. Every issue is a women's issue. We didn't just talk about abortion and the need for housing, education, poverty and all the other issues that concern the country."
The convention included subcaucuses to consider topics of Blacks, Chicanos, Republicans, Democrats, labor unions and the right to sexual privacy and workshops on the different ways women can exert political power.
Robinson said she didn't expect to see any radical changes in the near future.
Officers Burdened . . .
During his stay at KU, he will meet with students and faculty in several departments to discuss the relationship of philosophy to a variety of fields.
Richard McKeon, professor of Greek and philosophy at the University of Chicago, will speak tonight at 8 at Woolfrd Auditorium. Humanities: Technology and Philosphy."
Clinton Meeting
The League of Women Voters is planning to launch an organizational meeting for a citizens coalition for Clinton Lake tonight at 7:30 at the Lawrence Public Library. This coalition of groups and individuals is expected to work together to examine the problems and opportunities inherent in the lake and to create needed organizations and individuals interested in the development of Clinto Lake are welcome.
(Continued from page 1)
learn: not only do you learn to organize your time, but you learn to compromise."
But, she added, "It's too bad you have to compromise."
The only way to avoid compromise is to reduce the workload of the executive-officer. The problem is that the executive-officer
Allen says other improvements in the workload must be made. Other Big Eight schools restrict the number of classroom hours their student executive officers may carry while in office, she says. She recommends that KU adopt a similar position or perhaps increase the opportunity for independent studies.
"I do not think that the vice president should be chairman of the Reclamation Center because it's a full-time job," she says. "It's cut down my effectiveness in other projects because I've had to put in so much time for these projects, it's unnecessary job for the vice president."
"If you sit on a committee on which you're one of two students, and you have a class at that time, I wonder where your responsibility is," she says. "A faculty would say we, it's in my class." A student would say, We'd better not lose that vote."
A strong conflict often confronts the officers, Allen says, in the form of a committee meeting and a class that meets at the same time.
The end of her term of office is now only a few weeks away and Kathy Allen says she is unhappy that the load made the compromises necessary so often.
Correction
it was incorrectly stated in Monday's Kansan that advertising for student body president and vice president candidates would cost $55. The correct amount is $550.
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'Godfather' Leads Oscar Race
Have you tried McDonald's big, thick, hot, juicy Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with Cheese
HOLLYWOOD (AP)—“The Godfather” took the most nominations in the 45th annual Oscar race Monday, scoring for its best director, the talented actors and the star, Marlon Brando.
The him about the Mata won 11 nominations, followed by "Carabet" with 10. "The Poseidon Adventure" with seven and "Lady Songs the Blues" with five.
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"The Godfather" nomination was Brando's sixth nomination and his first after a long career drought. He won the Oscar in 1945 for "On the Waterfront." His
Other nominations included:
competitors for best actor of 172 are michael Caine and Lawrence Olivier of "Seulh", Peter O'Toole for "The Ruling Class" and Paul Winfield for "Sounder". A second-generation film star, Liza Miromalli, appeared in Monday's nominations for best actress the daughter of Judy Garland was named for her role in "Cabaret", also nominated: Diana Ross, "Lady Sings the Buese"; Maggie Smith, "Travels with My Ants"; Clytie Tyson, "Sounder", and Liv Ullmann, "The Emigrants."
Supporting actress: Jeannie Berlin, "The Heartbreak Kid"; Eileen Heckart, "Butterflies Are Free"; Geraldine Park, "Pete Cain"; Susan Tyrrell "Fat City"; and Shelly Winters. The Oscar ceremonies will take place March 27 at the Los Angeles Music Center.
Nominine for best picture were "Cabaret," "Deliverance," "The Emigrants," "The Godfather" and "Sounder."
Thursday February 15
The Class of '76 Presents Dr. Bill Roy
Union Ballroom 3:30 p.m. FREE
Kansas Congressman from Second District
Reception Afterward
Earn $100 a month and a Marine Corps commission through the Platoon Leaders
You can join the PLC program in your freshman, sophomore, or junior year of college. Training takes place only in the summer. Freshmen and sophomores take two-week training courses. Juniors take one ten-week course.
Class.
The Platoon Leaders Class (PLC) is the primary college officer commissioning program of the Marine Corps. It is a leadership program, and the positive characteristics developed during training as a Marine pilot are be of value to you throughout your career—be it civilian or military.
One of the many benefits of the Platton Leaders Class is that your total time of service is counted from the day of enrollment to the additional longevity of accrued service time means a bigger paycheck throughout your period of active duty. These financial benefits make it easier for you to decide to become a career officer.
Financial Assistance PLC members can receive $100 each month of the school year
The financial assistance is payable for up to three years—or a total of $2,700.
AIRCRAFT STOPPED AT THE TERMINAL
The Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will be on your campus 12, 13, and 14 February 1973. If you desire additional information prior to his visit call collect at 816-374-3031.
The location of the Officer Selection Team will be the Lobby of the Student Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan
3
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
Headquarters, Police Unite Efforts
By JERRY ESSLINGER
Kenyon Staff Writer
JOHN PELSON
Kansan Staff Writer
Cooperation between local law enforcement agencies and Headquarters, Inc. 1832 Kentucky St., has been growing steadily in the past few months, although each are vastly different, law enforcement, and Headquarters officials said recently.
The Lawrence Police Department and Headquarters have realized they both can benefit from keeping in contact, according to Dan Hardixum, Lawrence Chief of Police.
Stanwick said that most instances of cooperation had involved cases of psychellic overdosages and that the department has increasingly had been seeking the services of a psychiatrist in cases rather than jailing a person suspected of being under the influence of drugs.
Confinement behind bars of a person who is hallucinating usually has an extremely detrimental effect, according to George Schulz, Headquarters drug analyst. Schuiz said the Lawrence police had shown a definite awareness in their handling of persons hallucinating or suffering effects of other drugs.
AN EXAMPLE OF he, said, was a case last semester in which the police department handed over to Headquarters a young man who had torn a grating from a wall in the police building while under the influence of a hallucinogen.
The same person, Stanwix said, was never charged with destruction in the building even after he was turned over to Headquarters personnel.
Stanwick said there was a two-way exchange of information between his department and the university.
"There have been a few instances when they (Headquarters) couldn't handle someone and asked us for assistance," Stanwis said. Also, whenever we have a phone call, we often voice an overdose, what I often do is pick up the phone and call Headquarters."
News Briefs By the Associated Press Prison Fires
WARPOLLE, Mass.—Fires broke out in sections of the state's maximum security prison here Monday night, but prison of 100 inmates was evacuated p.m., Lawrence time, three hours after the disturbance began. A spokesman said there had been no injuries. A state police spokesman said it was the second consecutive night of trouble at the prison, where inmates were being held. About 100 state police troopers had dispatched to the prison in riot gear.
Snow Storm
A 31-county portion of South Carolina was declared a disaster area Monday after a record-breaking weekend snowfall left thousands of stranded motorists. At least 11 deaths in South Carolina were attributed to the storm, which rowed across the South on Friday and caused other deaths related to the storm were recorded in North Carolina and three in Georgia.
Ocean Pollution
WASHINGTON-Government scientists Monday reported finding globs of oil and bits of plastic "in massive proportions" in the Atlantic Ocean from Cape Cod to the Gulf of Mexico, and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said the pollution was distributed "far more widely than had previously been suspected." NOAA reported that "more than half of the companies, young fish and the food collected from the ocean were oil-contaminated."
Bankrupt a Shakey's for lunch.
Shakeus
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STANWIX SAID that he might not have considered consulting Headquarters a year ago but that Headquarters had become extremely responsible under the direction of Ric Silber, the current Headquarters director.
"Most officers in the Lawrence Police Department used to not want to have much to do with the operation of Headquarters," they wrote. "They now there, we have little reluctance."
Come into Shakey's for lunch. Eat as much as you want. And pay the ridiculously low price of $1.39. Even if you have 10 slices of chicken, 2 orders of salad and 2 orders of potatoes all you'll pay is $1.39.
Sibler said Monday that Headquarters' operation had been expanded and the that 25 new volunteers had been trained since the organization of increased needs for referral services.
Stanwick and Headquarters personnel acknowledged that because the aims of the two agencies were basically dissimilar, a two obvious cooperation between police and Headquarters could alienate or displease some persons involved in either the enforcement of drug laws or the Headquarters drug analysis program.
According to Schulz and Silber, some cooperation between police and Headquarters was beneficial, but Headquarters has, as much as possible remained autonomous from all law enforcement agencies. This role helped support with members of the "street community" who are naturally suspicious of any such relationship.
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"A major reason some cooperation has been possible is that local law enforcement agencies have respected the confidential information we provide our staff and our clients." Silber said.
Schulz said that since its inception, Headquarters, and especially its drug analysis program had had a direct sanction of local law enforcement agencies and a more indirect sanction from the Kansas Attorney General's office.
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HEADQUARTERS RECEIVES about six samples for drug analysis each week, Silber said. A sign on Headquarters' front door warns anyone who enters that holding or packaging will be included) on premises will not be tolerated unless a sample is to be analyzed.
Both Stanwyk and former Douglas County Attorney Mike Elmwell, who led several local drug investigations during his two years in office, said Headquarters' drug analysis program had operated completely outside of many of local law enforcement agencies.
Elwell said his office had maintained a
"Hands-off" policy, primarily because Headquarters had operated without any apparent discrepancies and its drug analyses had been done in a laboratory under the supervision of a University professor who was licensed by the U.S. Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs to do analyses of illegal drugs.
HE SAID THAT he had not been aware of any mishandling of drug samples by Headquarters and that he thought persons were using analysis program had acted responsibly.
Stanwick concurred, saying that he knew of no instance in which law enforcement agencies had been in direct contact with the Headquarters drug analysis program.
However, Elwell said that at least one sample of a drug confiscated in a Lawrence drug raid had been taken to the University and compared to drugs already analyzed in Headquarters analysis or used to build cases against suspects were analyzed only in official state laboratories, Elwell said.
City to Hear Protest About Sidewalk Plan
CHUCK POTTER Kansan Staff Writer
Opponents of a controversial $85,000 skeletal sidewalk plan decided Monday night to appear at today's regular Lawrence meeting in order to protest the nlam.
Lloyd Davies, of 1845 W. 19th St., said Monday that he would show city commissioners a map which is colored to show the area residents who oppose the plan.
The plan involves a network of sidewalks in an area bounded by 19th, 23rd, Louisiana and Texas counties. The plan was established since October 1978, when a group of area residents who desired sidewalks began a series of meetings with Director of Public George Williams in order to outline the plan.
Davies said his group had contacted 983 property owners in the area and had received 333 replies. About 75 per cent of the respondents said they would comply, the commission's plan, he said.
About 30 people attended the opponents' meeting at the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. 19th St. Many expressed bitter feelings about the commission's plan.
One area man asked, "If sidewalks are so important, where were the brains when they (the city commission) laid out this area without sidewalks?"
The commission plans to conduct a public hearing on the project today before beginning actual work on the project. Opinion will be filed in a file a protest petition after the hearing.
Davies said the group's purpose today would be to demonstrate to the commission the results of an opinion poll which showed people were three to one against the plan.
"If we're turned down," he said, "we will have to begin circulating a protest paper."
One area woman, who said that several sidewalk plans for the area had been defeated in the last 10 years, suggested that the history of such plans to the commission.
Robert Haralick, associate professor of electrical engineering and space technology who filed recently as a candidate for the city council in New York, meeting to express his views on the project.
"The city commission is 'generally in favor of sidewalks,' Haralick said. "In this instance they feel they have tried to get this in accordance with the people' wishes. In order for the commission to run, they have to keep the lines of communication open."
Haraldik added that he owned a house located at 19th and Albania streets and had a car.
In other business today, the commission plans to conduct a public hearing on the advisability of a marking lot extension for New Hampshire Street in the 900 block.
The commission also plans to:
- Consider a resolution authorizing a request to the Planning Division of the Kansas Department of Economic Affairs to provide planning assistance to Lawrence.
- Receive staff recommendations concerning two separate requests for an application to the State Department of Education.
- Consider an appointment to the Traffic Safety Commission to fill the vacancy created by the recent resignation of Ward Thompson, Sr.
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OFFICER ELECTIONS THE WEEK OF MARCH 5. BOARD ELECTIONS THE WEEK OF MARCH 12.
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Minority Affairs
Apply in the SUR Office
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For the theme of this Brazilian film, director Glumber Rocha has shown hisoseness in his work. In a National American, an protagonist is an aristocratic intellectual, new poet, now journalist, belatedly who reflects on his shattered life as he lies dying, shut down by an oppressive regime, and then sets about building up a country.
The swirling configuration of past memories, in his delirium, is the key to his ability to absorb ideas, debauchery, and self-passion; as his life ebbs and flows, in this film endeavor, undertaken to provoke serious thought and awareness of all of my pervasions. Think about it; plan to see it tonight.
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4
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Taxing Problems
"Skip lines 15 through 19, 21, 23,
and 24. Be sure that lines 20, 22, 25, and
27 are filled in, sign your return,
and attach the forms you need. See
the instructions below for filling
lines 20, 22, 26 and 27, and for
completing your return."
This would be a great beginning for an editorial on the complexity of income tax forms, but because most students simply have to clip a couple of three-digit W-2 forms into a Form 1040A, it hardly seems worthwhile. Unless, of course, your parents have given you considerable resources, you've made a sizable fortune dealing dope, you are a mail robber, a Big Eight athlete or any combination of the above.
It does seem prudent to suggest that it is not advisable to claim someone as a dependent if she or he lives with you for less than two days a week, or to use Schedule F for computing tax on income gained from the cultivation or marketing of noxious weeds.
But most of us won't join Boby the Bootblack and Kenny the Rag Picker in the income tax game until we finish our college educations. Bobby and Kenny seem to be the right names, but my English Literature class is hung on Henry James and I will be studying Mary Oliver for several weeks. If you wish to verify the names, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to "People, Etc." in care of some other newspaper.
So, instead of income tax instructions, I'll devote the rest of this editorial to a discussion of English themes, which are at least as difficult. I'll add that you'll probably be about 45 before the number of income tax forms you've written of English themes you've written to give you the education that made all of that income tax possible.
First, limit your topic to the point where no reasonable person would bother to discuss it. There are two main reasons for this introduction. Some people favor
"though" and some favor
"although." But most agree that
"however" is not a good word to
start with. Once you've written the
opening word, you use the opening
sentence to set up the basic comparison
and contrast that is used to
fill the remainder of the required
space. It is important to write to the
right length.
The transitions between paragraphs are important. Both "though" and "although" are good for transitions. The experienced writer will use "while" and "however" to break up the pattern.
It is important to screw up the first attempt and to show progress during the rest of the semester. Instructors are also encouraged to think they are teaching you something.
Your grade can also be helped if you talk in class. Whispering to the person next to you has been found to be detrimental, however. If you don't know what to say, say something that you don't understand so it will sound profound. If at all possible, the instructor and allow yourself to be persuaded to his point of view gradually.
This knowledge may help you in later life if you become a Kansas editorial writer and you are stuck for an idea on a Sunday afternoon.
If you ask the instructor "How long should these be?" he will say "Long enough to cover the topic; whatever you feel is adequate or some other obvious thing. It is better how much do people usually write?"
Once you have determined the proper length, make an outline containing enough examples to fill the space. It is important to arrange these examples so that they appear to support what you said in the first paragraph. If you don't want you can solve the problem by restating the topic sentence of the first paragraph in the last paragraph.
Eric Kramer
The Nixon administration is pushing a plan to reduce certain benefits to disabled veterans, but older veterans of previous wars would effectively be exempted by a law that forbids such cutbacks if a disability rating has been held for 20 years or more.
Amnesty for Veterans
Amnesty for the veterans, if you will credit the phrase, seems a legitimate application in light of the following:
The current proposal would, for example, reduce the rating for loss of a leg at the hip from 90 per cent to 40 per cent disability.
The overall group potentially affected by this proposal is not small. Disabled veterans constitute approximately 12 per cent of more than 2.3 million men who served in Vietnam.
There are all kinds of "amnesty" to ponder, as one reflects upon the continuing spate of news and opinion surrounding the official end of the Vietnam War era. An application which hasn't been widely considered is amnesty for the veterans of that era. Perhaps it has been considered, but the single word is momentarily so politically charged that it has become as suicidal in the mouths of politicians as "peace" was in 1968.
—The proposed cutbacks in social programs will also ultimately affect the veterans. The Department of Labor has already frozen all labor training programs at current levels. Vacated slots will remain unfilled.
Although the statistics for unemployed veterans between the ages of 20 and 29 have improved markedly in the past two years, down to 231,000 by last December, the men obviously still face and will continue to face employment problems.
This is particularly acute for black
veterans, whose unemployment rate is twice that of their white counterparts. Black ex-servicemen earn less when they are employed and fewer of them have taken advantage of the GI Bill for education.
—The GI Bill itself still does not equal the compensation provided to World War II veterans, even after last fall's increase (which, as a note of political interest, first hit veterans in large, retroactive checks which arrived within days of the election).
It remains possible for a veteran to actually collect more money from unemployment compensation than through the Gillib, rather a strange behavior. Provident's avowed interest in seeing the citizenry "help themselves."
The student loan program, already cut considerably last year because of limited funds, was at least providing some veterans with otherwise unavailable tuition money.
A proposal by State Rep. Michael Glover (D-Lawrence), for granting Kansas veterans free tuition for higher education is an enlightened step in the right direction. It deserves the support of all segments of the community. Start with the "easiest," the most traditionally acceptable form of amnesty and work from there.
In addition, the President has proposed the elimination of certain existing governmental assistance programs for education. These include the National Direct Student Loan program.
But by all means, if you're a politician, don't call "it," by its name. It's not the word someone is beginning to really try to help "heal the wounds of the war."
C. C. Caldwell
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty or staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
'Emergency' Disturbs Congress
By HARRISON HUMPHRIES
WASHINGTON—For more than 22 years, the United States has been in a state of "national isolation," because it is not an enjoy as it sounds.
Letters Policy
congress could be it by passing a one-line resolution. The President could reinstate it the same way with a one-line proclamation.
Associated Press Writer
The present "emergency" was proclaimed by President Harry Truman on October 14, involvement in the Korean War, and is still in effect.
one knows at this point the full extent of what is involved except that it is far-reaching and complex.
'In its first month, the committee's four-member staff has identified nearly 300 laws that give the President, and in some cases his cabinet officers, powers not prescribed by the Constitution during periods of war or national emergency.'
President Johnson used it in 1968 to control investments abroad and to ease that year's balance of payments crisis.
During the past 22 years presidents of the United States have relied on the proclamation to issue executive orders on a variety of subjects without specific congressional approval.
The Senate has established a special bipartisan committee to study the question and has allotted $175,000 for its work. The committee is to report its findings to recommendations by Feb. 28, 1974.
In February 1971 President Nixon used it to suspend provisions of the Davis-Bacon act requiring payment of the prevailing wage in the area to workers on federal projects.
In its first month the committee's four-member staff has identified nearly 300 laws that give the President, and in some cases his cabinet officers, powers not prescribed by the Constitution during periods of war or national emergency.
Sen. Charles Mathias, R-Maryland, first proposed a joint House-Senate committee in 1971 to minimize theinating the Korean War emergency and restoring the constitutional balance between the Presidency and the Congress. The president now has 12 Senate co-sponsors.
Government computers in the General Accounting Office have been put to work in a search for information on "national emergency" triggers.
Matias said there were emergency laws on the statute books "permitting the President to sell stocks of strategic materials, revoke leases on real and personal property, suspend rules and regulations applicable to business enterprises troops beyond the term of their enlistments, detail military men to the governments of other countries and exercise control over consumer credit." The idea
of a joint committee was dropped in 1972 and establishment of a special Senate committee was proposed to expedite action.
—To avoid the appearance of a partisan confrontation between the Democratic majority on all regular congressional committees and the Republican administration whose cooperation is needed in the inquiry.
—To avoid jurisdictional conflict between existing committees in a review of emergency clauses in laws extending beyond the responsibility of any one committee in such related fields as agriculture, banking, labor, foreign affairs and defense.
The special committee procedure has two purposes:
The Nixon administration, in 1971, agreed to cooperate in the inquiry provided the special committee's assignment went through. Because of the emergency to include whether it should be terminated
As late as June 19, 1732, Assit. Secretary of State David M. Branch of the branch believes that a number of statutes dependent on the existence of a national emergency cannot be allowed to lapse at this time.
One of them, he said, is the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917 which is a vital element in our ability to conduct foreign policy and protect our national security.
The special Senate Committee on Termination of the National Emergency was to report its findings, which were released by Feb. 28, 1973. Congressional recesses for political conventions last year delayed the committee assignments—four Democrats and four Republicans until September, though.
Last June 23 the Senate unanimously adopted a revised Mathas resolution reflecting the views of the senate as to the scope of the inquiry.
In an organizational meeting last year the committee decided that it would need more time than originally planned to assemble a staff and get started. The committee also adopted Church's proposal that to emphasize the bipartisan nature of the project Mathias be given equivalent status as co-chairman.
Sen. Frank Church, D-Daho,
was named chairman and
Republican Mathias was named
vice chairman.
resolution reauthorizing the committee, providing for co-chairman, extending its deadline for a year and increasing its revenue from $100,000 to $175,000. It remains routine, without delay, Jan. 6.
On Jan. 3, the opening day of the new Congress, Church and Mathias jointly introduced a new
Appointed as staff director was William Miller, former foreign Service officer who had served until the end of 1972 as foreign affairs specialist on the staff of Sen. John Sherman Cooper, B.A.
Miller told a newsman that $100,000 of the committee allowance would be spent for staff salaries, if the work takes the full 14 months, but that he hoped for a final report in eight months. Miller will be paid about $20,200 a year, the same salary he
received on Cooper's staff The task involves:
Searching out all the laws affected.
— Sorting them into categories.
- Sorting them into categories.
- Seeking out and interviewing the men who drafted the statutes and regulations for the Governing clause.
Arranging for expert witnesses for public hearings, expected to begin next month.
—Attempting to define a genuine "national emergency."
—Consulting officials of the executive branch departments and the White House.
Church said he and Mathias jointly called on Attorney General Richard Hollendielen to assist the Justice assistance of the Justice
Kleidienst promised, he said,
to assign an attorney with special
experience in the field. Other
executive agencies, Church
added, also are committing
personnel to the task.
The Senate leadership, he said, will have to take it from there and decide whether other committees will have to review elements of the problem within their jurisdictions.
"I am determined," Church said, "that the committee get the job done with the time allowed, report and go out of existence."
Besides co-chairmen Church and Mathias, other committee members are Republican Sen. Merritt Brown, former Clifford P. Hansen of Wyoming and James B. Pearson of Kansas, and Democratic Sen. Philip A. Hale of Colorado. And of Rhode Island and Adalie E. Stevenson III of Illinois.
Students Chase Searchers In New Midmorning Game
By KEVIN SHAFER Features Editor
For those of you who enjoy midmorning entertainment, be advised that on this very campus exists one of the hottest new morning games around: The Secret Search.
The game gets more complicated each week and has, since its origin at the beginning of the fall semester of 1972, periodically added new and more exciting categories and characters.
The game started with the resignation of the University's chancellor. For a while there, players were tested on whether to believe that the resignation was justified, in fact, a rumor.
But then the game got into full swing. Contestants were secretly selected from the studio audience and asked to form a secret committee Search Committee, as it was later abbreviated.
The game began to fade from the charts for awhile. But suddenly, the Athletic Director at KU resigned his post and another committee chairman was elected. The chairman elapsed from shortly after their selection,
Coordinators for the game revealed later that one of the criteria that they used for selection of Secret Committee members was age. The younger the member the better, because the Secret Search could take an entire lifetime to end.
Well, it didn't take long before the first Secret Committee allied into the shadows of secrecy and began its secret search for the next president. And when they searched them, where they look, nobody knows.
And so things seemed pretty busy on the secret Search. So the game show turned into the real world.
ters were introduced or at least their committees were made publicly known for a short time.
Now the all-star cast includes committees to find a chancellor, an athletic director, a health director and a chairman for the department for biological sciences.
As the plot thickened, rumors started flowing that the director, chancellor and chairman did not disappear, but might have, in fact, be sweet away by a secret monster.
Well, now that the story is nearly six months old, a new committee has finally been established—the Secret Committee to Search for Search Committee.
Anyone can participate with this committee. The next time that you are on campus, look in class rooms, unearth a stone, yes, even move a stone to see if there is another those other search committees on campus.
Instead of appointing secret members to look for another student leader they simply appointed the vice president to take over until the next student election.
All should not end on such a sour note. Sources reported from the purple capital of the world, Manhattan, Kan., that the student body president at Kansas State University had dropped out and had consequently resigned from his position.
Of course the normal thing to do in that situation would have been to form a search committee to replace the student leader. However the student government, backward as they might have been, decided to handle the situation in their own way.
That may sound simple, but I wonder what
name I should give them when no search committees are to be found.
Jack Anderson
Navy Overspends bv Millions
WASHINGTON — The supposedly mighty House appropriations chairman, George Mahon, D-Tex., whose growing and snorting intimidates most government officials summoned to the Capitol, has developed a taint streak in a showdown with the Navy.
He apparently is backdown in the face of the Navy's refusal to produce documents dealing with its illegal overcommitment of $110 million, over-oversupply and sequestration violation, was first reported by us last November. At that time, the House Appropriations Committee
had been awaiting a full report on it from the Navy for more than six months.
When the report finally arrived in January — 10 months after it was promised — it was shot through with inconsistencies and coverups. It contended, for instance, that the Naval force had been laughed out of 171 of the overspending which began in 1969.
Then Admiral David Bagley, navy personnel bureau was responsible for the whole mess, gave an elaborate explanation which concluded he wasn't to blame. Nevertheless, there was
enough hard information, coated over by rationalization and doublekalk; for committee induction to draw these conclusions:
YANKEE
GO
HOME
- When the overspend had reached major proportions, the numbers would be some cases illegal million of at least $80 million in an elaborate scheme.
- The Bureau of Naval Personnel even tampered with of official accounting records to conceal the overcommitments.
—Three successive admirals in charge of the personnel bureau have broken the law by failing to institute the kind of law by both law and military regulation to avoid just such overstuffing.
What makes the scandal especially embarrassing at this time is that the overthrow of the admonitions of specific additions from Mahon's committee to cut back in expenses. The Navy promised it would.
Then it embarked on a spree of promotions and relocations of personnel that cost tens of millions more than Congress had appropriated for such purposes. In one year, for example there were more than 525,000 people employed but had just 623,248 persons. It averages out to nearly everybody being moved.
Committee investigators have been after the Navy for months to produce the supporting documents used to prepare the whitehawse report. So far, the Navy hasrefused.
About a week ago, a letter demanding the materials was drafted for Mahon's signature. But instead of being sent in, he wrote this of this writing. Mahon was reported to be in a quandary about
I
whether to send it.
what's more, there is now serious doubt as to whether extensive public hearings on the scandal will be held at all, even though the overcommitments are an unprecedented violation both of law and congressional budgetary authority.
The final irony is that the handful of offenders have been disciplined by more letters of admonition and transfers to other comfortable jobs. Meanwhile, of course, the Navy is trying
its best to force Gordon Rule, whose economizing on Navy contracts won him the highest civilian award, to leave his job for answering congressional questions.
The Navy's policy seems clear: If you violate the law and defy Congress by overspending millions, you get slapped on the face. You're charged by saving the taxpayers' money, you get kicked out.
Copyright, 1973,
bv United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscription rates $6 a semester, 10 yrs. services; devices and employment offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin may not necessarily be accepted. The State Board of Regents.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 13.1973
5
Host Families Program Flounders
By ZAHID IQBAL Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence Host Families Program, a local group which helps foreign students and American families get together, is designed to help host families to participate in the program.
Sibylle Barron, chairman of the program, said Saturday that at least 15 families were required for the foreign students who had enrolled this semester.
The program provides periodic social contact, she said, and does not entail any legal, financial or academic obligations on the part of the host family.
The families are encouraged to contact the student assigned to them in the first few weeks after his or her arrival in Lawrence. Subsequent meetings may be once a month and are not always an actual get-together, Barron said.
BARRON SAID THAT a student usually found new friends at school, and that meetings with families became unrequent in many cases. On the other hand, she said, many students managed to keep close contact with the families.
Many people who had participated in the program liked it, she said, and those who had discontinued the service had done so for personal reasons.
Barron said the meetings helped foreign students understand the American way of life and gave American families a chance to learn about a foreigner.
In many cases, members of the Lawrence community who were asked about the program had heard about it either directly or indirectly. All of them thought the idea of a foreign student to be useful but said they had no time to entertain foreign students in their homes.
One woman spoke of the need to remove "misunderstandings that exist between people of different countries." She said she would like to host a European student. She said she would not mind hosting someone from Asia or Africa, but she didn't know what she might have in common with such a student.
FEAR OF AN inability to communicate with foreigners was evident in the comparison between the Japanese and the French.
The students themselves do not consider communication a great barrier, and say that the program disappoints many because contact between the family and the student is difficult.
had lived with a foreign student last year and that, although he had no problems of communication, he knew foreign students 'tit in' and knew sometimes "not accepted."
One student said that foreign students expected too much from the program, which was just supposed to be an introduction to an American family. Closer contact, he said, depended on how much time the family volunteered.
Another student said the name of the program misled students into thinking that the host family here would play the role of a manager. The program organizer's insistence that this was not so,
HASNUKH R. MODI, a new arrival from India, was very excited about the program and at the prospect of meeting his host family.
"My host father had fad, his wife had fud,
his baby had fad and they did not want to
Modi said that when he was in India he had heard about "the famous American writer and activist who tried to participate. His expectations from the program were reflected in the comments made by other students, to some of whom a holiday could be to be with during holidays or weekends.
give me flu, so we have not met," he said. "But we will meet soon and I am very happy."
Joerg Paag, graduate student from Germany, said that he was all for the program but that he did not think "dinnerers are going to exchange an exchange of opinions and ideas."
His said he would like to relate to people his own age, not to old people who might sit down after a meal and expect him to provide an interchange of culture.
ASKED TO comment on some of the criticisms of the program, Barron said the organizers were reconsidering some of the operational procedures, and might devise changes that would make the program more satisfying to all concerned.
She complained that she had been unable
SUA Presents:
Ron Crick & Band
Feb. 14 8 p.m.
Union Ballroom
FREE
Blood Drive Exceeds Goal Of 600 Pints
footstompin! lightening pickin! Good old country fun! Y'all come & bring your sweethearts too!
A total of 781 pints was donated during the three-day drive, he said, compared with the goal-topping 807 pints given at KU in November. Spencer said blood drives had been conducted at the University for at least five years.
The blood drive at the University of Kansas last week took its goal of 600 pints for the second time in its history, Doug Spencer, Shawnee Mission sophomore and chairman of the spring Bloodmobile, said Monday.
SINGER:SONGWRITER
Many other persons, discouraged by the long waiting lines, left without giving blood.
About 200 persons who came to the Bloodmobile did not give blood, Spencer said. He said 40 or 50 persons each day were given temporary medical deferrals because of health problems. They will be allowed to donate血 at future drives.
RON CRICK
SINCE 1950'S WRITER
A recent blood drive at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and the drive at KU have helped to alleviate a sometimes dangerous shortage of blood at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, according to Ruth Bell, medical technician at the hospital.
Strickland was a retired business executive and civic leader from Mason City, Iowa. For many years he was manager of the company, which owned the city. The company served a large area in northern Iowa. He was at one time a member of the executive committee of the Kansas City Power and Light Co. and he served as a director to the farmers and Merchants State Bank in Colby.
During the 1962 Commencement exercises Strickland received a citation from the College of Pharmacy.
Spencer said that the blood donation process normally required about two hours, but that it was taking up to three hours to collect all of the blood and blood were given. The 18-bed Red Cross unit used in the drive was designed to process only 20 persons a day, he said.
He came back to KU for homecoming and commencement regularly according to Mildred Clofdifer, assistant secretary-treasurer of the Alumni Association. He also encouraged northern Iowa students to attend KU.
Charles Stickland, 80, a 1914 graduate of
College of Kansas, died Feb. 5 in
Scottsdale, Arizona.
Agnes Wright Strickland, Charles' mother was an 1887 graduate of KU.
Strickland and his brother and sister established the Agnes Wright Strickland School.
The Agnes Wright Strickland Award, which is under the supervision of the Endowment and Alumni Associations, will continue to be awarded.
The award, which gives the recipient a life membership in the Alumni Association, is given to outstanding seniors. Since 1969, it has been given to an outstanding senior man and woman.
Feminist Speakers Bureau
Now available to speak to your group on Topics of Womens Liberation.
Women's Coalition Birth Control
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to get any significant feedback on the program from the students. Most comment
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"How can you criticize what they are doing with such good intentions," a student said. "There is nothing wrong with the idea, only the way it disappoints many people. But you can't tell that to women who give valuable time to make us feel at home here. After all, they don't have to do it. They don't get any money."
Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said the program served a useful purpose. He said he realized that the brief contacts disappointed some students, but that the organizers made it clear that the program operated on a voluntary basis, according to the convenience of the host family and the student.
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Sponsored by Humanities Lecture Series
SENATE TREASURERS OFFICE
ATTENTION!!
Organizations Funded by Student Senate Activities Fund
The President, Vice President and Treasurer of all organizations funded by the Student Senate Activities Fund MUST sign a Capital Disposition Contract in the Senate Treasurer's office (104 B Kansas Union) on February 13, 14, or 15, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Organizations which fail to meet the 5:00 p.m., February 15 deadline will have their funds FROZEN.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
Faltering 'Hawks Face
Life isn't looking too good for the University of Kansas basketball squad these days. After dropping a Saturday night contest to last-place Nebraska, the Jayhawks must face the league-leading K-State Wildcats tonight at Manhattan.
K-State, 6-1, is coming off an impressive win over Colorado, the team which until the Saturday contest was tied with K-State for the conference lead.
Kansas, on the other hand, played one of its worst games of the season against Nebraska, shooting only 36.7 per cent from the field and hitting on only two of nine free
"We just weren't sharp and it didn't seem as if we could regain our sharpness," she said.
Owen said Monday that he did not know if the team could get itself up for the K-State game.
"It's a big question," Owens said, "and one we have to answer. It being a Tuesday is not the case."
The 'Hawks, 3-3, still have an outfield chance to capture the championship but it
"If we can win at Manhattan," Owens said, "we can cut K-State's lead to one game. They have a tough weekend ahead, and they won't have a weekend we could be back in the race."
K-State must still play Missouri, Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Colorado on the road. The Wildcats have home games with Kansas, Nebraska and Alabama.
Owens said that the 'Hawks would begin the game with a zone defense but that the Coyotes would be on the attack.
The Jayhawk starting lineup will have Danny Knight at center, Rick Suttle and Mike Fiddeke at forwards, and Tom Marshall Rogers at the guard positions.
Suttle was the high scorer for KU in Saturday's contest with 13 points, well below his average of 17 points. Marshall Rogers was the only other Kansas player to score in double figures. He finished with 10 points...
The Wildcats will start Steve Mitchell at center, Larry Williams and Ernie Kusnyer
TOPEKA (AP)—The Federal and State Affairs Committee of the Kansas House of Representatives may move to direct the Kansas Board of Regents to require the University of Kansas and Kansas State University to schedule athletic contests with Wichita
KU Competition With Wichita Killed in House
"If Wichita is going to quit being the stepchild of the three universities, we're going to have to start competing in sports," Andrew said.
Manhattan. The junior varsity game will
begin at 7:30 p.m., and the varsity contest will
begin at 7:30 p.m.
The game will be broadcast on channels 41 and on the WIBW, KANU and WHEN 32.
Wildcats
at the forward spots, and Bob Chipman and Lon Kruer at guards.
"WE HAVE A LOT of fans in Wichita who don't understand why we aren't competing
PROBABLE STARTERS
Sayers to Announce Job Decision Today
Cherry said that Sayers would not return to KU today, but that he would call Arthur Dutch 'Lonborg, interim athletic director, of the Chicago Soccer Club.' Sayers is present at home in Chicago.
According to Jack Cherry, University of Kansas sports information director, Gale Sayers will contact the University today to inform the athletic department of his decision concerning the job of assistant athletic director.
Mitchell has twiced big two halfes to lead K-State over KU. He scored most of his points in the second season Big Eight Tournament contest when KU was down by only one at the half. At Lawrence, Mitchell scored 17 points in the second half of the game when K-State came out winning.
If Sayers accepts the job he will probably return to Lawrence sometime next week, March 18.
On a voice vote, Andrew's committee was the only committee heard to攻 against a memorial.
The Jayhaws will leave Lawrence at 10:30 this morning for the bus trip to
A motion to kill the bill came shortly after the committee heard Rep. Eugene Anderson and Rep. Loy Andrews, both members of the House Committee for committee approval of the measure.
Rep. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, who is a member of the committee, he said thought Wichita would be embarrassed if it were plaving the other two universities this year.
The University of Kansas women's gymnastic team placed second in a national competition.
Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, the witchbill appeared to be an insult to the Wichita State athletic shift because it said in effect that the witchbill would carry to out scheduled duties properly.
Ranass
Knight (6-10)
Rick Sitch (6-9)
Mike Fidledeau (6-4)
Marshall Rogers (6-3)
Marshall Rogers (6-3)
KU Women Gymnasts Place 2nd at Meet
The team's record is now 2-1. The gymnasium earlier defended Washburn of Tampa
K#date
Larry Mitchell (6-10)
Larry Williams (6-9)
Ernie Kruger (6-3)
Lon Kruger (5-11)
Rob Choman (4-1)
Southwest Missouri State won the meet with 83.06 points. KU totaled 72.15 points and third place went to Kansas State College at Emporia, with 99.95 points.
Janie Baker, Kansas City, Kan., senior took first place in vaulting, Paul Frank, Lenexa freshman, took second place in vaulting, Joan Smith, Lawrence junior, and Frank tied for second place in floor exercises.
nasts earlier detached washburn of topeka.
Saturday the team will travel to Des Moines for a triangular meet with Grand-
tower basketball coach State State. When making the trip will be Cheryl Beard,
Wichita freshman, Patsy Byrd, Ottawa sophomore, Liesim Crim, Sioux City, Iowa,
freshman, team manager Pat Brockman,
Baldwin senior, coach Judy Jones, assistant instructor in physical education at KU,
Baker, Frank and Smith.
Missouri Edges Oklahoma; Adams Out for the Season
Indications were Adams would be out for the season.
COLUMBIA (AP)—The Oklahoma Sooners lost more than a 64-62, Big Eight basketball game to the 8th-ranked University of Missouri Tigers Monday night. The Sooners lost their league leading score. Alvin Adams.
The 6-9 freshman, averaging 22.7 points per game, suffered a fracture of his left arm in a confrontation with Missouri's Owry Larson. The OU basket with 10.05 to play in the game.
Adams hit only 10 points in the game, sitting out the last 10 minutes of the first half with three fouls and the last 10 minutes of the game in the Boone County Hospital.
Missouri won the hard-fought contest on a 9-point show by Salmon with 9 seconds to play.
The Tigers held a 62-60, lead when Salmon
Leading scorer for Oklahoma was 6-8 Ken Evans, with 20 points. Adams and Holland added 10 points each to complete the Sooners' double scoring.
called the two free shots, only to have the ball thrown in and down the floor for a quick lay-up by OU's Tom Holland for the final score.
Al Eberhard led the Tiger attack with 19 points and 17 rebounds, but Missouri fans were impressed by the play of 6-0 reserve guard Kevin King, King, a freshman from St. Louis, tallied 11 points for the only other Missouri player in double figures. He hit 9 out of the last 14 Tiger points, scoring from both outside and underneath.
The victory gives Missouri a 5-3 Big Eight mark, I-T-S-overly. Oklahoma to drops 4-8 in the first round.
Missouri held a 31-29, halftime edge in a contest lead with mistakes. The Tigers were guilty of 28 turnovers, 14 in each half, while Oklahoma added 16 such violations.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
The KLWN 1973 1,000.00$$ Treasure Hunt is here — Good Luck! KLWN
FM Stereo 106
Purpose:
The Ombudsman Office Can Help
To provide an independent office to counsel, investigate, and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Office Phone 864-3607 Location B-108 Kansas Union
Scope: MOUTHWASH
All areas are open to the Ombudsman office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation.
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
RIGHT of the HUNTER
directed by
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starring
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CLASICAL ILLMS
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Wed. Feb. 14
75c
Film Society
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3:30, 7:30 & 9:30
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Thurs., Feb. 15
Spotlight on Modern Dance
DANCING PROHETM
SERAPHIC DIALOGUE
Special Films
Paramount Pictures
Presents
HAROLD
and
MAUDE
Special Films
Project—patchwork pillow of Paterna Persian Wool on French Canvas.
SU Woodruff Mon. feb. 19
TEOREMA
Needlepoint and bargello classes for men and women will be Thursday's 7-9 p.m. beginning Feb. 22 and Wed. day's 1-3 p.m. beginning Feb. 14.
Cost -58 for four weeks, plus cost of supplies
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Original design with monogram and date
documenting of 10 needlespoint and
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Presents
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Part five of Captain Marvel.
Popular Films
Woodruff 7 & 9:30
Feb. 16 & 17 60c
KING KONG
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Episode three of
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Ballroom 7:30
Tues. Feb. 13 75¢
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KU Concert Series presents The Ljubljana Dancers and Singers
Friday evening 8:20 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
This concert is free to all students with ID, Faculty and Staff $1.00. General admission $1.50.
Tickets can be purchased at SUA office, Student Union Starting Wed., Feb. 14.
If you liked the DUKLA you'll like this one.
SV
.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 13, 1973
7
Supply of Engineers Viewed as Insufficient
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
A University of Kansas student who receives a B.S. degree in engineering this spring probably will not appear among the ranks of the unemployed in the future, William P. Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, said Monday.
The demand for engineers in governmental and industrial fields is increasing at such a rapid pace that a deficit of qualified engineers is quickly developing, he said.
Not more than five per cent of the students graduating this year with a degree in engineering will be unemployed six years after they graduate, Smith predicted.
He said the job shortage for engineers in the 1980s was disappearing fast because of increased economic activity in the nation, and because business had been picking up at a marked pace since the 1969-71 low period.
ENROLLMENT IN the field of engineering has decreased steadily, resulting in an insufficient supply of engineers to meet the demand. Smith said.
Last year almost 43,000 students in the United States graduated with engineering degrees. Based on current enrollment figures in engineering schools, the number of engineering graduates is expected to drop to 32,000 by 1976. Smith said.
KU's engineering graduate total this spring will reflect the national loss of
The number of students at KU who received engineering degrees in the last three to four years remained between 220 and 223, Smit said. This year the number is expected to drop to 190 and a decline of 20 is predicted for next year, he said.
DESPITE WHAT the figures indicate, lizbeth Sherrill, engineering secretary at NASA, describes the problem.
the company had not experienced a shortage of engineer applicants so far.
However, KPL, like many other companies, has increased its demand for engineers since the 60s. Two engineering firms in New York and California in Lawrence since 1960, Steerling said.
Evans Bierly Hutchinson and Association, a local civil engineering firm, also reported no shortage of engineer apprentices. The company assembler, engineer-in-training for the firm.
KU conducts an active campaign every year in Kansas high schools to recruit students for the School of Engineering, Smith said.
The company plans to expand in years ahead, Steinbacher said. Eventually they will add one or two engineers to the staff. But whether applicants will be available to the company in future years is not known, he said.
Companies are sending recruiting teams to colleges and universities over the nation and are recruiting students to fill more positions. In 1969, a period between 1969 and 1971, South said,
SMITH SAID women are being encouraged to enroll in engineering programs throughout the nation to help fulfill the demand for engineers. Unfortunately, he said, schools have not been very successful in recruiting engineers.
Engineering is the only degree program in which enrollment figures are decreasing so drastically. Smith said there would be an increasing demand for students who have completed a two-year technical engineering program to help meet demands.
Area Sleuths on Quest For KLWN Treasure
Students who graduate from the School of Engineering this spring will have a greater chance to find the particular job they want and those students who graduated in 1970 or 1971, he said.
KLWN sponsored the first treasure hunt in 1972. Chabin said the response to last
From the Gold Rush of 1849 up to the Treasure Hunt of 1737, mankind has been captivated by the idea of buried treasure. Students, businessmen and housewives in a town have vies in a search for a $1,000 treasure, the object of the 1797 KLUN WN Treasure Hunt.
The money was hidden in early January by KLWN announcer Jim Chabin, mastermind of the contest. Chabin, the only person who knows where the money is hidden, not only invenied the treasure hunt the money, but also will write all the clues.
The commissioners approved a resolution that relates to authorization of a request to the Planning Division of the Kansas Department of Economic Development to provide planning assistance to Douglas County.
County Urges Improved Roads At Clinton Lake
Deterioration of roads in the area of the future site of Clinton Lake was brought to the attention of the Douglas County Commissioners in their meeting Monday.
The commission also decided to inspect the 4-H fairgrounds east of Lawrence to assess their condition.
In other commission business, bid specifications for construction of 10 civil defense warning sirens were submitted. Bid notices will be published Wednesday Feb. 21. The sealed bids will be opened at 10 a.m. March 1.
In reply to complaints of area residents, Dean Sanderson, county public works director, cited harsh seasonal weather as the cause of the deterioration. Commission action was requested that Sanderson take steps to ensure that the roads in the area were maintained.
year's hunt was so good that the radio station decided to make the contest an airing.
Chabin said the 1972 hunt had been a success for all persons involved.
"Most of the store owners were happy about the number of people coming in for shopping. "Some of the letters from several people saying they really got together to try to figure out the clues."
"It is all very good-natured and good for business too," said one local merchant. "a lot of people come into the店 to get the book and getting them in here is half the battle."
Chabin said the largest factor contributing to the contest's success was community spirit. There had been no malalam or destruction of property, he said.
"I had to go rescue the 9th hole at Alvamar (golf course) once, but other than that people were really good about not digging in and replacing what they did dig up," he said.
In the final week of last year's hunt, searchers were asked to pick up trash as they looked for the treasure, Chabin said. Many persons cooperated, he said.
The 1973 treasure hunt began Feb. 11 and will continue throughout the month. Chabin said the clues from any single week would be a great reward, but each week the clues would become easier.
"By the last week, almost anyone should be able to find the money," he said.
Campus Bulletin
*law school* 15:30 pm. Cottonwood College;
*law school* 16:30 pm. Buffalo Civil Liberties
Human Relations Training; 12:30 pm. Alcove A.
*law school* 17:30 pm. Buffalo Civil Liberties
Human Relations Training; 12:30 pm. Alcove A.
Oftentate Committee 3:30 p.m. Government Room.
812 W. Main St., N. Cary, Carry
Room.
brist Cathedral: 6 p.m., Centennial.
*wustache Sales Center*, 7 p.m. & 8 p.m. Eagle Room.
*wustache Sales Center*, 7 p.m. & 8 p.m. Eagle Room.
*Broadway Executive Committee*, 7 p.m. Flip Room.
*Broadway Executive Committee*, 7 p.m. Flip Room.
*Young Dearerlec*, 7 p.m. Flip Room.
*Young Dearerlec*, 7 p.m. Flip Room.
*Broadway Silent Stunden*, 8 p.m. P Perion A.
*Broadway Silent Stunden*, 8 p.m. P Perion A.
THORNTON
Commonwealth Theatres
NOW SHOWING
John Craig, Top British Agent, is sent on a case involving an internation double-cross.
You don't turn your back on anyone. Especially the partner who's backing you up.
MOVIE INFORMATION
nocent Bystanders
Eve. 7:20, 9:30
Mat. Sat-Sun 2:15, 4:15
Adults 1.50 Rated PG
842-4000
Hillcrest
Travels
With my
Aunt
BASED UPON
THE NOVEL
GRAHAM
GREEN
Directed by
George
CUNOR
Eve. 7:15, 9:10
Mat. Sat. Sun. 2:35, 4:25
Exploding With Wit And Humor
Hillcrest
Sun-Thurs. 7:15 only
Fri-Sat. 7:15, 9:55
Maf. Sat-Sun. 1:45, 4:10
ROBERT REDFORD IS
1776
ENDS
TUES Hillcrest
PLAYBOY Magazine. January 1981 through December 1983. $10 for one issue ($150 below current market value). Also SPORTS MAGAZINE. HI-DIMENSION magazine. late issuance. 16, 1981. HI-DIMENSION Magazine. fine issue (AUCTION). Record digital record of sports, $150. Phone Dick Daler at 822-748-3851.
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
For Isle: Superfatial Sport (Sport), excellent
For Orkney: Superfatical Tidal tires.
For Isle at 1340 Kettleby, No. 8-15
For Orkney at 1340 Kettleby, No. 8-15
AKC St. BERNARD Hospital blood lines
AKC St. BERNARD Hospital blood lines
Mont Blau Jr. St. Bernards, 843-252-3
2-19
Mont Blau Jr. St. Bernards, 843-252-3
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students at the following PLANNING CLASS ALL DISCOVERY TO 111 FLINT HALL
ANTIQUES CLOTHIES—53 Main, Western, Mo.
615 N. 27th St.—49th Avenue; 108 N.
or 164-644-266. Victorial mottos and badges
include "Estate of John A. Duggan."
RAY AUDIO STREET WARHORSE The Forest
Audiosystems, Inc., 605 N. Waukee Ave.
Lawrence, Iowa, K404-6024. Phone 862-247-1017.
NORTH SIDE Country Shops — 3-1bk. No. of Kwafi mats, collared shirts, gas heating & cooking stoves, wood pellet stoves, speed cookers & workstations, 40+ drum ware, net bushel & 1/2 bushel baskets & wooden crates, Fireplace and 1/2 bushel baskets & wooden crates, cord price, Baked alfalfa, bromus & wheat straw, Open 9, 7 set, 824-7539, Herbert Allenward, tp
JEREMIAH
JOHNSON
CARS BOUGH AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vermont, 842-806-9958
G.J. Ouse's Car dealership,
Vermont, 842-806-9958
FOR SALE
AUDIO EQUIPMENT - 20 to 40% below retail on over 30 name brands of stereo components. For quotes and more information call Sound Service representatives at 844-2634 or 841-213
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There is a lot of Value in this Book!
Eve. 7:30,9:35
Mat. Sat-Sun. 3:30,5:25
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
WOLLITER organ, with double keyboard, base
armature, and warranty, 843-714-2
bench books, and warranty, 843-714-2
Must sell Jawahir Tower Apt. contract to 1 or 2
families at 441-763, or collect to
pedia 235-2002
72 SUZUKI 725J, street. With tack, speedometer. 830 JACKSON 124, street. Ex-14 843-1747. Ex-214
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Madame Pauline, Town Crier.
Granada
THEAIR - nigelboone V1 3-STAR
Powerful 20 watt Magnavox AM-FM Deluxe
Powerful 20 watt Magnavox AM-FM Deluxe
1972 model - $89.95 - only $138 in
1974 model - $169.95
Entire stock of Michiel Reinbarth Steel贝垫 now 20% off list at Ray Stoneback .B25 MW
-Rated PG-
Weekdays 7:30; 9:50
Sat. & Sun. 2:30; 4:50
7:30; 9:50
AKC. St. Bernard puppy, 5 mon. Female, very
called. Call 842-4899-1689
2-19
BACKPACK -nylon bag, medium size aluminum
backpack with waist strap +$15 plus TWO MAN
accesories plus 3 in. comp. chair,
accessories +$25. Both used only once and
in new condition. $42-845.SS$.
BOKONON 15 BACK-Reckoned and antique
bokonon 15 BACK-Reckoned and antique
bokonon 15 BACK-Reckoned Clothes, 119 Vermont
Clothes, 119 Vermont
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1987 Chevy Impala convertible; air conditioning,
good tires, good light, low mileage; B44 2-16
after 500 hrs.
MUST SELL. **BELA** Mini-bike, new lad seat adapter.
MUST SELL. **BELA** Mini-bike, new lad seat adapter that retails for $45-$50 - Make offers. Cash return.
Three Days
Adults 1.75 Child .75
HELL UPSIDE DOWN
"THE POSEIDON
ADVENTURE"
Excellent used MagnaVision Contelekt Mediterranean Style Stereo with AM-FM stereo radio—like new only $99.99, WY Bankstone's, 824-730-6211, WY Bankstone.com, 824-730-6211, WY Bankstone.com
AM/FM stereo, Bait offer, 824-730-6210, 2-15
AM/FM stereo, Bait offer, 824-730-6210, 2-15
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
2434 Iowa VI 1-2008
tune-ups start ing service
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telegrams WP 7-1-2005
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Let Us Sell It For You
842-7098 anytime.
Be Prepared!
Sale every Monday Nite
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call 842-7998 anytime.
Mobile home on lot in Bonnet Springs, 20 min.
Homes at 14, 60, 2 bedrooms. A/C fully equipped.
Bldd # 14, 60, 2 bedrooms. A/C fully equipped.
Bldd # 14, 60, 2 bedrooms. A/C fully equipped.
- G8 Javelin BST. Respendant metallic green; full
luster with clear color and excellent condition. Avali-
$1500
sale price.
For Sale: Ud Armstrong Flute in good condition.
@ 60; Call Soma Linnakia evenings 2-4pm
$500 Audin America. Forced to sell. Good shape.
$350, ungraffited. 1318 Kentucky, No. 4, 8414.
1162 Lafayette, No. 7, 8414.
GTO 2-D BR-HT, yellow with black vinyl wuk
1830.9 condition
GTO 4-D BR-HT, 8419.9 – 2008 p. 2: 19
1830.9 condition
BOKONOON ORIGINAL ANTIQUE CLOTHES
now on sale, fur coats ($15-$10), flamed and
golden. Bokonoo, 15% discount on all dresses
and robes. Bokonoo, Recycled Curtains, 3-
483.97-988. 3-219
FOR SALE - 1863 Ford Fairlane Station Wagon
842-831-2500 842-831-2500 2-15
842-831-2500 7-6:30 pm 2-15
Record Collection for sale. Over 300 albums, most rock call Jm. J14-8278, after 2: 19
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
Travelling to a dormitory, try 2. bedroom apt. directly across Mast,
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus
buildings, parking pad for rent. Free: Cabcels,
workstations. Air conditioning, rateable rates, furniture availability. Ideal roommate.
Suite Apt., Suite Apla, 1123 Inst. Apt. 9
tel: 843-211-691
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-under duplex has huge windows and a Naimshi Foyn, in an extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms (kids' and adults') have electric kitchen with utility uptown, stove and electric range, large storm windows and large attached garage. $150/month. February 17 At $232 Cedarwood Avenue. Call
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
OLD ENGLISH VILLAGE
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE APARTMENTS
They play basketball and tennis outward. A quiet room is located in the corner of the hall, where you play basketball, the indoor room games, or the gymnasium.
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
Counsel by and for these question apartments. Rent
will vary. The rent of each apartment are paid Leases of various lengths are paid.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. New apartments apts for the Spring season. Central heating and air, pool and gym. Most utilities included. Call 843-6250 or see at 11am W. 19th, apt. SB.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall 2016. Room 2, bedrooms 2, bedrooms w/Judit. Guided bath location: Pool and gas-light, landcapped management, 2500 West 844 - 843-733, Libby Library
Nicely run apt. for 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-854. 2-14
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
RENTAL SALEM SERVICE
For the later dates in rental in rentals will be lacew Lawrence Exchange, Rentals 210-365-4780.
ROGM with kitchen privileges close to campus.
Call 842-4475.
2-13
1 bdmr.吧 to Campus. Off-street parking
Also studio. No pets. 1429 Ohio 8131-214
2 studio. No pets. 1429 Ohio 8131-214
4 bedroom house, 3 porches, full basement, part
furnished $180/month, day calls 843-1601 or
parties for $300/month.
Must Sublease one bedroom apt. a1 block from $180; plus elec. a182-526A. Away fees: $275; room rates: $395.
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall.
2-23 in each room with 100 square feet.
From Union, no pets. Phone 843-5677 - 2-23
Sleeping room, single and double, furnished for 2 people. Kitchen with sink and 2 blocks in front. Phone: 845-767-567.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 18th 841-2656
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Pougeot uo-8 $117.50
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
NOTICE
Best apartment value in Lawrence, Conventence,
management, and cleanliness. Make reservations
now for 1 and 2 bedrooms from $10. Excellent
bedroom space. Cedarwood Park, Edison
843-116-2144. 2144 Oustahl
2-15
RIDE ON BICYCLES
room for rent with kitchen privately, 84/5
month, new campus, call 843-9833, private
room.
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas.
Home health facilities. Home Health
Centers. 311 E. 7th St. 848-6100
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
151 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, We Bar-B-Q in Queens,
NY 11204. A slab to住 here $2,400. Large rib laph
meat; a slab to住 here $4,200. Large rib laph
beef must; a slab to住 here $4,200. Ground of beef $3 | chicken plate
bread
No charge, lift your home, housemates, doubles,
friends, family and a friend. No waiting.
For more info call Home Locator
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
furniture or equipment for compartmentalized
information call 842-739-6000.
Discount prices with saving up to 40% on some items. Touring packages at Country Shop, 797 North 3rd Street, Open 9-17, 7 days.
Roses and candy may be sweet, but a Valentine's gift is a very special. The 10th Edition, 2-14
W 10th Bd
GAY LIBERATION ACTIVITIES; Monday-busty,
7.00 a.m. union; FRIDAY-SOCIALIZING-
4:30 a.m.; 4-20 for details; OFFICER-
RAPID-846-3564; OFFICER-
Union, 864-4898,封室 204, Lawrence.
2-14
Want to send a special Valentine to a special
person? Send a valentine Valentine For detail:
862-6827 2-14
WANTED
Desperately need someone in doctor in math, in engineering or computer science and/or any reasonable amount if you could help me with something.
Wanted- Person to fill position of roommate. No preemptive needed. For more information call 312-559-6870.
Want to move into Chang? Need one more to
move from Union. Come by & see. 1031, Tom or
Jim.
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
furniture, 842-7098. tt
1401 Mass.
Wanted: female roommate to live in house with
college student, attending campus; camp
$80.00 per month, Call 842-6531
Two cords DEPRESATLY rived need rite to Stillwater. They are charged by paying the deposit. Going out way FIRE ride is required.
PERSONAL
Recruiters on Campus:
Feb, 19-23.
843-8484
Contact them in the Union, Fraser, or Strong Hall.
Come gifl our store! 20 new fragrances have been original! Original 7 at Waxman Center. 7 West 14th St.
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 843-9694
Casa de Taco
Delicious Nutritious
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with counon 843-9880
UP YOUR ALLEY—o coffee house! The pleasant place to escape what has shaken you or meet friends. Planned entertainment Wed. - Fr.
Sunday. On week of week. Open 6-12 pm. Location in Lewis Hall.
The Needle Point Men's and women's needles
beginning February 22. Come visit us at 319-650-4108.
LOST
LOGST-Much tough louse, short hair, gray with a
moustache. I will help her.
KIMA (Nya-ma). Please help me find her MAI-
MA.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses
and bar staff for dinner and weekend hours. Phone 843-656-
4401 for information.
Bowed for return of small black and fan盯med
for small white and fan盯med
Mistlethorns-door or call 841-7631 or 842-
8000.
Dancers want for afterwards. Must be 18.
Achilles want for afterwards. Must be 24.
19th and Haskell between 11 & 2. Coinage 2-14
Product Development Assistant. Rapidly growing team of engineers requires creativity, understanding of material properties and responsibility for direct activities of draftroom. Should have understandings of management skills working with hands. Communicate with teams working with hands. Communicate with teams working with hands. Burnett instruments, 700 E. 22d. F. 823-728. - 12
If you know farming, talk to the Peace Corp.
Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fear and Strong Hall
Lost-Man's, black "dattier" wallet, possibly
from 1987 on Feb 6. Reward 2.14
or 833 or 833-707 or 833-708
SALIS HIJP.) WANTED-Morning, apply to
person, Mr. Guy. 920 Mass.
2-20
TYPING
Employment Opportunities
experienced in typing them, disassemblers, them
processors, and code readers. Send resume to:
Prentice Hill, spelling correction. Phone:
718-532-6000. Email: prenticehill@cps.com
HELP WANTED
FOUND
Found Friday. February 2. female miniature pooch
with yellow eyes. Black at 92 Kentucky. No. 4. Grow-
back at 92 Kentucky. No. 4.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals:
into. center 864-3506
DATSUN
IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S IMPOR-DAY'S 500 F. 33rd 842-6444
500 E.23rd
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pickup a budget request form from 104B Kansas Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 104B before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
8
Tuesday, February 13. 1973
University Daily Kansan
BOYBURNS BARBERSHOP
Kansan Photo by DON PFANNENSTIEL
Men's Hair Styling on the Upswing
Don Keeler, Lawrence graduate student, gets the 'treatment' at the Squire Barber Shop . . .
(Continued from page 1)
Faculty Examines Salaries ...
Prices rose 5 per cent in 1971 and 3.5 per cent in 1972. The projected price increase for 1973, he said, also is 3.5 per cent. He said the increase was due to the three years would be 12 per cent.
Business, calculated the decrease in faculty purchasing power.
SALARIES DID NOT increase at all in 1971, he said, and rose no more than 5.5 per cent in 1972. If the request made by the Board of Regents is granted, salaries could rise another 5.5 per cent in 1973. The total increase would be only 11 per cent, he said.
The comparatively optimistic outlook for 1973 makes the projected impact of inflation seem more tolerable than the impact felt thus far. In just 1971 and 1972, prices climbed 8.5 per cent and salaries rose 5.5 per cent.
Charles Kiesler, chairman of the department of psychology, said that not every faculty member realized a 5.5-percent increase when the legislature increased the budget allocation by 5.5 per cent in the Department of grant management, psychology teachers received only a 5.5-per cent pay raise, he said.
THE CHRONICLE OF Higher Education lists the average salaries paid to full professors at all institutions, Kiesler said, and last year he counted 402 colleges and universities that surpassed KU in compensation to full professors of psychology.
The pay scale for full professors is most critical, Kiesler said, because the mobility of an assistant or associate professor is difficult. "You have to pay for the future as well as by his present pay."
Hiner said financial difficulties make professors more interested in research
Kiesler minimized the tendency to seek outside employment.
grants and outside employment, such as extension work and consulting.
"This is a professional department," he said. "People tend not to moonlight. Their lives are their professions. They don't want to spend their time moonlighting. It's demeaning. Can you imagine someone as equally famous moonlighting? It's ridiculous."
KIESLER SAID that his salary had not been affected as much by the austere budget as the salaries of some other members of the psychology faculty.
"I haven't been here very long," he said.
"They had to pay me an honest wage to get me. KU had to compete with other colleagues."
KU's power to compete with other institutions in hiring and retaining competent
faculty members has been diminished by its lower-than-average salary scale.
The hardship created by the tight budget, Clark said, is thus greater for the entire University than it is for individual faculty members. The reason for this, he said, is that professors often can accept higher-paying jobs at other institutions, and the University is left with a less-distinguished faculty.
Puladan said that the low pay did not prompt most professors actively to seek other employment, but did make them aware of the opportunities for job opportunity if they came along.
The salary situation also promotes gamesmanship among faculty members, Peladan said, in that they will seek out jobs they do not really plan to take.
"I'd rather term it nearer than shorter," said Wayne Meisheimer, manager of Hillier Corp. Shop, "Men still wear their hair fall but like the convenience of short
Men's hair lengths have been a controversy for many years, but suddenly the styles for men are doing an abrupt abutface. The styles are getting shorter.
Styles of Men's Hair Go to Shorter Lengths
contrasting with the flattoe of '60s fame, the '70s version of short hair is very short on top, full around the face and ears yet tallened, according to George Irwin, owner of Hair Benders, 1919 W. 24th St. He said the longest hair would be shoulder length.
Both men said they had noticed a definite trend and demand for shorter haircuts in Lawrence. Irwin said it was for comfort's sake and Meisenheir thought that the clothing of today had a lot to do with the trend for a shorter haircut.
Ken Amess, owner of the Esquire Barber Service, 2232 Ridge Court, said that the reason men wanted shorter hair was that job opportunities were scarce, and consequently interviews were more demanding.
He described the new short haircut as a shorter version of the shag. The hair is longer on the sides but more closely styled on top, Ameas said.
Irwin said that a recent trip to New York he noticed all the men wearing much shorter hair. He said the fashion had been growing for six months.
"Twenty per cent of the people will catch on right away, 50 per cent will catch on in
One MOMENT BY RUSS
A LITTLE OF REGRET
"Referz
MADNESS"
NEW YORK CITY FILM MUSEUM
FOLLOW THEM ON WEBSITE
MAKE UP AMERICA! WITH A ROADBORN WEED
WORK AWAY FROM NATIONAL HIGHWAY
MARJIJUANA
WEED FROM THE DEVIL'S GARDEN!
All agreed that the college student would be the first to follow the trend.
STARTS WEDNESDAY
7 DAYS ONLY - FEB. 14,20th
Hillcrest
Mismeisenher and Irwin have already cut their hair shorter to adapt to the trend, but they don't.
TEACHERS
two years and 20 per cent will never catch on," Irwin said.
Get to the heart of education problems at home or overseas, and can show you how. Education problems (Monday); Sign up for interview
Use Kansan Classified
Cynthia Brane, junior, was elected Girl Most Likely to Succeed.
Cynthia's initial reaction was bitter. "At what?" she said. "Women's work is a drag."
Vice President of Finance, I found a great job! I joined Provident Mutual's Campus Internship Program. I can have fun and work with people, be a banker, money! I have a job waiting for me when I graduate. By the way, I have an insurance program that would be perfect for me.
PROVIDENT MUTUAL
LIFE-INSURANCE COMPANY
OF PHILADELPHIA
Home Office P.O. Box 7378, Ph. 1905
STEPHEN H. KRAYBILL /C.R.
2401 W. 25 Apt. No. 989
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
913 841-2310 or 913 842-3146
Tuesday Night
is
K.U. Night
5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
SPAGHETTI and
MEAT BALL
809 W. 23rd
843-1886
$ 7.00
ITALIAN
PIZZERIA
Res. 913 841-2310 or 913 842-3146
Buy two,
get one free.
Reg. Value $7.29
$3.99
Free
60 minute
cassette!
MEMOREX 60
Buy two.
Get this one free!
MEMOREX 60
MEMOREX 60
MEMOREX Recording Tape
Reproduction so true it can shatter glass.
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT
RECORDS
& STEREOS
The Malls
Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
Candidates for PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT BODY must file a joint declaration of intention to seek such offices with the secretary or the elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 14.
On March 14 and 15, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student Body will be elected.
In order to be eligible for either of these offices, the candidates must have either served on the Student Senate or must have their declaration supported by the signatures of at least 500 members of the Student Body. Declarations must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee for each candidate.
To become a candidate:
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OFFICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
W
W
W
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
83rd Year, No. 90
House Hears Testimony On Equal Rights
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
See STORY Page 2
St Valentine's
Greeting.
Kansan Staff Photo by DON PFANNENSTIEL
Hearts
Museum until Feb. 21. Elaborate colors, paper and lettering characterize these "sentimental" valentines of the mid-1800s. Most of the valentines in the exhibit were made in the United States and England.
Valentines of the 19th Century are on display at the Spooner Art
8 Vie for City Commission
David Healv
and George Stewart Kansas Staff Writers
Eight candidates filed this week for the three city commission seats that expire this spring, bringing to 14 the number of candidates. The deadline for filing was noon Tuesday.
Three of the candidates filed more ceremoniously than the others.
The candidates were Fred J. Pence, 40,
415 East 15th St.; Robert L. Elder, 43, 2636
Arkansas St.; and Gene F. Miller, 40, 305
Arrowhead Drive.
After reciting a prayer and the Pledge of Allegiance, the Lawrence Support Your Local Police committee presented Tuesday a slate of three candidates pledged to bring the Lawrence City Commission back to the tavern.
"We feel the only way to be effective is to offer a slate of moral and honest men for guidance."
Tom Hart Sr., chairman of the committee, who announced the slate, said that Support Your Local Police had not been fouled as a political organization.
Hart said that the committee's members
Student Filings Due by 5 p.m.
The filing deadline for student body president and vice president is 5 p.m. today. Candidates must file a joint statement in the Senate, or the mittee chairman or in the Senate office.
The deadline for candidates for Student Senate and class officers is Feb. 21.
thought that the basic function of govern-
ment was the protection of life and property
direction.
HART COMPARED the candidates' platform to a seven-course dinner and said they would serve one course at a time. The candidates did not simply announce their campaings Tuesday, but served their hors d'oeuvres, he said.
Pence, who owns and operates The Garden Pier, 15th and New York streets, and has lived in Lawrence for 11 years, complained of what he called the present power failure that exists in city hall. He calls the city official's absence without the consent of city taxpayers.
Among recent power plays that Pence enumerated were the annexation of Michigan to New York and Massachusetts St. improvements which he said people did not like, the misuse of city sales tax revenues, the mistreatment of city residents in state legislature and a recent sidewalk controversy.
He said, "Serious questions arise concerning the activities of one of the city commissioners who owns several of the beer joints in Lawrence (some of which are public nuisances) and a large number of the gaming machines in the area.
MILLER, a former Lawrence policeman who is a shift supervisor at DuPont Co., Tecumseh, has lived in Lawrence for 22 years and is a member of the John Birch Society, attacked a city commissioner whom he would not name.
"Is there a connection between the gaming machine business and illegal gambling in Lawrence? Does a city commissioner have an unfair advantage in obtaining a license to operate beer joints?" Miller asked.
plained that Lawrence City Manager Watford Johnson Jr. spent too much time traveling around the country attending meetings at the taxpayer's expense.
"HIS JOB is in Lawrence, Kansas." Elder said. "If he feels he should attend meetings outside the state, then our answer is for him to be in a position to so on his own, and we can be an administrator who can concentrate of job of administering the city of Lawrence."
Elder said that Kansas Atty. General Vern Miller had to come to Lawrence to arrest law breakers, not because Lawrence was a city administration unresponsive to the city administration was unresponsive.
Elder, a building contractor who has lived in Lawrence for 14 years and also is a builder.
Ending the formal pronouncement, Hart said, "We ask the citizens of Lawrence to
See EIGHT Next Page
Nixon Plans Strategy For Monetary Talks
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon said Tuesday that he will ask Congress for authority to erect tariff barriers if the federal government follow up devaluation of the dollar.
Nixon took Secretary of the Treasury George P. Shultz that "devaulation of the dollar is at best only a temporary solution of the problem."
"That is why trade legislation must follow," Nick said. "Only by getting legalization and by changing or reducing the dollar, we can have pressure on the dollar be taken off."
In signaling a tougher stance, Nikson said that as part of an effort "to get a fair deal with the company," he had to
abroad" he would ask Congress "for the right for our negotiators to go up or down" with tariffs in trade talks with other countries.
HE SINGLELED out Japan and Europe when he bected of threats I.P.I.S. hustings.
women talked up a Panda Dose of businesses. In
other major trading nations of the world
had been too slow in eliminating the trade
and monetary surpluses that have thrown
the American international economic
position out of equilibrium.
State Department officials warned these trading powers, particularly Japan and the European Common Market, that they must work quickly to restore balances or face
Europeans Laud U.S. For Devaluation Move
LONDON (AP)—European governments praised the United States on Tuesday for swiftly and decisively bringing to an end the confidence crisis in the dollar.
The surprise American decision Monday night to devolve the dollar for the second time in 14 months was seen in Europe as almost certain to stop the unprecedented selling wave of dollars on world money markets.
But fears were voiced at the same time that what has largely been a dollar crisis may now turn to speculation against other currencies and a fresh round of monetary turmoil sooner or later. Adding to the confusion was the fact that five financially important countries are now allowing their currencies to float outside fixed exchange rates.
Furthermore all the new exchange rates, in effect changes in the price of money, were bound to affect world trade by revising export prices.
Italy is the latest to join this group. The others are Britain, Canada, Switzerland, Italy and New Zealand.
Most American business leaders expressed hope that the devaluation would help to boost foreign and domestic sales by making U.S. goods cheaper abroad and foreign goods more expensive in the United States.
The first hint of how well the devaluation
severe reaction by the United States in the form of U.S. restrictions.
In Washington, President Nixon warned that the dollar devaluation was at best only a temporary solution to the free world's trade and monetary problems. British Chancellor of the Exchequer Anthony Barber voiced the hope that the dollar would be lifted off the easier foot longer-lasting reforms in the world monetary system.
THE STOCK market reacted with an initial burst of enthusiasm and analysts predicted a fresh flow of foreign investment. But some economists were lakwearm about the decision of the Nixon administration and predicted it would heat up inflation.
Docking,Rep Trade Barbs On Taxing,POWs,MIAs
liabilities of the immediate families of the POWs and MIAs and said there was a question whether the tax exemption could apply to them.
TOPEKA (AP)—The governor's office and a key Republican House committee chairman traded charges of partisan politics Tuesday in a dispute over whether Kansas already has exempted returning prisoners of war and those previously listed as missing in action in Southeast Asia from paying back state income taxes.
He also said they should get immediate refunds of taxes paid the state during the years their husbands and fathers were prisoners or missing.
The governor's office insisted emergency legislation was needed to clarify law and principles of tort enforcement and prisoners' tax liabilities for the years they were held captive or listed as missing in court.
But Rep. Shelby Smith, R-Wichita, chairman of the House Assessment and Taxation Committee, was equally adamant that Kansas already had made provision for excusing the prisoners' state income taxes because its laws conformed with federal income tax laws that already have granted the exemption for the POWs and MIAs.
Gov. Robert Docking also asked the legislature Monday to wipe out tax
is likely to work was not expected before Wednesday when most of the world's foreign exchange markets reopen for the first time since last Friday.
American tourists caught by the rate change found their traveling money did not go as far as before the move. The German tourist saw his new costs 34 cents, according to exchange rates announced in Bonn. The French franc, which cost 19% cents before the crisis, has grown from 75 cents to hand, the British pound, which is floating, was expected to rise only marginally.
Multinational companies such as automotive manufacturers, steel markets, chemical firms and textile manufacturers, that have felt some pressure from low priced imports, stood to gain the most from the devaluation.
Monsanto Co., which makes chemicals and textile fibers, said the devaluation will benefit companies like it which have large export sales. An opposite view came from who said the devaluation would do little to offset the mushrooming domestic market.
Most analysts said the devaluation would have little impact on the average American consumer. But one area where a price hike is likely meant in international air force
One harsh critic of the administration's decision was economist Eliot Janeway, who called the move a disaster and predicted European oil prices will be influxatory against the United States.
"Inflation will get worse and interest rates will go up," he said.
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
Dillon Views His Role As Being 'Nonpolitical'
David Dillon said that two people would not have enough time to easily handle the job of student body president, but that he was not spressing his duties too thin.
Dillon, Hutchinson senior, says that he is able to put out the time required of the office because of his strong commitment and the that he knows his job will last only one year.
As president, Dillon is automatically a member of the Athletic Board, the Board of Directors of the Union Memorial Coronation Hospital, and a director of denominating Committee, of which he is the elected chairman. The committee is composed of student body presidents of each of the six state colleges and faculty and staff of the Board of Regents, and three members of the Board of Regents.
DILLON SERVES, by virtue of his office,
on the Homecoming Committee, the
University Senate, University Council, and
is a member of the Student Senate.
Dillon is also a member of the Chancellor Search committee and was selected as the student member of the Athletic Director program. He is enrolled in 14 hours this semester.
Dillon says he considers his time better spent keeping abreast of administration business rather than running the Student Senate.
"In a normal form I will meet with one of the vice chancellors, the chancellor, the vice president."
"IVE NEVER tried to say that I could speak for the student body," he said. "Ive tried to pull out the different segments of the student body and say, 'This is what some people are saying, this is what other people are saying.'"
secretary," he says, "I usually will walk around just talking with these people finding out what's going on, making sure they are genuinely aware of what students are thinking."
Dillon stated his reason for preferring to devote more of his time to the administration and the Board of Regents than to the overseeing of the Senate.
"I last year when we ran for election, we had with us a group of candidates who we met at a summer camp."
"Because of that we said our job was not so much to run the Student Senate, but to make sure that student views were heard." The Board of Regents and the legislature.
"IN THE PAST, some student body presidents have looked at their role as being a political one, that of steering the Student Body in the direction they wanted it to be steered in.
"I guess I'm more a nonpolitician than anyone I've seen in this position in a long time," he said. "I don't like to play politics."
Some of Dillon's critics have charged that although Dillon might not like to play
See DILLON Next Page
Loss of Grants Augments Departments' Budget Woes
Editor's Note: This is the second story in a three-part series examining the impact of austere budgets on University of Kansas faculty during the past few years. Today's installment examines the causes of the financial difficulties of schools and universities and concern the consequences of departmental finances for the individual professor.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
A professor in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences says such domestic chores as fixing his plumbing have cut into his research time.
"it's not good to do these things," the professor, who asked not to be identified, said. "First of all, I don't do them very well, second, I should be doing research."
his purchasing power, and made it impossible for him to pay a plumber.
This professor wouldn't have to repair his own plumbing if irritation had not eaten away at it.
As it is, his insufficient salary gives him insufficient time for research, which reduces the University's ability to obtain research grants and federal funding. And such grants are what keep many schools and departments going.
"We have never had any equipment furnished by the state," said Frances Horowitz, chairman of the department of labor. "We have nothing." "Everything we have is through grants. The
Charles Kiesler, chairman of the psychology department, said that an enormous amount of grant money was received for educational purposes, such as funding graduate research and paying secretaries. Several faculty members said that a majority of equipment used by their departments was purchased with outside funds.
faculty, not the state, equips the University."
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said his school should not have had to reorder priorities by paying for basic equipment at the expense of research. The state should furnish the funds for equipment, he said.
It is hard to distinguish the research function from the teaching function, said Ronald McGregor, director of the Biological Sciences Administration. He said professors often used equipment that was not well suited for research in their classroom demonstrations.
In the HDLP department, Horwitz said, even subscriptions to scholarly journals are free.
Clifford Clark, dean of the School of Business, said he anticipated spending about $20,000 in private contributions to help students with current present programs. The contributions
were made to expand and improve the academic program, but must be made more suitable for smaller students.
According to several professors, "soft" money, or money from sources other than the state, is beginning to dry up. Research dollars are harder to come by because of increased competition, and President Nixon's economic policy has reduced the amount of federal monies available to states for higher education have increased slightly, but no funds have been allotted for direct grants to colleges and universities.
Several professors said that science departments could acquire soft money more easily than many other schools within the University. Mossberg attributed this to the launching of Spatnik by the Soviet Union in 1967. However, the need for expensive equipment in these departments is greater than that of other departments, be professors said.
State support for higher education increased by an extremely small amount between 1970-1971 and 1971-1972. In the projected budget for 1972-1973, the increase is more than 10 per cent over state support in either 1970-1971 or 1971-72.
The ability to attract research money and federal dollars also depends upon the quality of the school or department. An austere budget can diminish the academic standing of a department and reduce its ability to obtain soft money.
The educational and general budget for
The financial plight that faces most departments and individual professors is due to several factors in addition to the driving up of outside funds.
Reductions in outside money make departments unable to maintain their quality and even less able to tap resources of soft dollars. A perpetual motion machine of deterioration is being created that can be stopped only by an infusion of funds.
the academic year 1971-1974 was $45,066,355.
The state supplied $22,555,549 from its general revenue fund, and $8,597,451 came from the department budget comes from research, federal funds and other sources. For 1972-1973, the University spent $44,754,909, which was less than in 1971. Fees from enrollment dropped significantly to the state support; increased slightly to $22,967,480.
The estimated budget for the current academic year is $4,683,793. Student fees are estimated at $9,595,000, and the state's part of the project is projected at $2,097,292. Projected student support this year is up by 10 per cent over the amount in 1970-71.
Revenue from student fees is less than anticipated, however. For fall 1972, the university had 18,546 students actually enrolled. Most of the decrease was in the College of Liberal Arts.
See LOSS Page 5
2
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
First of Prisoners Begins Trip Home
Rv the Associated Press
Two American war prisoners flew home Tuesday and officials said most of the first group to be released would be back on U.S. soil for the weekend. But doctors report that a few asked to remain for plastic surgery to repair their wounds before going
“It’s less cosmetic than practical,” said a hospital staff member. “Some of these men have bad scars on their arms from being bound and wounded in others or in others wounded badly.”
one of the 27 Americans freed Monday by the Viet Cong reported he spent much of his five years' captivity in schackles and salitary confinement.
"I have spoken more since I was freed yesterday and in all the five years I was a prisoner," Michael Hugh Klonge, a civilian officer with the Clark Air Base Hospital in the Philippines.
A contract employ with the Agency for International Development, he was captured in Saigon during the 1968 Tet offensive.
sensitive. Kiome's doctors found him in good
condition. But like many of the men who have come back to freedom, he may have recurrence of malaria and probably suffers from a vitamin deficiency,
A few other Americans reportedly told of beatings and ill treatment, such as salt rubbed on wounds by their captors. Their comments were relayed by military spokesman Dan Hagen. They talked directly prevented newsmen from taking directly with the returned prisoners.
While some prisoners were returning
The four-party military peacekeeping commission in Saigon was summoned into session Wednesday to make the arrangements.
home—Hanol said it would release 20 more journalists of war from North Vietnam in the next few months.
At the same time, Col. Bui Tin, chief spokesmen for the North Vietnamese delegation in Paris, also said the group of American missionaries held in South Vietnam would be released in
10 to 15 days, possibly near the same site
27 U.S. prisoners ever freed Monday
Jerry W. Friedheim, spokesman for the Defense Department in Washington, said on Tuesday that the Pentagon had received a list of names of the 20 Americans to be freed and that some were being notified. Included on the list are four Navy men and 16 from the Air Force.
the 20 prisoners ever treed Monday.
Tin said he had no details on the impending release of the 20 prisoners in North Vietnam.
House Examines Equal Rights Law
Rejection of two Kansas House resolutions to rescind ratification of an equal rights amendment to the federal constitution seems probable, according to Emily Taylor, dean of women at the University of Kansas.
She said she expected committee action on the resolutions Wednesday.
Taylor, who testified against the resolutions before the KFC committee and two committees meeting
Tuesday said, "It would surprise me very much if the resolutions were passed."
More than 100 people attended the hearing in the Kansas capital to hear testimony on House Resolution 10-16 which provides for outright rejection of the ratification.
Eight Candidates Vie . . .
(Continued from page 1)
join with us in returning the government to the people.
`WE OPPOSE secret meetings. Let’s throw the doors of city hall open to the taxpayers and install three men on the front door, so that they can intern the interior for it to do the job which needs to be done, three men who are business-minded, who will take the time necessary to restore to city hall government run in a businesslike manner for the good of every citizen.
Two other candidates, Tola M. Ross, $9, of 2206 Orchard Lane, and Anna Laura Rusk, 2019 Ohio St., filed Monday in the commission race.
Koss, owner of Baskin-Robbies Ice Cream Store, 1524 W. 23rd St., said she considered her background as a business woman an asset in her bid for city commissioner.
SHE SAID that her campaign would focus on studying the role of the city manager and on proper utilization of Lawrence's one-half cent sales tax, which, she said, was established to assist in the maintenance of police and fire departments.
Rusk, who has been a resident of
Boston, can easily be a need for a
long term plan for the city.
One of her campaign suggestions is to use various monies now in deposit to build a new bridge across the Kansas River and restore waterway traffic. She is cooperating with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to dredge the river or add a second channel or canal with locks. This, she said, would make possible local commerce and drive traffic to seagoing ships at all ports.
The Peace Corps can show you how to use your knowledge where it will do the most good. Recruiters at Engineering Placement Office (Marvin Hall), Feb. 21. (Wed.) Sign up for interview.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Pact with Cuba
MIAMI BEACH-Secretary of State William Rogers said Tuesday an agreement with Cuba on curbing hijacking would be signed in a "few days." Rogers, who came to Schultz in June, met Schultz to discuss foreign trade issues with ALF-CIO leaders, refused to give newsmen any further details. In Washington, the State Department said a note received from Rogers during the weekend "made it clear only procedural details remain to be worked out."
Airport Security
WASHINGTON—The Federal Aviation Administration ordered airport managementes Tuesday to post an armed guard at each boarding point beginning the week of Sept. 25, a legal move to stave off the requirements originally scheduled to take effect Feb. 6. The guards will replace the U.S. deputy marshals and customs officers now embodying the law. Airline employees screening boarding passengers and inspecting hand luggage.
Government Cut
TOPEKA—A gradual reduction in the size of the Selective Service system staff in Kansas is scheduled during the remainder of this calendar year, Junior Elder, state Selective Service director, said Tuesday. The present 101-member staff was to be reduced 70 by June 30, ten more to be cut by Sept. 30, and another 10 by Dec. 15.
ENGINEERS
RUSK SAID SHE would call for the initiation of plans for constructing an administrative building to house city and county government and the retention of funds from the settlement 800 to 1,000 persons to accommodate various city and county meetings, she said.
City Commissioner J. R. Pullam, who last week withdrew from the commission race, filed for re-election the second time Tuesday.
Pulliam, 44, said that because of his past experience on the Lawrence Planning Commission and the Lawrence City Department, he would provide service to the community, especially with the Clinton Lake Planning Project, implementation of Federal Revenue Sharing, the East Lawrence Neighborhood Initiative (NDP), and anticipated NDP projects.
Pulliam is a past member and chairman of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission. He was elected to the city commission in 1989 and served one term as
WILLIAM LEMESANY, 909 Arkansas
Spencer, 3903 W. 8th
Court, 4 allied Trial, 6000
Lemesay, 47, is a 1950 graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder. He moved to Lawrence in 1951 and entered the University of Kansas Law School. He
graduated from the School of Law in 1953 and made his home in Lawrence.
Lemesham has practiced law in Lawrence for ten years. He also owns and manages several apartments in Lawrence, including 900 Kirkland Terrace Apartments, 900 Arkansas Hall.
Testimony was also heard on House Resolution 10-13 which provides for the rejection of the ammendment, pending a research study.
He said Tuesday that he would have a statement for the press today.
CANDIDATES WHO FILED before this week are:
Barkley Clark, 31, 151 Crescent Road, associate dean in the University of Kansas School of Law and chairman of the Douglas County Planning Commission.
Spencer, who is president of Competition Spencers Cars, Inc., could not be reached for contact.
Robert Harallick, 29, 3414 Tam O'Connor, associate professor of electrical engineering
-Lawrence Mayor John Emrick, 57, 1200 W. Sixth Street, who has real estate holdings in Lawrence, deals in novelty wines. His novel's Novelle West, 1024 Massachusetts St.
—Harry W. Kroeger Jr., 34, S52 E. 128 St., who owns and operates The Mercantile, formerly at 1237 Oread St. but soon to be redeveloped downstreet.
-Mike Morrill. 1520 Vermont St.
Representative Glee Jones, R-Hamlin, agreed that not enough time had been spent studying the amendment. She urged sup- porters to look into the committee to "look before you lean."
Dillon Views ...
—Gale Pinegar, 148 Minnesota St.
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
politics the Senate he does in administrative
He has been accused of playing politics to insure being named to the Chancellor and Athletic Director Search committees and the State College Coordinating Committee.
ADMINISTRATION SOURCES, however, deny that Dillon ever exerted pressure to be named to any administrative body. Rick Von Ende, University Executive Secretary, said he knew of no efforts by Dillon to be nominated for the position. Raymond Nicholas said flatly that "there was no campaigning or electioneering" in the selection of the search committees.
Max Bigford, Executive Secretary of the Board of Regents and the State Colleges Coordinating Committee, said that because he is a member of the student body as its president, it was only
logical that he be named to the Chancellor Search Committee. He noted that the minutes of the Sept. 15 Regent's meeting, when the committee members were announced, specified the president and vice president, the student body, the faculty, and the alumni.
Bickford said the State Colleges Coordinating Committee received a list of nominations for its officers, two names for each position. The committee voted to name the name listed for each position, and Dillon's name was the first list for chairman.
IN SPEAKING of his administrative activities, Dillon said, "It's been my experience that while people have told me that I probably would be a token student on one or two committees it hasn't been that way at all.
I think student input is very high right now."
Harley Huggins, D-Kansas City, called ratification of the amendment last March a cruel哼 on the state of Kansas. Huggins, a Republican, headed testimony against ratification.
Taylor, in testifying before the committee, said, "It doesn't change biological laws." There's no requirement that men start keeping house, but it would be help-
Some question was raised about whether the ratification could be rescinded, but Taylor said Tuesday that attention that a recent lawsuit brought against him in Kansas, held that it could not be changed.
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She said the ratification passed in the Kansas Senate and was opposed by only eight senators.
Taylor said Tuesday night that 27 states had now ratified the amendment, the latest being New Mexico and South Dakota. She said the state has not ratified it however, but had tabled the indictment.
Last Fall's Bills Dominate Agenda For Spring'73
Bills carried over from last semester will predominate in Student Senate business when the Senate meets tonight. At least four bills, tabled during meetings last semester, are on the agenda. Old old bills may be presented for action if they are released by the committees which have been holding them.
DELIVERY
843-9111
Old bills on the agenda include a proposal to require Senate appropriation bills to be examined by the University attorney to insure that they conform to state statutes. The senate committee is determining the number of representatives from each school to the University Council.
Other holdovers are bills to appropriate funds for the KU Amatur Radio Club and to set guidelines for impeachment proceedings in the Senate.
Six new appropriation requests will also be considered. The Finance and Auditing Committee has recommended passage of a bill worth $210 by the Community Cleaning House.
The meeting is at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union
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2
Sidewalk Construction OKd by City
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission ordered the construction of a controversial $85,000 sidewalk network in West Lawrence after a lengthy public hearing Tuesday afternoon.
Proponents and opponents of the project debated for nearly an hour before the commission finally voted 4-1 to go ahead with the plan.
Lloyd Davies, 1845 W. 19th St., told the commission that he and several other area residents had formed a group to oppose the plan.
"If the commission insists, we shall carry a protest petition." Davies warned.
Davies said his group had polled 593 property owners in the benefit district affected by the project, replied, 260 people voted "no" to the project, and 89 voted "yes". Davies said.
"We know that a post card poll has no legal value," he said, but obviously most people do.
Several women defended the plan at the commission meeting.
The plan calls for construction of a skeletal sidewalk network in an area bounded by 19th 23rd, Louisiana and Iowa streets.
Mrs. Russell Braid, 2003 Naismith Drive, said, "When I first got interested in sidewalks, my child was in the second grade, and he's now in graduate school."
Budget Requests Due March 2
The Finance and Auditing Committee announced Tuesday that all organizations requesting Student Senate budget must apply for funds by 5 p.m., March 2.
Forms are available in 104B Kansas Union and must be returned there by the deadline to be considered during the spring budget hearings.
All organizations presently being funded by the Senate must sign a Capital Disposition Contract in the treasurer's office by Feb. 16. Any group failing to sign a contract by the deadline will have its funds frozen.
Rick McKernan, Salina senior, said Tuesday that Finance and Auditing would soon begin an inventory of all equipment during the organized organizations during this fiscal year.
The Student Services Committee discussed the problems of communication between the Student Senate, the student Senate and the Blue Cross-Blue Shield Tuesday night.
The committee is working on a new student health insurance policy for next year.
Campus Briefs Poetry Contest
The closing date for submission of manuscripts to the National Poetry Press' spring competition is April 10. Any undergraduate student is eligible to submit his/her work in this theme, although the Board of Judges prefer shorter works because of space limitations considerations. A separate sheet must be used for each poem. Entries must be typed or printed and must bear the name, home address, and college addresses of the entrant. This information may be provided of the Press, National Poetry Press, 3210 Silly Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90034.
This seems to me to be ample delay in putting in sidewalks."
Bradt added that the absence of sidewalks in the area recently turned her front lawn into churned mud when people walked across it.
"It looks like a cattle feed lot," she said. Meredith Cooper, 1638 W, 20th St., told the commission that traffic in the area had increased by two years. She said sidewalks were needed.
As opposing and favoring groups presented their comments, exchanges became somewhat heated. Commissioner J. R, Pulliam finally said that persons wishing to comment on the project should address their remarks to the chair.
Mrs. Arthur Gasper, 1510 W. 21st SJ., "Two years ago the commission promised us that they would not put sidewalks in here unless 51 per cent of the people in the area brought in a petition for them. That promise wasn't kept."
Nancy Hambleton responded. "You have a new commission now."
"That promise was kept," Commissioner
The commission voted 4-1 to authorize the city staff to prepare a resolution ordering the construction of the sidewalks. Mayor John Emick voted nav.
Davies said his group would begin circulating a protest petition immediately.
In other business, the commission unanimously approved a proposal by the Lawrence chapter of the Antique Auto Club 688 Milburn electric car owned by the city.
The Auto Club notified Emick that it would restore the car only if the city met five conditions: the city must pay all acquisition fees, the department or door space to work on the car, 12-18 months must be allowed for the project, selection of necessary parts and material must be done by the club and the car must be displayed in a prominent public place for no less than 10
City Manager *Buford Watson* recommended annexation of approximately 79.5 acres at the southeast corner of 31st and streets, and approximately 23.5 acres west of 31st and streets. The property owners requested annexation in both cases, Watson said.
staff to prepare ordinances ordering annexation of two plots of land.
The commission also authorized the city
The commission also:
—Ordered construction of a parking lot located in the 900 block of New Hampshire St.
- Awarded a bid for a new one-ton truck to the street department to Kurtruck, Truce and Browne.
—Approved on second and final reading an ordinance eliminating parking on the west side of Crestline Drive from Harvard Road to 18th St.
Emick reminded the audience that the next regular commission meeting would begin at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 20, instead of the usual 2 p.m. starting time.
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Nichols Optimistic About Budget
Nichols will make his appeal Thursday morning but he also will be in Topeka today
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Tuesday that he thought that the Kansas Legislature would accept Gov. Robert Docking's budget requests for the state colleges and universities and reinstate some items that the governor cut. The budget hearings will take place Thursday in Toneka.
"There seems to be a great willingness on the part of the legislature to accept the Governor's recommendations," Nichols said. "There also is a feeling that the governor is putting in effort which were on the Regent's request that the governor did not recommend."
Nichols said that Jess Stewart, chairman of the Board of Regents, would make the major appeal on behalf of all six state colleges and universities. Stewart probably will appeal all cuts made in the regent's original request, he said.
Nichols said that most of his own presentation time would probably be used to answer questions from legislators. He said he would ask for $80,000 needed for the second stage of planning for a new visual campaign. He said the amount from his budget, recommendation.
for budget hearing on the KU Medical center. Nichols said that the Medical Center presentation would be given by the Rihee, vice chancellor for health affairs.
Charles Brennan, assistant to Rieke, said the presentation would be short and would center on the expansion program. The legislators will be given explanatory handouts concerning the expansion and the general operating budget, he said.
"The handouts will also contain reasons for the reinstatement of some cuts made to our budget and a statement of support for the governor's present program." Brennan man.
The University is currently under in-
On other topics, Nichols said that a recently completed affirmative action report would be reviewed some time next week by members of the Senate Executive Committee, the Affirmative Action Policy Council of Deans and some students.
"I think the report needs to be reviewed very critically," he said. "I question some of the terminology used. We also have to find out if the report meets national guidelines and whether the University can live with the recommendations."
3 Enter Plea of Guilty In KU Explosives Case
Two University of Kansas students and a former student pleaded guilty Tuesday to a reduced charge of illegally storing explosives in Learned Hall. Two previous charges of theft and concealment were dropped by the Attorney's Office.
No date has been set for sentencing and all three remain free on $1,500 bond.
Jack Lewis Butler, 27, Lawrence senior; Ronald Johnson, 25, London, Neb, senior and David Bruce Akin, 25, a former student from Shawnee each could receive a maximum fine of $1,000 and one year in prison.
Richard Meyer, assistant U.S. attorney, said Tuesday that the circumstances surrounding charges of defrauding a cemental charges were such that thecharges could not be supported. He saidevidence indicated that the three had no involvement in explosives or of inflictingdamage or harm.
Johnson and Akin had taken the explosives, which were left over after a drill in the dam. They then left Reserve Unit. Johnson and Akin were members of the unit. Meyer said they had intended to transport the explosives to the unit's headquarters in Kansas but they failed to arrive close.
made some attempt to return the explosives through military channels and to schedule another exercise where this explosive material could be used."
Roth added that army regulations required that unused explosives be destroyed. He said the defendants had no right to assume personal custody.
In a prepared statement, U.S. Attorney
Marcus said, "investigators further
racalled the incident."
Meyer said the storage of explosives in
banks was in violation of regulations
established by the FAA.
White Foundation Honors Editor
Byron Guse, owner and editor of the Marysville Advocate, received the 1973 Kansas Editor of the Year Award last year. He is a professor in the University Foundation at the University of Kansas.
Drew McLaughlin, editor of the Miami Republican in Paola, presented the award to Guise at a luncheon meeting of the Wiliam Allen White activities at KU.
The Editor of the Year Award is presented annually to the Kansas editor who best exemplifies the ideals of Mr. White.
"We will give any investigative group all the facts we have," he said.
vestigation by the Kansas Civil Rights Commission on charges of sexual discrimination. Nichols said that all relevant data at the University were open to the
The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in 200 Learned Hall. James Pilley, former mayor of Shawnee Mission, will speak to the group on "Politics and Municipal Management." All interested students and faculty may attend. Free coffee and soft drinks will be served.
--testifying before the House Education committee, Jones and Kansas students participated.
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Peace Corps/VISTA recruiters can show you how. Education recruiters call (212) 457-3900 (Monday). Sign up for interview
Bill Requiring History Course Creates Dispute
Mother Mary's "A Beer Joint"
The bill was proposed by Rep. Glee Jones, R-Hamlin.
Knox said recently that he was ap-
palled at being allowed the legislature to dictate court decisions.
Special!
Ark Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools, has questioned the merit of a bill before the Kansas Legislature that would require students to enroll in a Kansas history course.
Courses in Kansas history are now offered in junior high schools, Knox said. The proposed course requirement could cause problems in the school curriculum if the legislation is very specific. The program should not be restrictive and confining, he said.
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"There is a state board of education to set educational standards," he said. "It should be the board's responsibility to choose courses, not a function of the legislature."
"I think it is sorrowful that Kanaas
educates her little knowledge of their
history."
2406 Iowa
ASCE Meeting
A representative of the State Department of Education said that there would be problems in implementing the proposal, but an administrator would solve them if the bill was passed.
Optometry Grant
---
"Our youth need to know the foundations of their state," Jones said. "I think people in the state are not aware that Kansas history is not being taught."
Two scholarships of $2,000 are being offered by the Kansas Optometric Foundation and its auxiliary. Complete information and application blanks are available from the Kansas Optometry Association Blvd., Topeka. All applications are due by March 15. The recipient of this scholarship will be given $500 a year to attend any college of optometry in the United States. Scholarships also are available to Kansas students interested in a career in optometry.
T. William Goodwin, assistant state commissioner of education, said several states did have required courses in state history.
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Wednesday, February 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Dubious Kudos
Concurrent with the filing deadline at 5 p.m. today for candidates seeking the position of student body president, it seems appropriate that a long-awaited group of award recipients and responsible student leaders of the past year. Let these awards be known now and henceforth.
—Attendance Award: to Susie Cowden, Senate Executive Committee member who has attended Student Senate Executive Committee meetings consistently: almost never.
—Day Care Award: to the Hilltop Day Care Center staff for overspending its salary budget, as added to the Senate, by approximately $3,000.
—Decorations Award: to Gus diZerega who proposed a multicolor "paint-in" for all the mobile classrooms on campus.
—Finance Award; to Barbie Downer, chairman of the finance and auditing committee, whose committee has attempted to finance almost every organization on campus by increasing the activity
—Emporium Award: to Natalie Roth, chairman of the student services committee, whose Emporium Bookstore has changed its hours more often than the number of books on its shelves.
—Legislation Award: to Deborah Brooks, chairman of the student rights committee, whose committee issued four different versions of the same bill on impeachment—at the same time.
—Procedure Award: to Kathy
Allen, presiding officer of the Student Senate, who, when in doubt of the proper procedure, calls the senate to vote on a resolution to the legislation back to committee.
—Reclamation Center Award: to Molly Lafin who successfully negotiated a loan from the Endowment Association for $1,000 for Whomper T-shirts. The loan has not been paid off to date.
-Silence Award: to Les Schwartz whose communications committee has not been heard from since his appointment as chairman.
—Transportation Award: to David Dillon, student body president, who negotiated a bus contract at a rate of one-fourth over that of last year.
—Union Operating Committee Award: to Richard MacKenzie who promised to solve the ills of the Kansas Union food service if he was placed on the Union Operating Committee. He also promised not to accept complimentary tickets from SUA or free meals from the Union until his task was completed. He has broken both promises.
—Voucher Award: to Bill O'Neill, former student body treasurer, who signed a voucher for an expenditure of $83 for a visual aid, a model of a male pelvis, for use by the Commission on the Status of Women.
Congratulations to one and all.
And may the candidates of 1973 be aware of past accomplishments, recognizing that one of them who will with the most dubious award of all: the title of student body president.
—R. E. Duncan
Smoking Complaint
Guest Editorial
"Warning: The Surgeon General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health."
Many smokers find this warning easy to ignore. "Not my health," they think. Let them discover for themselves whether the Surgeon General's warning is valid. A person has a right to a certain amount of self-determination in chosing his personal habits.
This self-determination, however, does not mean that others should have to tolerate cigarette smoke in a classroom. Smoke in a classroom permeates hair, clothes and personal belongings; it irritates sensitive membranes, causes coughing, watery eyes and distraction.
In this time of great concern with pollution of the environment, must we sit and tolerate those ill-mannered individuals who create within our vicinity an atmosphere equal to and in many cases far worse than a city's polluted air? It isn't their right to inflict this upon us. We certainly have a more justifiable claim to clean air than a cigarette smoker has to satisfaction of a compulsive habit.
One might suggest that if a person finds smoking offensive, he can
move. But why should he be obliged to inconvenience himself to allow another to foul the air? shouldn't it be the responsibility of the smoker to share the smoke with who may share the smoke and ashes, whether they object to the smoke?
At KU there is a recommendation pertaining to smoking in the classroom: "The University Council recommends that each instructor provide some procedure to alleviate the problem of smoking in the classroom, and to report this problem to his or her classes, the council suggests that the request of any student in the class, the instructor shall prohibit smoking in the classroom during the class period."
This recommendation was
this recommendation was
recommended and should be
recognised and should be recognised.
Failing that, a little tap on the shoulder and a pardon me, but you're polluting my environment might be effective in dealing with an offender. As a last resort, an incense burner, taken to class and placed on the offender's desk, might convey the message.
—Steve Ralston
Jack Anderson
Nixon Strikes Back at Press
WASHINGTON—The word has gone out from the White House to "mail" Jack Anderson and the Washington Post. This language was used, according to sources who heard it, by President Nikon's crewcut chief of staff, H. R., "Bob" Halerman.
plode angrily: "We got to take care of those people!" But it is Haldeman, according to our source, that the remarks into direct action.
The sources are too sensitive to be identified, but they gave us details known only to the President's inner circle. They said the President is interested in the press are often bitter and belligerent. He has even been heard, in reference to the Washington Post, to ex-
In defense of the President, they contended his hostility toward the press is justified because of the abuse he gets in print. They spoke of a double standard that many Washington officials had against him. He is badgered and belittled for taking action that would have brought praise for the late President John F. Kennedy,
But they contrasted his touchiness and irritation with Haldeman's "solid, calculated" approach. And Haldeman's idea of press relations, they said, is to tell reporters nothing. "He has an absolutely evil attitude relative to press," he acknowledges one source.
suggested our sources.
It may seem incredible to the public that the White House could be hostile to a press that suppressed him, or overwhelm in both presiden-
Amnesty Defeats Rule of Law; Draft Evaders Deserve Justice
WASHINGTON — With Mr. Nixon's ice blast the other day, a budding ammesty movement in Congress has curled up and died. There will be no amnesty, consequence otherwise, for quite some time.
Outside the halls of Congress, amnesty appears likely to become The Movement for the next several years. After all, the war is effectively over, so far as the U.S. is concerned. The draft
What of the others? Many of the evaders, it is understood, are still in the United States. They live a life of anonymity, with names. My mail brought a letter the other day, anonymous but authentic, from a youth in a town near me about as far as he could get from his native Atlanta. He was afraid
to go home, and afraid to stay
to where he was. "You don't know
what it's like to stay on the
move."
More than 50,000 eavards, it is said, are in Canada, another large group in Sweden, still others in Europe. They are interviewed now and then in the news magazine, about them. Some profess contention in exile; some, according to Tame, are
tional elections. A survey of press enduresments last November showed that Nixon-Arnew were 17 to 1 toove McGovern-Shriver.
That number does not include those young men who truly had the courage of their convictions—those who sought classification as conscientious objects and served as such, and those who openly defied adoption and went to prison as a witness to their faith. These men have earned respect; they have earned kind of admiration from Martin his bitter foes. And when the last prisoner is returned from Vietnam, few persons would object to honorable discharges and executive pardons for them.
If that sounds acidulous, it is meant to sound that way. No one seems to know precisely how many "evaders of military terms" are still alive and ducking. The term embarks those young men who never registered for the draft, those who registered but fled when the summons came, and those who took and then deserted. The number appears to lie at about 100,000.
has ended. Cesar Chavez is ok hat; ecology is hard work; black studies are a bore. The country is three of women's rights, equality and smog. For those whose lives are empty without a Movement, amnesty offers a perfect cause: All the Good People, such as Cesar Chavez and all the Bad People, such as Richard Nixon, are on the other
James J. Kilpatrick
obligation, others had to serve in their place; and some of these others died or were wounded. The most elementary justice demand that evasion and obedience not be regarded as equal at law.
But the hostility is deep-seated. Those who know Richard Nixon say his feelings toward the press were hardened during his early struggle for political power. He slashed and slammed his way to the top, stepping over the top of the fence against opponents. By his own account, his early campaigns were "rock 'em, sock 'em" affairs.
"anxious to settle up with their Government, but not at the price Nixon wants them to pay." Many of them exude a pietistic arrogance that curdles the cream of compassion: They are willing to lose the country "apologizes" for the wrong it has done them.
Those who oppose a blanket, unconditional amnesty are accused of seeking "vengence." Nonsense. The object is not to be taken personally, and you must be just. Because these 10,000 men evaded their lawful
There is more. Unconditional amnesty would condone desertion. It would give official applause, but it would not but citizen档案 pick and choose the wars they approve, the wars they disapprove. By extension, we move to an anarchistic society in which men obey or disobey as they please, without the risk of being punished, thus eroded, would disappear.
Many of the evaders, we may believe, are among the nation's best and brightest. They are possessed of an idealism that, put to constructive channels, could be of great value. As individuals, in our human relationships, they deserve love, compassion, an attempt at understanding the law of the governmental relationship, in their having nothing come to them but justice. And justice, though tempered with mercy, must first be just.
This kind of campaigning, inevitably, attracted counterfeit. Some of the attacks on Nixon were more abusive than his own worst tactics. These attacks were aimed at scandalized young Nixon who scaledyled young Nixon and left some deep scars. His inner bitterness finally erupted after his defeat for governor of California in 1962. He lashed the Nixon administration's faces: "You won't have Nixon to kick around any more."
Once in the White House, Ninja's attitude grew in importance and criticized his conduct of the Vietnam War. He complained petulantly to his closest associates that "the papers peddled by him give more space to the enemy than to their own President."
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
He came to look upon himself as standing almost alone upholphing "America's honor against the carping criticism and the ridiculous press." His attitude not only was reflected but magnified by the people around him, particularly the Haldeman clan. "They had become so angry," said he soon, "and would lose their perspective."
Always, the angriest barbs were aimed at the Washington Post. Our sources claimed the President wasn't particularly hostile at first toward us but rather regarded it as "hard-hitting but fair". Not until we exposed from their own most
secret documents how he and Henry Kissinger had misled the public about U.S. policy toward the India-Pakistan conflict did not prevent him from us. He became even more enraged when we broke the ITT scandal linking a settlement of ITTs antitrust cases with a $400m commitment to help the Republican convention.
His anger at the Washington Post was fanned into a blind rage, said our sources, over its Watergate stories which exposed the cover-up of the illegal espionage operations against the Democrats. The President was heard to complain that "these leaks have got to be stopped." Not long afterward, the administration made instructions to nail us and the Post.
The word was passed to the, Justice Department, we were told, to try to make a case against him. He was arrested while gathering news for this column. His notepad and pen were torn from his hands, cuffs were snapped around his wrist and he was thrown into a lock-up.
Let there be no confusion about it. Whiten's only crime was digging out critical information from the records in misandering of Indian rights. We will prove in court that he had nothing to do with stealing any documents. His sole interest in them was to extract the news from them.
The right of newsmen to report and write critical stories about the government was established in 1789. It had been thrown into prison for criticizing the governor of New York, who re-frained by the Constitution.
We don't know what action the Administration intends to take against the Post. It may be an unanticipated piece of evidence, that one of the FBI agents who arrested Whiten mentioned the Washington Post.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
able at Malot'
To The Editor:
Overlooked
Reading the University Daily Kansan is an excellent way for a student to keep up on activities of importance both on and off campuses. However, unless it is available to the student, it a purpose is defeated.
This reference is directed to those of us who have the majority of our classes in Malott Hall. There are many students majoring in pharmacy, physics and chemistry who never have a chance to get to Jayhawk Boulevard.
Although there is a Kansan box outside Haworth Hall, it is either overlooked by the distributor of the paper or is not large enough to serve both buildings. Therefore, it is impossible to get a Kansan without unreasonably going out of the way.
INFLATION
PHASE III
If a box similar to that found in Summerfield Hall could be placed in the lobby of the main entrance, one would enter entrances of Malott Hall, another portion of the student body could be reached. Such an action would be greatly appreciated by us and our students at the hours of class time in Malott Hall.
Cindy Tasset
Pratt Junlor
Jane Stinnett
Winfield Junlo
Pearson
To The Editor:
As an impartial observer who has seen both sides of the situation, I would like to comment on some of the basic issues that lie behind the recent furor over the Pearson Integrated Agriculture Program. Having participated in both the program and Western Civilization, as well as having listened to the heated arguments presented in the College Assembly meetings of the past few weeks, I draw two conclusions involving PHP and the objections that have been raised against it.
First, regarding the concepts of 'advocacy teaching' and 'pralismation', it has been the custom of the headmaster to advocate one specific set of beliefs to the exclusion of all others, to respond
with the charge that the Western Civilization Program and the University in general do the same thing on a different level by advocating the adoption of many concepts in a pluralistic manner.
On the surface, the two may seem to balance each other, but upon closer examination, the parallel falls apart. First, it is almost self-evident to those who have seen the program in action that it does indeed advocate an integrated philosophy of life that can best be characterized as medieval in its outlook.
Second, although there is some doubt as to whether the Western Civilization program is as successful as it is proclaimed to be, the "pluralism" of which it is accused is not justifiable. Students, it is true, are presented with information that are expected to reach their own conclusions with regard to issues involved.
In integrated view is presented for their easy consumption; the student benefits in a way meaningful to himself, because he emerges from such which he emerges are his own, and not those of the instructor.
Secondly, it seems that there is a basic misunderstanding involved in the discussion of PHIP, with those supporters who are not involved in it having a different concept of what they are defending than do the individuals actively involved. To address this, the current argument centers on the entire concept of PHIP as it might be personified as an innovative educational program.
To the PIPH staff, the program is more than just that: being a "way of life" (this statement was actually made in class), it is taught accordingly. By and large, it seems the opponents of PIPH are concentrating their criticisms against this dogmatic method of teaching rather than enticing future students to educate intimation as R.E. Duncan suggested in his editorial Feb. 7.
In addition to obscuring the smaller issues, this confusion of understanding is a concern of whether any program so conceived and operated within the guidelines of a public university should be allowed to
This last point, of course, will be up to the College Assembly to decide. My purpose in writing
Jeff Southard
Wichita Sophomore
this letter will have been served if the two major issues I have mentioned above emerge any clearer to the reader and assist drawing his own conclusions about the Pearson Program.
Cars at Hilltop
This letter concerns the parking problem at Hilltop Day Care Center.
I met with Lynn Taylor, dean of the School of Religion yesterday, mostly to clarify why the dispute is a dispute. I took along a Hilltop Bible and looked for it, finding it very difficult to believe what happened there.
Taylor read to us a letter he had written. He read it one sentence at a time stopping at each period and asking if we needed any clarification. If not, that it is insulting to do this. Perhaps he doesn't know that they let women go to college these days.
He insisted that we realize that the School of Religion is private property. And the school seems to have no intention of lowering itself to more human concerns. In fact, when it was suggested that this was not Hilltop's problem or the School of Religion's problem
but a human problem, Taylor said he didn't know what I was talking about.
I admit to a certain naivette on my part. I really believe that all stuff about compassion and loving your neighbor. I didn't realize that is something that is spotted in Sunday school and family. I don't think it dary when it comes to real people and real situations.
But I know now that the School of Religion's lawn is "our grass" and I know that it really anything but straw men. And I know that Taylor is a reasonable man, he told us so at five times, so I know it's true.
I also know (he told me and somebody else, and it was written down and read and explained and signed and so it must be so) that the parents are allowed to use the property as a leading place for Hilliop parents and that they are permitted to walk across their grass. So I'd suggest to Hilliop parents that they do just that. Don't worry about traffic jams, or parking on Jayhawk Bivd. And I am very capable to the School of Religion because they did sign that paper and that's what's really important, I guess, to them anyway.
Christine Leonard 1125 Indiana
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Subscription rates: $8 a semester, $10 a year. Second admission fee is $25, based on enrollment. Court and employment advertisement offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended to convey any particular opinion.
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University Daily Kansan
Birds First Legend
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
Roman Sagas Create Valentine's Day
By MARILYN GIBSON
Kansan Staff Writer
When exchanging valentines today, keep in mind that the first observance of Valentine's Day celebrated the mating of birds.
Legends of Valentine's Day are many, but one of the oldest concerns the ancient Roman festival of Luciaria. The festival was observed in mid-February each year to celebrate the mating of birds. Young Roman males would draw lots for the names of girls and then would court the girl whose lot they chose for an entire year.
The Christian tradition of St. Valentine's Day came from a legend of an imprisoned young priest named Valentinus, Valentinus was befriended by a jail keeper's blind
According to the legend, Valentinus was being executed for refusing to renounce his Christian faith. Just prior to the execution, Valentinus had received a letter from a daughter and sent a farewell message to the
Arts and Sciences and the School of Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, the loss of anticipated revenue.
(Continued from page 1)
Loss . . .
Martin Jones, budget officer, said the drop in fees also was due to a reduction in tuition. The ratio of nonresident students to resident students and an increase in the number of students enrolled on an hourly basis account for part of the drop in the average student income.
At the same time, inflation has chewed away at the funds departments do have. In the past three years, price increases in the annual inflation rate of four per cent, combined with a 10 per cent budget cut, means a 14 per cent drop in purchasing power.
Because of the unexpected decrease in overall enrollment, most departments received a 10 per cent cut in their supply and equipment budgets this year. J. K. Lee, assistant chairman of the department of business administration, supplied and equipment budget had been cut a total of 27 per cent over the last three years.
The pattern of enrollment has shifted in recent years so that some individual schools and departments must cope with the increase in the face of budget cuts and inflation.
The number of students in the School of Social Welfare has risen from 90, when the school was founded in 1969 to 345, an increase of nearly 400 percentage points, according to Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare.
Kiesler outlined what the shift in enrollment has meant to the psychology department. The department has 17 per cent of the majors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and non-majors have between 2.9 and 5 per cent of the College's resources.
He said a redistribution of resources had to be achieved by supplying additional funds and faculty members to needy departments because it would be difficult to actually decrease allotments to some departments.
However, decreases in state funding do not reduce the budgets of departments nearly to the degree that backups in money do, according to several professors.
B&G Places New Trash Cans
Six red and blue trash cans were placed on the KU campus during semester break by Buildings and Grounds employees, accustomed to the supervision, supervisor of building maintenance.
Wiley said that the cans were a six-month experiment, and that more cans might be needed at that period. However, he said, if any of the cans were stolen, they would not be replaced.
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girl. He signed it "from your Valentine." The legend says that he was executed on Feb. 14, 270 A.D., and that a pink almond tree bloomed near his grave. This, according to the legend, is a symbol of abiding love.
Another story is that Emperor Claudius of Rome issued a decree for bidding marriage. Married men were being called to war and they did not, according to the Emperor's notion, make good soldiers. Claudius decided that matrimony must be abolished.
The good priest Valentine heard this and was sad. He invited young lovers to come to him.
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The Emperor learned of this and had Valentine dragged to prison. It was here that the "friend of lovers" died, a martyr to love. This was on Feb. 14, 270 A.D.
The first Valentine's Day card supposedly was sent by Charles, Duke of Orleans, to his wife in France. This was in 1415 while he was imprisoned in the tower of London.
It is no wonder that Roman youths and
some whom he gave his life set apart
this day to be martyrs.
The craft of making valentines came to America in the 1840's. Comic valentines date back to 1809, but their popularity zoomed late in the 19th century. Through the 1850's and 1660's valentines were often gaudy and very long.
Photography has become popular on cards in the last few years. The verses tend to be shorter and more direct. It is not unusual to find cards that take on the conversational approach and that use bright and varied colors.
Hallmark Cards Inc. works hard each
I.
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year to develop new ideas for their Valentine's Day cards. The Schultz characters, Charlie Brown, Peanuts, Lucy are all popular.
"This year we are using a lot of personal expression cards," said Roger Hill, plant manager of Hallmark Cards in Lawrence,哄哄哄哄哄哄哄哄哄哄
NOVEMBER 6 THRU 10
Hill said that the Valentine's Day cards make up the second largest season for baseball.
VISTA and the Peace Corps are looking for seniors and grad students with backgrounds in agriculture, home ec., law, business, architecture, teaching, and the sciences for assignments in the U.S. and overseas.
Recruiters will be in STRONG HALL and the Union
also in:
Business Placement Office—Nov. 6
Liberal Arts Placement Office—Nov. 7
Education Placement Office—Nov. 7
Engineering Placement Office—Nov. 7
Law Placement Office—Nov. 8
Sign up for interviews
Sign up for interviews
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COL 3.02-12
6
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
K-State Rally Cuts 'Hawks Short
Rv STAN WILSON
Kansan Snorts Writer
MANHATTAN—The ball hit the rim and bounced off. It was tipped out, Rick Suttle picked it up and shot. It was true. The ball broke into two hands before, failing off into the hands of Kansas State's Danny Beard. What began with a helpless chicken painted red and blue and sitting pitched at half court of the Javahawks with the Jahawks feeling the same way.
They were close . . . oh, so close, but again close comes in second. After leading all but the 22 seconds, the 'Hawks left Ahearn Field House with a 67-66 loss Tuesday at the hands of the Big Eight leaders KU seeming, although its stats come out in KU-State team and the game under control. With 1:30 left in the game, Marshall Rogers hit the last half of two free throws, stretching the Jayhawk lead to 13 points, 62-49, equal-
in their largest lead of the game. what happens there on in, shouldn't hap what your worst.
THE 'HAWKS, who had scored steadily through the last 27 minutes, went for 3:19 without changing their figures on the scoreboard.
Meanwhile, Kansas State switched from a zone to man to just minutes earlier, rolled off 11 points to pull within two at 62-60. With 2:11 remaining, hittle bit both ends of a one-and-one, but the Wildcats pulled even at 64-all after jumping into a three-run lead. The lance came after reserve Doug Shider popped the ball out of Suttle's bands.
On their next trip down the floor, the Jayhawks again proceed to lose the ball. This time Beard pilfered the ball from between Danny Knight's hands as but the ball bounded to Rogers' bouncing boots to Rogers. Rogers drove in white everywhere was out of position
to hit a 15-foot jumper, giving KU a 66-64 lead.
52
20
31
30
A fear by Suttle, trying to block a shot by Steve McIlwell, gave the "Cats another chance to pull even, but with 0&2 left, I don't know if it would work" of the line and Suttle grabs the rebound.
Kansas Staff Photo by PRES BRANDSTED
Dale Haase (20) Faces Center Steve Mitchell (52)
Gale Sayers, two-time All-American from
Chicago Bear's team, in return to retire
Chicago Bear star, in return to retire
Sayers Accepts New Job Returns Monday for Work
The Jayhawks called time with 22 seconds left and then began to work the ball for the first time.
Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, acting athletic director, said Tuesday that Gale Sayers would report for work Monday as the new assistant athletic director.
At KU Towers was selected to the All-Bligh Eight team three straight years. He was named to the All-Pro team five times and played in 16 games after scoring 2 touchdowns for Chicago.
Sayers, who returned to Chicago Sunday to discuss his plans with Chicago Bears owner George Halaas, led Lonborg and the Bears to this acceptance of the new athletic post.
Sayers still holds two KU individual records, a 99-yard run from scrimmage
Lomborg said that Sayers would be responsible for help in recruiting, public relations, counseling and football coaching. He added that Sayers' responsibilities included coaching the varsity team, Novotny, presently assistant athletic director in charge of business affairs.
against Nebraska in 1963 and a rushing total of 283 yards against Oklahoma State in 1962.
Knee trouble hindered Sayers and his attempts to endure the pros, and he decided to retire after an attempted comeback with the Bears in 1972.
Sayers retired from the pros in September 1972.
Soviet Basketballers To Play U.S. Teams
LOS ANGELES (AP)—The Russian Olympic basketball team, which won the gold medal and handed the United States its first defeat ever in Olympic last year, will play two games against the Americans, matches against the Americans, the Anateur Athletic Union said Tuesday.
The AAU said the Russian team would be the same one which beat the United States by one point in the controversial "second round" match. The American team will be announced April 10.
KU's possessive Tom Kivisto and the Wildcats' possessive Lon Kruger both went for the ball, but neither could get a grip as they collided and the ball went out of bounds. On a call that at best was "hit," the Brownt whistled down Kivisto with a foul.
BORGEN'S LIQUOR STORE
Next Door to Rusty's Hillcrest
"You saw it," said KU Coach Ted Owens after the game. "You decide for yourself what it was. When the other team apologizes about it, it's pretty bad. This will make you wonder whether you can take anything away from Kansas State. They've done a fine job this year."
Ruger calmly sank both shots of the 1-1
State and its first and only lead of the
game.
KANAS WORKED the ball until Kivisto missed from 18 feet, and then could only watch as Suttle's shot, taken with 4 seconds remaining, bounced off the rim.
The loss put KU at 3-4 in the Big Eight and 7-12 overall.
Imported & Domestic
K-State is 7-1 and still on top of the Big Eight and 17-3 on the season. This was the third time this year that the Jayhawks have won in their last three seasons it has happened since the 1947-48 season.
In all three losses, KU has played well in the first half and fallen victim to the veteran Wildcats in the last 20 minutes. Tuesday night was no different.
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Behind the scoring of Tommy Smith and Taylor, the Jayhawks jumped out to a 35-29 lead. Smith, who wasn't even used in Saturday's loss to Nebraska, scored seven points after entering the game in the last 13 minutes of the first half. He finished with 11 for the game before fouling out with 4:12 to go.
Cold Strong Beer o Chilled Wines
Rogers and Knight picked up 11 and 10 respectively to give KU five men in double figures. Suttle was the leading rebounder with 8.
Special orders chilled on request.
TAYNOR ALSO got after coming off the bench and hit 10 points from long range before intermission. He added another two shots on a palmate tie toadie for Jayhawk honors kicks.
WINE
917 Iowa
For K-State, Krueger netted 19 points, 12 of them in the first half, to lead all scorers. Mitchell added 17 more points and Ernie Catson added nine rebounds to lead the Cats in that category.
"We played fine basketball," Owens said. "We had good shots, and after the initial few minutes we didn't talk, and all along that we are a better outside shooting team than we had demonstrated. We had two open shots there at the last. I thought Rick's was on line and
"I was extremely proud of our players," Owens said. "They did, as well as anyone could expect. We made some mistakes down the stretch but our kids showed up to win, and we were winning on the road to the Big Eight, I thought we handled it extremely well.
The Jayhawks return to Allen Field House this Saturday against Oklahoma State.
842-3990
★ ★ ★
| | FG | FE | R | R | Pit. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Foldieke | 9 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
| Suntie | -3-1 | 1-1 | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| Stille | -5-1 | 1-1 | 0 | 3 | 1 |
| Rogers | -4-9 | 3-4 | 0 | 4 | 11 |
| Kivisto | -4-9 | 3-4 | 0 | 4 | 11 |
| Klivoo | -6-9 | 3-4 | 0 | 4 | 11 |
| Kluvoo | -6-14 | 3-4 | 2 | 2 | 12 |
| Smith | -6-14 | 3-4 | 2 | 2 | 12 |
| Smith | -1-1 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Barrow | 1-1 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Barrow | 1-1 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Barrow | -6-14 | 3-4 | 2 | 2 | 12 |
| | FO | FT | R | F | Flu |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Williams | 54 | 27 | 8 | 1 | 16 |
| Kauffman | 3.9 | 2.2 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Krager | 6.4 | 5.7 | 7 | 1 | 10 |
| Kruger | 6.4 | 6.7 | 0 | 3 | 19 |
| Chipman | 1.3 | 2.4 | 0 | 3 | 14 |
| Montgomery | 1.3 | 2.4 | 0 | 3 | 14 |
| Salter | 2.3 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Sutter | 2.3 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| McVerry | 2.3 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| McVerry | 2.3 | 0.4 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Stokes | 32-44 | 32-39 | 7 | 12 | 17 |
K STATE (47)
Junior Varsity Beaten by 'Cats
MANHATTAN - A tremendous second half surge lifted the Kansas State junior varsity to an 84-48 muling of the University team. The Jayhawks their first loss of the season.
The Jayhawks, now 4-1, held a 34-24 lead late in the first half before the K-State onslaught. K-State freshman Chuckie Williams scored a game-high of 35 points. Carl Gerlach, also of Kansas State, was the top rebounder with 11.
Neither Williams nor Gerlach played against KU in the Jayhawks 67-85 victory.
PHYSICAL ED. GRADS
Ever think of training a team for
a mission? Our Corps recruits can offer you exciting assignments. See them in action in PASER or Strong
Lake, Feb. 12.
Night of the Hunter
sUA FILMS sUA FILMS sUA FILMS sUA FILMS sUA
Classical Films
directed by Charles Laughton starring Robert Mickey Peter Graves Shelley Winters - Lillian Gish
Second Meeting
Super 8 Film Workshop
Tonight 8 p.m.
Classical Times
Woodruff 7:30 & 9:15
Wednesday, Feb. 14 75c
Woodruff 3:30,7:30,9:30
Thurs. Feb. 15 75c
Teorema
by PASOLINO
Film Society
PUNTA
Paramount Pictures Presents
Oread Room Union, 2nd floor
Three Short Spotlights on Modern Dance
DANCING PROPHET
HAROLD and MAUDE
Popular Films
Part Five of Captain Marvel
Woodruff
7:00 & 9:30
February 16 & 17
60c
ACROBATS OF GOD SERAPHIC DIALOGUE
SPECIAL FILMS
Woodruff 7:30
Mon. Feb.19 75c
PLUS
Episode four of Phantom
Empire
THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE
SCIENCE FICTION FILMS
Ballroom 7:36
75c
Tues. Feb. 20
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SENATE TREASURERS OFFICE
ATTENTION!!
Organizations Funded by Student Senate Activities Fund
The President, Vice President and Treasurer of all organizations funded by the Student Senate Activities Fund MUST sign a Capital Disposition Contract in the Senate Treasurer's office (104 B Kansas Union) on February 13, 14, or 15, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Organizations which fail to meet the 5:00 p.m., February 15 deadline will have their funds FROZEN.
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Wednesday, February 14, 1973
7
Faculty Club Half Filled, KU Dean Says
The recruitment of over 330 members for a new University of Kansas Faculty Club has brought its membership drive past a halfway point, according to Henry Snyder, associate dean of research administration for the club's steering committee.
Snyder said that membership must reach 600 if the club was to become a reality. Two-thirds of the members should be from the Lawrence community, and one from the Lawrence community, he said.
Membership is open to all KU academic and administrative officers, supervisory and professional staff, active members of the University of Kansas Alumni Association and faculty members and administrators of KU and the KU Medical Center.
The membership fee is $50, he said.
Faculty members without tenure can pay the fee in two installments: $25 upon attaining tenure, and $25 upon attaining tenure, he said.
Lawrence residents may join if they are sponsored by two active members of the
The annual dues are $70, although they may be adjusted by the club's board of directors upon approval of the membership Snvder said.
April 1 is the deadline for the membership drive.
Over $45,000 have been collected to finance the club so far. Snyder said that he expected the minimum goal of $18,000 would be enough to fund the funds that have already been collected.
The club will be situated in the former Phi Kappa Tau House, 1120 w. 11th St., Snyer said. The building is owned by the KU department and is located to the club on a yearly basis, he said.
Renovations on the building are expected to cost about $150,000, he said, but the Endowment Association will help the club finance them.
Hearst Contest Selects Senior To Final Draft
The photo competition is a part of the foundation's annual $63,500 Journalism Awards Program which is conducted in cooperation with participating member colleges and universities of the American School of Schools and Departments of Journalism
Edward Lallo, Lawrence senior, has been selected as one of 20 finalists in the William Randolph Hearst Foundation's national photojournalism contest.
Judging in the seminal competition was based on student portfolios containing four representative photographs in specified categories. Another portfolio by each of the student finalists will be presented next month for the final judging.
Ten scholarship awards, ranging from one or first place to $100 for tenth place will be offered.
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BUSINESS GRADS
Share your talents thrice
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(Monday). Sign up for interview
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THREE and BOBBY McGEE
(Live-6 Nights a week)
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3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Friday and Saturday
Admission with K.U. I.D.
YUK IT UP AT THE YUK DOWN Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
★★★★★★★
The KLWN 1973 1,000.00$$ Treasure Hunt is here Good Luck!
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Store Hours: Mon thru Fri. 10-8 Sat. 10-6
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
8
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Week Scene
'Harold and Maude' Back
MOVIES
REEEF MADNESS: A 1936 propaganda film about the horrible things marijuana does to a person. Go and see what really happens to marijuana smokers. Held over after its Saturday night sellout. 7:40 and 9:30 at Hirstrell 1. (See Review).
LADY SINGES THE BLUES: Diana Ross recreates the image of Billy Holle, one of the greatest black blues singers of all time. Recently nominated for 5 Academy Awards. Starts Wednesday, shows at 7:15 and 9:45 at Hillcrest 2.
JEREMIEH JOHNSON: Backed up by mountain scenery, Robert Redford goes on a Rocky Mountain high. Starts tonight with shows at 7:30 and 9:20 at Hillcrest 3.
THE PSEIDOE ADVENTURE: A Hollywood extravaganza about a luxury liner that leaves the captain's subsequent escape from the capsized vessel. Recently nominated for 7 Academy Awards. Starts tonight with shows at 7:30 and 9:50 at the Varsity
THE SWORD AND THE STONE and WHITE WILDENNESS: Two delightful children's shows from Walt Disney, the master of animation. Stalls tonight with shows at 7:00 and 9:40 at the Granada Theatre.
NIGHT OF THE HUNTER: A 1955 classic look at the perversity of evil; adequate performances by Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters and Lillian Gish. Showed at 7:30 and 9:15 tonight at Woodruff Auditorium. Admission 75 cents.
HARBORED AND MAUDE: A beautiful
story about an 18-year-old cynic and an 81-
year-old optimist. Shows at 7:00 and 9:30
Friday and Saturday nights in Woodruff.
Admission 60 cents.
SABOTAGE and BROKEN LULLARY:
Two 1989's classics which rank as all-time greats. The first is vintage Hitchcock, the master of suspense spins a wild tale of a band of enemy agents who are plotting to blow up the forces of the free world.
The second is one of the greatest anti-war films of all time. It is a tragic tale of a young soldier whose wartime brutality returns to haunt him the rest of his life. Featured in the film, Friday at the Oread Ministries Center, 1204 Oread St. Admission is a donation of $1.50.
TEOREMA: A biblical parable of an attractive young man who appears in a very conventional sourgee family and seduces all its members. The film was made by Pasolini, a rising Italian film maker. Shows the life of 9:30 thursday, in Woodruff Auditoolm.
SPEECHES
ORIGINAL COMPOSITIONS, RANDALL
MEQUILLE TO 8:00 tonight in Swartwout
Hall.
SCIENCE (ALL KINDS) IN AUSTRALIA,
PROF. GOFEFFREY VAUGHAN:
A speech by the Dean of the School of
Pharmaceutical Chemistry at Victoria College
of Pharmacy in Melbourne, Australia. 7:30
PM.
Sponsored by the KU chapter of Sigma Xi.
POETRY READING, GENE FRUMKIN:
6:00 p.m. Friday in Parlor A for the Kanass
Jerry Jeff Walker Tops, Bee Gees, Neely Schmaltzy
By TIM BRADLEY
Kansan Reviewer
"LIFE IN A TIN CAN'D (RSO)'—Bee Ges
"SAM NEYL E 2" (Capitol)—Sam Neely
"JERRY JEFF WALKER (Decca)—Jerry
Jeff Walker
have a good hum.
The Bee Gees are best known for their tremulous vocal style, vast Grand Canyon harmonies and symphonic lushness, and lyrics that could out-Mary Worth Mary Worth. Everyone does need a little sugar in his diet and there are enough sweets on "Life in a Tin Can" (RSO) to choke a moose. The listener needs only to let his guard down, hum along and not worry over it or get scared of it at his sympety best. The Bee Gees obviously have the gift of melody (although the same one seems to recur with new words every so often) and the knack for making even the most mawkish lyrics ring true.
For this LP, the brothers Gibb have combined a spate of superstar sidenes, harmonica right out of a dog food commercial, some trendy pedal steel guitar, a cello and a drum, something enjoyable to buff and buffon alike. If your sentimental side demands satisfaction and buying a Mary Hopkin album would be going too far, buy this one and let yourself
Pseudo-sensitive Sam Nelly tries for a similar effect on "Sam Neely 2" (Capitol) and muffs it, joining legions of muckrockers who are spewing reams and reams of this adolescent wimpy glop all over yer radio. The song's quality is equally called emotion and his music sady lacks it. The lyrics声声 as if he composed them in the John of a Trailwalk bus during a long trip, and wherever added the violins must've filtered them through a quart of room. And the sound that one over and in its stead the new Jerry Jeff Walker album (Decca).
Most of Jerry Jeff's songs were recorded in one take in Austin, Texas, with the result of creating a very easy, very loose, very good record. Because it puts the emphasis on the lyrics, the album's simplicity adds a lot of depth and meaning to the images and emotion, and the backup musicians (David Bromberg among them) sound as if they felt it, too. This album is not an example of a star with a name and sessionmen with a lot of luchter licks together to market a product, but of friends singing down to make good music They do.
JESUS FESTIVAL: The festival will feature Roger Vann as the special speaker and other speakers and the Jesus People Singers will also take part, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Big Eight Room of the Union. Admission will be free.
Now available to speak to your group on Topics of Womens Liberation.
Feminist Speakers Bureau
MUSIC
Women's Coalition Birth control
Women's Health Abortion
Women's Roles Rape
Lesbianism Women's Sexuali
Sexism Self Defense
Women's Liberation Man
STEVIE WONDER: 8:00 p.m. Feb. 18 at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan. Tickets are $ in advance and $ at the door. Tickets may be bought at Team Electronics.
SONATA RECITAL, HOWARD BOYAJIAN AND ROBERT WART: 8:00 p.m. Monday, Feb. 19, in Swarthout Recital Hall
By JIM EATON Kansan Reviewer
Call Barb Krasne 843-0410
RETRACTION:
Women's Liberation Movement
The University Daily Kansan would like to retract the error concerning the appearance of the word "mouthwash" in the book for the one busdman office Tuesday. February 13.
The Ombudsman Office Can Help
To provide an independent office to counsel, investigate, and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
Some films are bad. When a person thinks that about a film, he usually just walks out. But some films are so bad a person may want to see the movie through to get a laugh and not because of the audience," shown at the Hilcrest Theatre Night, was a little of each kind.
All areas are open to the Ombudsman office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation.
Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
SENIOR RECITAL, REBECCA HAYES,
PAMELA ELLIOT AND DEBRA PEA-
SON: 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 20 in
swarthout Recital Hall.
Purpose:
Scope:
Office Phone 864-3607 Location B-108 Kansas Union
"Reefer Madness" was made in 1936 to be a health film. The film begins with a high school principal talking to a group of parents about the scourge of the drug abuse, even though, even according to contemporary attitudes. But then the scene changes.
'Reefer Madness' Is Back
A high school kid takes a drag of the stuff, and things go bananas. The film moves through scenes of orgies, murder and insane behavior this reviewer has never even remotely thought to associate with marijuana.
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FREE
footstompin! lightening pickin! Good old country fun! Y'all come & bring your sweethearts too!
RON CRICK
SINGER-SONGWRITER
SINGER:SONGWRITER
Burger Chef's Student Night Prices!
Wednesday Eve 5-9 p.m.
REG. SPECIAL
Hamburgers . . . . . . . . . . 23¢ 15¢
Cheeseburgers . . . . . . . . 27¢ 20¢
Double Cheeseburger . . . . . 50¢ 39¢
Big Shef . . . . . . . . . . 55¢ 39¢
Super Shef . . . . . . . . . 69¢ 55¢
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
9th & Iowa
Let's All Go To Burger Chef
The film is so inaccurate that you shouldn't even feel insulted, unless you feel insulted at slapstick comedy. It's the same type of thing; it's funny, but the humor gets thin after a while. The last part of the film is so bad — I wish I could put that in italics—
that it's ladicrous, but by that time you're worn out to laugh at it.
"Reefer Madness" was shown at a special Saturday midnight late show, which sold out. It will also play on a regular basis at Hillcrest 1, Feb. 14-20.
The GARDENLAND
So much more than just houseplants.
POLYMERASES
Our large selection of houseplants is only a small portion of the many delightful items you'll find at The Gardenland. We have one of the largest selections of pottery and baskets found in Lawrence as well as candles and a variety of unique containers. You'll soon discover that there are so many interesting types of lawrence—we have terrarium plants in every size and shape. For those who prefer to make their own, we carry all your terrarium needs. Come in and see us.
THE 914
GARDENLAND
914 W. 23rd
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00-5:30
Thurs. 8:00-8:30
Sunday 1-5
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents
THE MATCHMAKER
by Thornton Wilder
F
February 15, 16, 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
February 18 - Matinee
2:30 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K. U. students will receive free reserve seat ticket with Certificate of Registration
MH
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
KANSAN WANT ADS
9
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day 25 words or fewer: $1.50
Three Days
each additional word: $.01
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
Valentine Messages
Dave, Roses are Red-Violets are Blue: Oh How
you can to make it with you. Please be mum.
Love Bake!
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY TEDDY BEAR 2-14
Beauty Valentine; Marriage is out of the question for now!—I need more time, say until Friday! You are down, you are falling down. Passionately yours, Train 2-14. Dear Patty, Adam said to Eve on Valentine's Day, Try it. You like it! I thought you'd like it better than was either this or he'll call! You're, Dave 2-14
To Bath, Mary, and especially Elise in Austria
she is a beautiful wife. Have all of you happy
with her!
Zorro's real name is Diego the seventh
player and curb-hard Italians are sexy! Right,
Gamero is beautiful.
Valentine Messages
Although you only 52* Your eyes are brown
and your nose is red I'd say to you
Honey I dig short little ears.
SCOROPI would like to meet Wesan female.
Prefer Virae, Pieces, or Capricorn. THEKELY
ROSSMAN
PIM.D Meet us at the Harbour at the 10th hour for the cheer on cheer on 2-14th November. XOX PIM.D. XOX PIM.D.
for us on us on the Harbour or for our hour for our hours on our Harbour or for paradise not pop on us on XOX P.H.D.S. 2-14 To Dce & All K U R Remember God demonstrates that Jesus Christ died for us. We love because he first loved Christ died for us. We love because he first loved Christ died for us.
Cling peaches don't always come in a can, but I
love you love and Know you're good for 5-14
Luke
My dear Babe, Happy Valentine's Day from Puku,
and every day of the year. We love you 2-14
and every day of the year.
Valentine
Darcy, the you gave me are willing, but
the thought is as nice as ever, maybe nicer
Little Bit--Let's spend tonight alone. I love you.
Big Bit
3-14
Carolyn Love is a journey. The moment it be-
comes aware of the all it matters to her ends.
KYN 2:14
Dear Aunt Swamps: to the best back-berry,
to the loveliest houseplant, to the sweetest vines,
to the happy Valley, Ute's Home
WAGS. My heart palpitates everywhere I read,
with your hair, and we'll make beautiful music
with your hands.
For Chiquita, Yellow rioes, yellow cars, big yellow trucks will free. Everyday with 2-14
Doinie
Vickie. University of Texas. Hope you enjoy the feeling people like yourself on Hapag Lloyd.
Messages
Daddiest Your kid mays shes her daddy, 1
you love dad? Sweet Maury Dearheart, 2-14
Valentine Messages
Mrs. Putin--I tried dill pillows & waterworm
my animal crackers I try to eat. I found that your
many crackers it cracks. I don't like them.
Kathy Sue-With much love--Happy Valentine's Day. Skeeter 2-16
Happy Valentine's Day Hunt. You are the greatest
girl on earth, beautiful, nice-to-cheeko-girl and I
love you.
KU KARL—What a fantastic 4, 4 months.
KU KARL—will continue it! Happy Valentine's Day! Love, Lily!
Valentine Messages
Dear Den, Roses are red Violets are blue After 4
years of marriage I will love you! I still Love B-24
18
To an anxious Rat! The river flows, the mole
warns it; the insect feeds on the insect nest,
walnut shells, extra long toes.
FEK-Even though I am better at it then you,
have to do what I have to do that! (al
Mustafa's DAY LAM) 2-14
1-34
On the 28th of October up '72 I met a computer
unit that didn't use Unix. On this Valentine's Day, I
met unit that didn't use Unix.
To C. Bear I Love You, Cutie 2-14
Dear Julie, Believe what I told you Friday night
—It’s true, Love, Mark
2:14
Dear Kathy Jane Rose are red, violet are blue,
sugar is sweet, and you are signed D. 2-14
Dea DellAmu, Love is for sharing Share your
women with someone today. And every day. Lay
Mike.
Accommodations, good services and employ-
ment are important for successful work in the
career of a foreign national LEADER BRING
and/or foreign national LEADER BRING.
Big Wille—Just a line o' type or two. To tell you much how I love you—Mrs. Willie
Dear Kip: Happy Third Valentine's Day. LENGTH
21.49
KATHY RUTH T., Happy Valentine's Day. my
hard work and wife. Mike T.
2-14
I love you TURKEY--only 101 man days until ours. May the Lord be with you! The DUCK
L.G.S.B. Roses are Red. And as sweet as you are
The number six is in your new car. 2-14
14
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE SIDEN Shop - 3 blks. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Hwy. 29, 40-49. Antiques, used furry bicycles include 10 speedes, old pot bikes and 14 basket baskets and wooden crates and 14 basket baskets and wood crates. Fireplace with log fireplace and cord price. Baled alfalfa, brome and wheat straw, home grown fruits. Also fruits and vegetables available in the store.
ANTIQUE CLOTHES—52-38 Main. Westen, Mo.
91-280 or 816-745-2487. Victorian ladies and indians,
sometimes from the mid-19th century.
CARS BOUGH AND BOLD. For the best deal
for your car, G.I. Joe's Used Cars.
Vermont; 842-808-9000.
RAY AUDIO STREET WAKEHOME The fused
RAY AUDIO STREET WAKEHOME The fused
RAY AUDIO STREET WAKEHOME The fused
RAY AUDIO STREET WAKEHOME The fused
AKC St. Bernard puppies Champion blood lines.
health care insurance. Payment plan. Stud servicen
health care insurance. Payment plan. Stud servicen
"New Analysis of Western Civilization."
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale! There are two ways of looking at it: 1. If you use them,
72 SUZUKI T254J. Street, with tact. speed, tackdemondowns 83-1474.肩 2,肋床. Excellent jump height 83-1474.
46 Chevellere 5S, c 6yl) 2 dr. H.T., very good interior and exterior body, H.T. clean, new tires, clear glass window.
Powerful 20, watt magnasin AM-MF Deluxe
powered by Dana-Power 1978 model. Ref. $199.-50 only; $128 at
Dana-Power.
Must sell Jayhawk Tower Apt. contract to 1 or 2 females from a balance of 841-328 or collect it
BIOKONON IS 15 BACK-Reaped and antique
backpacks bibboned Redwood Clothes, 119 Vermont
bibboned Redwood Clothes, 119 Vermont
AKC. St. Bernard puppy, 5 mox. Female, very
reasonable. AKC 842-489-0499
2-19
WURLITZER organ, with double keyboard, base pedal, 160% scale, stair, and keyboard capitals.
TWO MAN MOUNTAIN TENN. tern, 5 lbs.
TWO MAN MOUNTAIN TENN. tern, 4 lbs.
and in new condition. 842-883-785
2-12
1970 bteg VW, good condition, belted radial belts, AM/FM band, best offer. 842-4383 2-15
Entire stock of Michelin Radial Steel Belted tire now 30% off. list on Ray Katz Store 2-15
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals
info. center 864-3506
Casa de Taco Delicious Nutritious
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
starting service
Louwence Kønner 66084
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
Tony's 66 Service
be prepared
tune-ups starting service
5 weeks. $387 incust. London departures. Small international group camp- nizations. Africa, India: 3-11 weeks. Write to Earth Travel, Ltd. Box 497, K.C. Mo.
Excellent used MagnaVox Consolette Mediterranean stereo store. MagnaVox radio set, like none other. Ray Stone Televison.
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Mindula single angle reflex w/normal w/normal
wide angle wide 15.28 (l-meter) $135.00; Maniya-
sake 607FV (built-in-meter) w/normal normal
wide angle wide 15.28 (l-meter) Call Jack 5064
to see 1066.
1973 Cavey Impala convertible: air conditioning,
good tires, good tires, low mileage 8421-64
after 0.06 hrs.
MUST SELL. Mint-ike, new last semester; must be at least 18 years old to watch that retails for $99.50. Make offers. Can ship worldwide.
Mobile home to lot in Bomber Springs, 20 minutes to KU-20 minutes to Kansas City. 190 Buddy, 14, 60 to 8, 2 bedrooms, A/C, fully carpeted, separate dining and humidity. Call 415-4432-156-2
68 'Javinell SBT'. Replaced metallic green, full
baskinfit and black finish. Excellent condition. Asking
price is $500 plus excellent condition. Askings
http://www.javinell.com/
For Sale: Use Armstrong Flute in good condition.
$50. Call Susan Lombina nights, 241-6400.
0410.
969 Audit America, Forced to sell. Good shape
$50,忌错装 1318 克特 No. 4. Kickoff
4:14
2-16
1980 GTO 2-DR-HT, yellow with black vinyl top.
1980 GTO 4-DR-HT, blue with black vinyl
element condition. 841-388-7360.
FOR SALE-1636 Ford Fairline Station Wagon.
For sale in the U.S. only. Offer
2-15
842-841 between 6-7 p.m. on
Saturday.
Record Collection for sale. Over 300 albums,
most rock, Cole Call Jm; 841-2878, 2-19
5
BMC.ORC. Car, 1989 AKA-Romeo Speed. s. Speed.
bMEO
PIONEER model SX-62x stereo receiver. Worth $200.00 new. Price more岁月 ago. Mate SX-62x. 118. Dam
1960 Rambler Station Wagon, $50 or best offer,
843-1222 2-20
64 TR-4. New head, recent valve job, good赖
basket, $450, 943-3678.
2-20
1-72 / Z-B C48 Ex. condition - 14,000 miles (316) - 345-414 (Emporia, Kan. AFT) 6 P.M. (316) - 345-414 (Emporia, Kan. AFT) 6 P.M.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RITCHIE MANOR-CUPBOARD
THE GREVEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-6256
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Alexander's
Wide selection of gifts
826 Iowa 842-1320
Lawrence Auction House
Portmore, Antigua, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
842-7098 anytime.
PEUGEC
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
For sale: Upright Panasonic Tape Recorder with
8mm film capability. Untested. Uprated
0000 Tape 1000 Tapes. Amps need $1 each. 842-
364.995.500.676.400.500.400.400.4
Let Us Sell It For You
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS.
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
920
Mass
843
8500
The Stereo Store
AUDIOTRONICS
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP CLIMBING! PARKING IN FAR-FAR LOTS! GO from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking lot for Free Campus rates. Fully furnished, room-rate rates, furniture available. Ideal rooms for hotel. Saturdays; Anita, 123d, Ind. Apt. 9 if phone 843-211-6191
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-夹-篮 playground is back away from the new Naimshi Park, in an extra-qua-tive neighborhood study! large closets, an allele-electric kitchen with utility hook-ups, stock up and store all your things, and large attached garage $15/month, available 844-866-0333 or 844-830-8900. 2-22
MADLE
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
Come by and see these three apartments. Rent
water bills are $299 a month. Water bills are
water bills are $299 a month. Water bills are
water bills are $299 a month. Water bills are
These beautiful apartments surround a $90,000 pool. The spa and fitness center — Fraser Hall is only 10 blocks away the spa. Foster Hall is only 20 blocks away the spa.
Peugeot PX-10-E $225.00
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
842-5552
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now living in the same apartment, you can apply for, the Spring sentence, Central heating and air; pool and laundry. Most utilities are included. Call 843-8220 or see at 119 W. 19th st., Php 843.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings; 1 bedroom; 1 bedroom; w/Sliding door; 2 bedrooms; pool area; ban location; Pool and gas-lighted, landscaped courtyard; Excellent management. 2500 West 6th Avenue.
1 blemm. **a**t **blemm**. **c**at **dlemm**. **o**f-**te**r**s**i**e**r**r**i**e**r**r**r**r
Nicely run. apt for, 1 or 2 students close to campus parking. Utilities paid. 843-854. 2-14
For the latest up to the minute lending in rental
rentals, Purchase Rental Exchange, 826-545-
2500, 91 Kentucky.
THE HI D in the WALL
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
841-765-Weel-Doer - 9th & 11th
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
Amps
Recorders
Accessories
Rise
Keyboard Studios.
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Evenings
RIDE ON BICYCLES
4 bed room house, 3 porches, full basement, part
4 bedroom suite, 480/m², days call 841-6801 or mires
842-3820.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Fender
REGIONAL HOTTIE LINEAR
1401 Mass. 843-8484
Must Sublease—one bedroom apt. one block from Union! $130/m plus elee $824. Avaliable for up to 5 bedrooms.
Apt. for sub-lease, Clean furnished, walk-to-wall
seats, Wi-Fi, AC-powered TV, Accessible to Union,
no unts, Phone 845-767-767
2-23
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for
12 and 2 rooms at Union. Photo #842-5676.
www.unionphoto.com
Best apartment value in Lawrence, Convenience,
management and cleanliness. Make reservations
now for 1 and 2 bedrooms from $100. Excellent
bedroom options. Cedarwood Bedroom. 843-
114-116. 2414 Osdahl. 2-15
Room for rent with kitchen privacies $45/
month for boot camp, campus #84-983, occupies 100-
square feet.
Sarried Student: Nice front room in quiet home
Sarried Student: Not in quiet home
Not slum housing 288 B江岸岛 2-20
For Rent - private warm room - two blocks from
Kitchen shared - 842-447-825
2-20
NOTICE
ATTENTION RENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farm all areas,
Home offices. 311 E 7th St. 8-610-610
311 F 7th St. 8-610-610
515 Michigan St. B-B-Q. Bar-B-Q. Bar-B-Q in an
elegant, two-bedroom apartment. A $300 a
stab. A stab have here $2,400. Large rib plate
bread sandwich. Bread sandwich. Bread sandwich.
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
No charge, list your house, apartments, displeaser
and dwelling. For more info call Home Locator
www.homelocator.com
Lawrence Auction House, Sell your household
for compartmental information call 843-759-6000.
For compartmental information call 843-759-6000.
Discount prices with saving up to 40% on some items. Catering for 10, 20, or 30 guests. Shop 798, North 2nd, Open 9 am-7 pm, 7 days a week.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
WHY RENT?
MUSEUM OF THE YEAR
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
Open 24 hrs.
Roses and candy may be sweet, but a Valentine's
gift to "Maryann's" is a very special.
7:14 West 10th St. 3:14
129 E. 57th Street
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OP
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
842.5304
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Coin-Op
843-5304
Independent
GAY LIDERATION ACTIVITIES: Monday-justice 7.0 p.m. on Tuesday; FRIDAY-SOCIALIZING 8.30 p.m. on Saturday; SUNDAY-RAP 644-3664 for referrals; OBFICE-NIL 814, 864-8098, Box 234, Lawrence. 2-14
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
Want to send a special Valentine to a special
girl? Send a singing Valentine! For details:
2-14
645-6622
LOST
Will pay $80 to have my Nalshim Contract for Spring 75 taken on weekend or male or female Call 843-269-1900.
CHEAPER BEER EVERYDAY-$1-60 pitches
and 20c draws EVERYDAY at 8 p.m. at the
NEW HAVEN, 12th & Onward Play Football,
for Choss and drink cheaper beer EVEN
DAY! 2-14
WANTED
Wanted: female roommate to live in house with
students. Phone 612-834-5025; $5,000 a month; Call 612-834-5025; 2-15
Wanted - Peren need to fill position of roommate. No prerequisite needed. For more information call 800-355-4192.
Fair prices for good used furniture and
antiques. 842-7098 tt
Desperately need someone to help me in Math.
I'll go to school but I don't have any reasonable amount if you could help me with it.
I'll just stick with math.
LOSST -Much lovet owed short hair, grey with a
dark streak. (Ny. (n-y-a)) Please help me find her bert!
(Ph. (n-y-a))
Lost-Main's 'black "dattier" wallet, possibly from 1985 on F. 6. Week 2—Bracket 5—8322-225 or 8343-2897. **D**—2-16
Rewarded for return of small black and tan mined
cobble; or for return of large black and tan
Mississippi-side door or call at 841-5431 or 842-
9403.
days per week
7
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Eating Place
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu
Sweat Sandwiches
Shrimp Skewers
Beaks
Our menu is and has always been
There is no substrate for quality
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
DR
1. Motion Maker at the door
2. Knife Drawer, Window
Phone 843-6311
Open 4:30
Close 10:30
器
HELP WANTED
Dancers need for afternoons. Must be 18,
preferably 21. Apply in person at Camel Club
Court. Call (516) 437-8910.
SALES HELP WANTed-Mornings, apply in
person, Mr. Guz 920 Mass. 2-20
Employment Opportunities
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waiters
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 935-850-
0767
TYPING
PERSONAL
KAW BODY SHOP
DAY 841-2800
NIGHT 842-0131
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
Plenty of
Pressure
Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH
OF KAW BRIDGE
FOUND
DICK MILLS - OWNER
724 N. 2ND ST.
LAWRENCE, KS.
You have the right to call the wrecker of your choice in case of a wreck or just need a tow. Keep this in mind—call me anytime.
Product Development Assistant. Rapidly growing lab manager. Job requires creativity, understanding of mechanical and electrical engineering. Must be able to work with draftman. Should have understanding of machine shop, production techniques. Need skill in computer experience. Only qualified need apply. At least 2 yrs exp in the job offered.
If you know farming, talk to the Peace Corps Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fraser and Strong Hall.
REPAIRING
IN IT'S SLOWS
WE'LL LIVE IT
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
Come auf our store! 20 new fragrances have been online! original 7 at Waxman Center, 7 at West 14th, 7 at West 15th
TOWING
The Needle Point, Men's and women's needle
instruction. Men's needle point
beginning February 22. Come sitch with us, 389
and see the needle point demonstration.
Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other mime typing. Have electric typewriter with plexa type. Accurate and prompt typed works of corrected spelling. Ph. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright
$28\frac{1}{2}$ HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
EXPERT BODY & GLASS REPAIR
20 YEARS LOCATION
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
Friday Fund, February 2. female miniature pool
ball with a ball on a board. Co. with Gail Hick at 92 Kentucky
is Date Nite
Friday Nite
SPECIAL
YOU AND YOUR D
3 games each
$2.00
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
HUU
8 8 8
KANSAS UNION
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73.74 must pick up a budget request form from 1084 Kansas Union, 819-340-3030 or submit a HUST form to be received in 1084 before 5 p.m. March 5. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
10
Wednesday, February 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
7 Compete for Board of Education
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
Seven persons filed as candidates for the Lawrence Unified School District No. 497 Board of Education before the filing deadline noon Tuesday.
In the March 6 primary election, six of the seven candidates will be selected for the general election ballot, from which three will be elected, according to Douglas County Clerk Delbert Mathia. The three winners of the general election, April 3, will serve four-year terms on the board beginning July 1.
Three of the candidates currently hold positions on the board. They are Dr. Helen Gillies, 1310 Iowa St., Larry Hatfield, 1020
Lawrence Ave., and William F. Bradley, R. R.
2. Lawrence, R.
The four candidates seeking their first term on the board are Gary Conrad, 2542 Ridge Court, Anne Bauer, 1818 Gadet Ave. and Robert L. Annel, 1718 Brook St., and Robert L. Annel, 1718 Brook St.
Hafield has lived in Lawrence all his life. He is president of Haverty and Haffield Real Estate and Insurance Co., and vice president of the Lawrence Board of Education and of the KU School of Education and is a coach for the Lois Holom Baseball League.
Gilles, a 24-year Lawrence resident, is a
Better vocational education will be one of the goals if re-elected. Hatfield said when he was elected, it will be the focus.
nites said Tuesday that the door-to-door salesmen used very high-pressure tactics to seduce them.
Atty. Gen. to Investigate Magazine Sale Tactics
Sales pitches were made by pregnant women and Vietnam veterans who said they needed to sell a certain number of magazines to win scholarships to college.
The salesmen also tried to sell magazines to be sent to American prisoners of war in the Middle East.
A complaint filed with the Consumer Protection Agency concerning high-pressure equipment forced to be furnished to the state attorney general's office, according to Linda Biles, co-manager of the agency. The Lawrence Police Department also has been informed,
Biles said salesmen apparently were the service or a company called Publix Circulating Seal.
The police department was notified because the salesmen were in violation of a city law requiring all peddlers to obtain licenses issued by the city clerk.
People who decided to subscribe to magazines made out their checks directly to the salesman. One person wrote a check for $18, the salesman and later received a bill for $18.
Gilles said she would like to see public schools change to meet more needs of her children.
The $33 was apparently commission, Biles said.
Subscribers have a three-day "cooling off" period in which they can cancel their subscriptions. However, cancellation must be made through the salesman, Biles said.
Bradley, the current board president,
operates the Bradley Veterinary Hospital,
935 E. 3rd St. He has lived in the Lawrence
area since 1907. He is director of the
Church of Jesus Christ, and is past director of the Chamber of Commerce
area agricultural committee.
local pediatrician and graduate of the KU School of Medicine. she said that she had served four years on the board and found the job challenging and interesting.
State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, arranged the luncheon as a benefit for the Bentley family.
Roy will also speak at 3:30 in the Union
alroom. His speech is being sponsored by the
State Department.
Ballard Plans Benefit Lunch With Roy, Owen
Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., and Lt. Gov. Owen will be guests at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in the Cottonwood and Meadowkill Rooms of the Kansas Union. He will not present formal speeches, but will respond to questions. The public is invited.
Bradley has served on the Lawrence board since 1966. Before that he served three years on the Kaw Valley School Board.
Tickets are available at the Ballard Center, 708 El St., the University Relations Office, 123 Strong Hall; the Raney Horses; and the Lawrence National Bank.
He said his goal for the district was developing each child to his fullest potential.
Any old ring will make it legal.
But who wants any old ring
Flowers fade, cake crumbles.
So if you want to be the one,
wedding band should remain
a beautiful shining symbol of
love and commitment.
One of our stunning ArtCaveli
rings for any old ring. We could go
on about the ArtCarved tradition of fine rings that goes back to 1850, but why don't you come see for yourself?
Condra, executive director of Cottonwood Inc., a training school for the handicapped, is a five-year resident of Lawrence. He was a junior high school counselor, coach and principal in Topeka from 1962-68. From 1964-67 he was a grade 10 teacher. From 1965-67 and from 1967-71 he was assistant superintendent for instruction in Lawrence.
ArtCarved
WEDDING RINGS
MISTY HARBOUR SET
H
Only one complaint has been filed officially Biles said, although about 20 inquiries about the salesmen have been made.
Anti-Carex wedding ring in 14K solid gold
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Conda said that three major issues faced Lawrence—finance—a movement away from education science and a lack of emphasis on vocational education and better programs for
Amunel, a self-employed painter, has lived in Lawrence since 1959. He is a graduate of Tonganone High School and is the second bid for the Board of Education.
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Berger described her platform as one on "economy, equality, responsiveness and responsibility," in her second bid for the board of education. She has been a part owner of Downtown Health Foods, 2 E. Ninth St.
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Friedrich Sengle, chairman of the German department at the University of Munich, has been appointed the Max Kade Distinguished Professor this semester at KU. Sengle is an expert in 19th-century German literature.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No.91
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Sanitary Landfill To be Completed By 1975
Thursday, February 15, 1973
See Story Page 5
IN NEW REFORM
Kansas Staff Photos by PRIS BRANDSTEED
Roger Martin, Student Senate Treasurer, Examines Letter . BSU charges "invidious discrimination" in suit announced at Wednesday night meeting .
Rieke Urges Bill Passage
By MYLA STARR
Kansan Staff Writer
Topeka—Financial requirements for increased health care facilities and expansion of the physical plant at the University of Kansas Medical Center were discussed Tuesday by Dr. William O. Rieke, vice chancellor for health affairs, in a joint session of the Kansas House and Senate Ways and Means committees in Topeka.
During the committee hearing, Rieke recommended passage of Senate Bill 90, section 9, which would revise the Medical Center's expenditure authority and make
available additional revenue for the current fiscal year.
He also urged passage of Senate Bill 260, which would make $28.3 million from the state general fund available to the Medical Center to build new buildings on the Kansas City campus.
Senate Bill 280 should come before the legislature within the next month. Hickey is running for re-election.
Rieke said the increasing demand for health services and student training at the Medical center justified the legislative appropriation of funds.
He said that enrollment had been ino increase in both inpatient and outpatient demands also puts financial pressure on the Medical Center, he said, as do maintenance of the open heart surgery center and the interdisciplinary cancer research and demonstration center.
Secretary of State William Rogers will sign the agreement at the State Department, while a Cuban official will sign it simultaneously in Havana.
Cuba, U.S. Come to Terms On Handling of Hijackers
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States and Cuba will sign an antihacking agreement at 11:30 a.m. today, U.S. officials sav.
As outlined by these officials, Cuba and the United States will agree to either extradite or prosecute persons guilty of blacking airplanes or ships.
U. S. officials said the agreement was very satisfactory and would serve as both a real and a psychological deterrent to blacking.
creased to meet increased demand, but that temporary measures were taken which could not be maintained without the current capacity of the currently proposed capital expansion plan.
However, the agreement does not affect the traditional American position concerning acceptance of respect by a Cuban may violate a Cuban law in escaping to the United States, if he does not endanger either himself or his country. If he would be unable for extradition, he would not be allowed for extradition.
Such a refugee would be liable to
prosecution under existing U.S. laws, which could lead to charges of illegal entry. An American official said that the agreement pledges the United States to enforce such laws, including the neutrality acts that allow for legal and property for attacks on other nations.
Because the United States and Cuba do not have diplomatic relations, a relatively complicated system of antihijack negotiations has been followed, with the Swiss ambassadors in Washington and Havana acting as intermediaries.
An additional $263,000 in general revenue appropriation was needed in fiscal 1973, he said, to support increasing numbers of residents and interns in Kansas City as well as satellite branches of the Medical Center in Wichita and Garden City.
But because the Czechoslovakian embassy in Washington represents Cuban interests in the United States, the state may be assigned by the commission to be addressed to the Czech ambassador.
The signing ended negotiations that opened Nov. 25 with a Cuban note expressing interests in reaching an antijihacking agreement. The last of seven notes exchanged in the protracted negotiations was received in Washington Saturday night.
The text signed in Havana will be sent to the Swiss ambassador in that city.
Major expansion of the Medical Center's physical plant was also reviewed by Rieke in the committee hearing. New facilities will include a $6 million basic science building, a $10 million medical funded by a federal grant, and a new clinical building, which would raise the potential patient load at the Medical Center to 800. The building would also provide additional facilities for medical service areas and specialized units such as intensive care and emergency service.
The cost of the new clinical building has been estimated at $48.3 million, which includes $2 million for fees and land acquisition.
Last year the legislature approved a $64 million bond issue for the expansion, but Governor Docking has recommended that $28 million of the funding be paid by the state to cut bond interest costs. Rieke said that cut taxpayer costs by $7 million.
Rieke said all funds appropriated would be used to improve health care throughout the state. He said 30 per cent of the inpatient counties and 25 per cent of the county counties judge, Johnson and Wondetoe.
Training of a physician at the Medical Center requires $12,000-$13,000 a year, he is
BSU Charges Senate With Discrimination
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
The Black Student Union (BSU) filed an action with the University Judiciary Wednesday charging the Student Senate in its actions involving the BSU.
The suit also alleges "arbitrary and capricious taking of property" in the Dec. 6 senate action to remove $3,000 of the BSU's food co-op allocation and to freeze the remaining $3,250 until the co-op could be reorganized to the senate's satisfaction.
Roger Martin, senate treasurer and Lawrence third-year law student, announced the action during the senate meeting Wednesday night. Martin, both individually and as treasurer, and the three senators are named as defendants in the suit.
The BSU action further charges the data center attempting to force the BSU to spend a fraction of its cementments throughout the year and that no other funded organization has been so
The suit was signed by KU third-year law students Gary Jackson, Lawrence; Richard Jones, Topki; and Louis Sturk, Rekwal, Tex. All were listed as RSU advisers.
The suit, filed with the hearing division of the Judiciary, alleges that the action to remove $3,000 from the BSU “amounts to an arbitrary and capricious taking of property by the State.” The suit also demands of law and in contravention of the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution."
The suit also claims the senate did not hold fair hearings before taking the action.
Such action "amounts to invidious discrimination in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution." The suit says.
The action seeks temporary and permanent injunctions enjoining the senate from withholding BSU spring semester funds and mandatory relief to order Martin to approve BSU vouchers which are "proper on their face."
Martin has refused to approve couchers this semester for the BSU co-op because of their sexism.
In addition, the suit asks a declaratory judgment finding the senate actions "arbitrary and capricious" and "a taking of BSU property without due process of law."
The defendants have until Feb. 28 to
answer the suit. Should formal hearings
be allowed, also give the
location of closed on.
Four bills died on the floor of the senate when they failed to receive introduction into the Senate.
They were a bill asking the University attorney to determine the legality of senate appropriations, a proposed change in the method of electing members to the University Council, a proposal for senate impeachment guidelines and a request by the Secretary Graduate Student Organization for $200 to attend a convention.
Two other bills listed on the agenda were not discussed. They were a proposal to refund 40 cents from the contingency fund to each student and a proposal to allow each student to allocate his own share of the activity fee.
Five appropriation bills were passed by the senate. The KU Hockey Club received $200 of its $1,911 request. The money will be used to pay for ice rink rental.
The KU Amateur Radio Club received its entire request of $380 to pay for additional equipment.
The Jayhawk Jamboree received $1,000 for its annual spring program.
The Kansas Engineer, a magazine published by students in the School of Engineering, was allocated $500 for increased costs of printing.
The Volunteer Clearing House received two requests of $210 to pay for new programs.
In response to the Hockey Club's allocation for ice rental, several senators circulated a petition to recruit members for a new organization, the KU Mountaineering
Gus DiZerega, Lawrence graduate student and apparent chairman of the group, said the group would meet at 3 p.m. to discuss the plan and determine the size of its allocation request.
The group originally said it would ask for sufficient funds to build a mountain in Lawrence but later decided to ask only for the cost of the mountains it climbed.
A proposal to allocate $3,000 to pay for free beer in the Union "until the beer runs out or the fiscal year ends, whichever comes first," was defeated.
Only 1 Candidate Files For Top Senate Office
Only one team of candidates for student body president and vice president filed before the deadline of 5 p.m. Wednesday.
They were Mert Buckley, Wichita sophomore, president; and Nancy Archer, Anamosa, Iowa, junior, vice president.
Dave Ellen, Hutchinson senior and student body president, said Wednesday that the school's new policy
Dilson said write-in candidates would be eligible to win only if both candidates had been members of the Student Senate and were run together ran together in a write-in campaign.
The deadline for filing for Student Senate and class officers is 5 p.m. Feb. 21
Mert Bucklev
Hanoi to Help Decide Scope of Aid
WASHINGTON (AP)—Haniol and Washington announced agreement Wednesday on creating a joint economic forum between the U.S. and to rebuild war-battled North Vietnam.
The disclosure came in a joint commune unqueque outlining nearly four days of the Nixon administration's President Nixon's chief foreign policy aid. Ronald Ziegler, White House press secretary, said Kissinger and North Vietnamese officials had potential U.S. reconstruction assistance.
Predicting the joint commission would be set in up about a month, Ziegler said any dollar figures would first be discussed in a conference to further consultation with Congress.
The 700-word communique expressed hope the Kissinger visit *will mark the end of* that era.
It also spoke of "imperative measures" necessary to carry out the Vietnam peace accord signed in Paris on January 27. It did not elaborate.
Ziegler said in response to questions that one such item on which Kissinger and the North Vietnamese agreed was the need to set up a system for trying to trace Americans still listed as missing in action in Indochina.
The communique said Kissinger and Hanoi officials "also agreed they would continue to have periodic exchanges of views" with the aim of making sure the Paris accords "are strictly and scrupulously implemented."
Kissinger was en route to Peking via Hong Kong and will leave there next Monday, making an overnight stop in Tokyo, before returning to Washington the next day.
Ziegler said Kissinger would hold a conference on his hand and Peking talks soon.
The communiqué said Kissinger and Hanoi officials 'exchanged views on the manner in which the United States will contribute to healing the wounds of war and
to postwar economic construction in North Vietnam."
It said they agreed on a joint commission, with an equal number of representatives from each nation, to develop economic relations between the United States and North Vietnam.
There has been persistent talk of $7.5 billion to be distributed throughout Indochina over a five-year period to help repair war damages. Of the total, North Vietnam presumably would claim about $2.5 billion.
The United States would be but one of a number of nations and international organizations contributing to such a fund. Nixon's latest federal budget, for the bookkeeping year that begin July 1, combines money earned for North Vietnam.
Administration officials have indicated that if aid money is needed during the time span of the new budget, the funds would be used by some part of a section of the federal spending blueprint.
Austere Budgets Reduce Availability of KU Supplies
Editor's Note: This is the conclusion of a three-part series examining the impact of autereal budgets during the past few years on the University of Kansas faculty. Hearings for the fiscal 1974 budget begin this morning before a joint session of the Kansas House and Senate Ways and Means Committee.
Many University of Kansas professors must pay for paper, stamps and envelopes they use in their normal teaching duties. They absorb the cost personally because of a 10-per-cent reduction this year in supply and maintenance budgets.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Rising costs, reductions in revenue from student fees, small increases in state support, shifts in enrollment patterns that make some departments overcrowded and
Faculty members encounter countless situations in which the facilities in their buildings are not available.
reductions in research grants and federal
have contributed to the financial
involvement of researchers.
University office supplies are used sparingly by professors and are unavailable to students. Both sides of dittos are being used in the KU geology department, and no photocopying is done. Ernest Angio said, chairman of the department of geology.
Professors also face a shortage of secretarial help. The secretarial staff in the human development and family life department has not increased at a rate comparable to enrollment increases, as chairman of the department, said.
Charles Kiesler, chairman of the department of psychology, said he had been recruiting new faculty members and had reviewed the credentials of 1,000 applicants. The department also handles about 500 graduate school applications every year, he said, and all the paperwork must be done by three secretaries.
Howard Mossberg, dean of the School of Pharmacy, said federal funds enabled the school to prevent cutbacks of office materials. Office supplies, other than mailing materials, are supplied for faculty members in the chemistry department, said John Landgrebe, department chairman.
The work-study program, four-fifths financed by federal funds, has enabled the school to provide private and secretarial staff. It is the equipment budget that has affected the chemistry department most. Landgrebe said.
Laboratory experiments are being redesigned to use cheaper chemicals, Landgrabre said. He said that the chemistry department at one time wrote off lab equipment breakages of less than $1 but would be charged for all materials they broke.
The annual orders of chemicals and glassware have been reduced, said J. K. Lee, associate professor of chemistry, and inventories of expensive items are
becoming depleted. Three weeks ago the
electrodes for the first three years, he said,
were in good condition.
The effect of cutbacks in chemicals and equipment is subtle and long-term, and undergraduates often do not realize there are significant benefits, but the quality of education is lowered.
The Biological Sciences Administration needs $12,000 to meet "minimal standards for supply and equipment," Ronald McGregor, chairman of the administration,
Angino said the geology department had equipment and an equipment budget of $1.5 million.
The department also must reduce the number of rock samples it purchases. In the course of study, samples often get broken, but the department "gets by" by using
"Obsolete equipment does the student no good," he said. "He won't see this equipment when he goes on the job. Modern places just don't have it."
"Preventive maintenance is better in the run, but we can't afford it," he said. "We wait."
smaller and smaller samples, Angino said. Small pieces of equipment, such as geologic hammer, are beyond the reach of the department's budget, he said.
Maintenance of equipment also is a problem, Angino said. The University cannot afford to maintain service contracts on its equipment. Without contracts, he repairmen are in no hurry to fix equipment, and each service call costs more.
Angino said many geology classes took field trips. Some of the cars available to the department have more than 80,000 miles on them, he said, so professors often use their own cars at their own expense for safety's sake.
Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Affairs, and travel also was a big part of his career. He is survived by his wife, Julie.
were doing field work in many different parts of the state.
"It is absolutely necessary for the educational program that our faculty visit these students on a regular basis to discuss and evaluate their work," Katz said. "This results in travel costs which are part of the budget, as well as when we cut gets in trouble."
He said telephone expenses in the School of Social Welfare also were high because of the necessity for contact between teachers and their students in the field.
A freeze was placed on faculty hiring at the beginning of the academic year. In departments that had vacant positions at that time, professors have had to teach more classes and have had even less time to devote to research.
Professoras desire to use films for their classes often find them unavailable. Ross A. Johnson, a professor at New York University,
See AUSTERE Next Page
2
Thursday, February 15, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Use of Library Fund Questioned
A report submitted to the Association of University Residence Halls (AUHR) has questioned the office of the Dean of Women about a $8,000 library fund administered by
The library fund has accumulated from a five-per-cent commission on money taken from vending machines in the residence halls.
In the report to AUHR Monday, John Beisner, Salma sophomore and AUHR treasurer, questioned the nature of some financial decisions he made in fiscal 1972. Beisner suggested that some of
In his report Beisner also alleged that funding inquiries made Feb. 8 by an unidentified Oliver Hall resident were stopped after a staff member from the Dean of Women's office said funds were not available for Oliver.
the expenditures might not have been made in the spirit of the fund.
Beiser's report stated that the fund contained $8.19 as of 19, 2017.
In a reply to Alex Thomas, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, senior and AURH president, Emily Taylor, dean of women, denied that her office had ever turned down a fund
Taylor's reply also said a central library had been created in 220 Strong Hall for use by all students. Her reply stated that many of the expenditures questioned by AURH were made to provide books and periodicals for this library.
request.
In a statement Wednesday evening, Thomas said that communications between AURH and the Dean of Women's office were broken. And because that AURH intended to pursue the matter.
Copies of Beisner's report were also made available to the members of the Ad
ministrative Housing Board: William Ballour vice chancellor for student affairs; Donald Alderson, dean of men; J. J. Wilson, housing director; and Taylor.
The five-percent centending machine rebate has been administered differently by the offices of the dean of men and the dean of for many years, according to Adelson.
Austere Budgets Reduce . . .
Taylor said her office request each of the residence halls to place its five-per-cent rebate from the vending machines into a account under the jurisdiction of her office.
(Continued from Page 1)
service, said the film budget had been reduced.
"This doesn't affect our office, but the whole campus. We don't have the funds to fill film requests, and teachers are limited," he said.
Two-thirds of the film budget for the year was spent last semester, Wulfuhke said. He said films that were not available in the film library had to be rented, and because the budget had been cut, cutbacks had to be made in filling rental requests.
The audio-visual department also has decreased the number of student employees. Wulfkulea said projector operators were able to perform most of the film show, and return it to the library.
The buildings and grounds department is extended beyond the capacity of the physical plant, McGregor said. The department employs no more people than it did its years ago, and the employees are well trained to maintain buildings and laboratories.
Laboratory maintenance once paid for by buildings and grounds, is accomplished by funds allotted to individual departments, he said.
Anginso said trash barrels go unempressed for days. "Kansans have a hell of an in vestment in these buildings, but they're letting them go to hell."
Bobby R. Patton, chairman of the department of speech and drama, said his department had cut back subscriptions to professional journals.
"Any departments that have less to spend have less to spend on printing," he said.
Departments also have reduced the number of publications or have produced fewer books.
William Smith, director of the printing service, said he had noticed some cutback in the amount of printing done for departments.
The printing service also does work for the University Press, a publishing venture not as restricted by budget cuts, Smith said. This has minimized the slack from the reduction of work from departments, he said.
The printing service in the past has printed both a preliminary and a final commencement program, Smith said, but because the commencement program will be printed this spring.
Smith said departments had cut printing costs by publishing smaller issues or by publishing less often. The amount of color used in these designs have been cut back also, he said.
The service no longer publishes the University Directory. Plains Publications in Labbock, Tex., publishes the directories free of charge in return for the opportunity to sell advertising. Catalogs are now printed on a newsprint instead of offset paper, Smith said.
He said some departments used duplicating typewritten form instead of writing.
"It's less beautiful, but it's functional," he said.
One professor said his department could not afford to publish brochures advertising its academic program and distribute them at other schools.
Instructors find that the format of courses is less than desirable. A main reason for this is that departments cannot afford to hire instructors in order to provide an instructor instructors to teach lab courses.
Kiesler said he would have liked to have made Psychology it a lab course, but the high enrollment and lack of instructors prohibited him from doing so.
Angino said computer costs had been cut
"across the board." Students writing theses must be for computer time, he said.
All deans and department chairmen are faced with the threat that their ablest faculty members will leave KU for higher paying positions. Clifford Clark, dean of the School of Law, said Frank Rialty, who, he said, was one of the best professors in the Business School.
Deterioration in the quality of the faculty results in substandard education for students and difficulty in soliciting federal funds and research grants. Clark said.
There is reason to believe that the financial situation will ease somewhat.
Katz said he foresaw one more tight year, the 1973-74 academic year, when the number of full-time faculty positions must be decreased by 23.5 because of the decrease in enrollment. He said he did not believe that students were distributed, but he assumed that schools having enrollment increases would not be affected.
"I have great faith in our administration of the University," he said. "By your sound management policies, plus what seems to be greater support by governmental officials and, hopefully, the legislature, the situation will improve in the near future."
The budget should increase slightly next year. Gov. Robert Docking has recommended that KU receive $48,743,306 for the next year, compared to $48,933,793 this year.
This amount includes a supplemental appropriation of $798,200 to cover increases in Social Security costs and to make up for the loss of fees stemming from this year's supplementary appropriation. The supplementary appropriation already has been approved by the Kansas Senate.
Most of the budget increase will come from an increase in student fees, not from the state's general fund, however. Student loans that are part of the state's $9,550,000, but the state's allocation is
the general fund will rise only by $44,069 if the governor's recommendation is adopted, from $25,097,252 to $25,543,321. The remaining $12,606,774 allocated to the University is expected to remain unchanged.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols has said that the supplemental appropriation should allow him to restore the 10-per-cent cutback in the supply and maintenance budget and to end the freeze on the hiring of faculty members.
The budget granted no increases for extension and research, except for the Geological Survey. This will mean that the budget should be to be curtailed because of rising inflation.
Docking has endorsed a request by the Board of Regents for a 5.5-per-cent increase in faculty salaries and a one-step increase for classified emplovers.
The proposed budget should allow the University and individual faculty members to barely keep pace with inflation during the coming academic year. It will not, however, make up for the loss created by the austere budgets of the past.
Nor can the slight increases in state funding compensate for the anticipated loss of "soft" money, which supplements the state's allocation. This could prove to be the state's long-term loss for individual departments and for the long-range quality of the University.
Correction
The Kansas incorrectly reported Tuesday that dependents of staff members receive reductions in tuition fees. Not all dependents receive fee reductions. A depend who normally would pay non-resident fees is entitled to a reduction to the resident fee level. A dependent normally paying resident fees has no reduction in fees.
Alderson said that for at least five years the eight residence halls under his jurisdiction had put the vending machine in their place, each hall in the University business office.
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"I see no reason for the two offices to manage the vending machine funds the same way," Taylor said. "I would be appalled if the funds are done by the dean of men."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 15, 1973
3
Tight Funds Restrict School Busine
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Konson Staff Writer
An excess of state and federal regulations, increasing costs and limited income have prevented the Lawrence Public School District from providing transportation to all Lawrence students that may need it.
According to Ernest Coleman, Lawrence public school's director of federal programs, the state will allow the school district to transport any of its students to their schools. The state requires the district to provide transportation for each student who live outside the city limits and more two and one half rules from their school.
The difficulty in state regulations, Coleman said, is in the area of state financial assistance to the school districts. Even though the state allows busing of all students, it will help finance the transportation costs only for those students living more than two and one half miles from their schools.
The present Lawrence public school's busing policy tries to work within the limits of state requirements and state financial constraints. The school's busing requirements, buses all students living
KU Provides Job Service For Students
An employment service for students who do not qualify for work study is now available in the Office of Student Financial Aids.
About 25 students have been placed in part-time jobs both on and off campus since the beginning of the spring semester, acco
nder Darwin Eads, director of the service.
Students who do housecleaning, babystying, clerical and secretarial work constitute a large number of those placed in jobs, Eads said.
Although some jobs are posted on a bulletin board outside the office, some employers prefer to limit the number of applicants for a job. Because of this, Eads encourages students to file an application with the office. This enables him to study the student's qualifications and refer him to prospective employers.
Approximately 100 students now have applications on file.
Eads estimated that about 90 per cent of students who used the service were happy.
The employment service was established last semester as a convenience for both students and employers. It provides a central location where faculty and businessmen can easily contact students who need jobs.
In addition to faculty members, Eads has contacted about 1,000 businesses in Lawrence to inform them of the service. He said he hoped this contact would increase the number of off-campus job opportunities for students.
outside the city limits and more than two and one half miles from their school.
The district also buses all elementary level students who live more than one mile from their school and all junior high students living more than two and one half miles from their school, regardless of where they live in the city limits or outside of town.
Coleman said that because of a lack of funds the district cannot bus high school students living in Lawrence, even though most students live in half miles from Lawrence High School.
The inability of the district to transport these high school students is an old problem in Lawrence. The problem is particularly in Income areas in East and North Lawrence.
Ocee Miller, volunteer worker at Penn House, a cooperative community aid program located at 1035 Pennsylvania, was particularly concerned about students living in Hope Plaza, near the north end of Michigan Avenue.
Miller said that some of the students at Hope Plaza can hitch rides. Others have to pay to be taken to school and this is particularly hard in low income areas.
She pointed out that in some low income areas of East and North Lawrence the families have no cars. In other families the father takes the car to work and he does not operate on the same schedule as the teacher, who cannot ride to school as he goes to work.
Miller said that she knew of four students that said they had dropped out of school because they had no way to get there. To counteract this situation Penn House is trying to coordinate a community bus in order to provide some transportation for students.
The present status of the bus project is in question. Miller said that there is some difficulty finding students willing to ride the bus, and also said that finances might be a problem.
Louise Cook, Lawrence public school's social worker, said it was hard to pinpoint transportation problems as the reason some problems certainly add to their problems.
problems for several years. She explained the failure of a district backed bus that carried high school students from North Lawrence during the 1970-1971 school term.
Cook has been involved in transportation
This bus was financed with special federal money for students from low income areas. After one year of service the funds were depleted and the bus did not meet federal requirements.
These requirements state that the money must be used to transport low income students to special teaching programs to assist them in developing basic skills. Because Lawrence High School is a general public high school it did not meet these requirements.
Cook said that when the federal assistance was withdrawn she requested that the busing from North Lawrence be continued with local funding. The local district could not honor this request because of lack of funding.
Coleman said that the district currently has allocated more than $14,000 to train firefighters.
cost of approximately $100 per student. The state reimburses the district $39 for each student that it buys more than two and one unit, or about 40 per cent of the cost to the district.
He estimated that if the district decided to bus all students living more than two and one half miles from school this would add $40,000 to the cost at an additional cost of nearly $50,000.
This would use all the additional funds that the district can receive through taxes due to the present state tax lid. Nothing then changes. The state tax lid increases or other educational programs.
Coleman has suggested a combination funding program that would utilize the state assistance given for all students bused two miles or half miles plus some form of local effort.
Coleman suggested a voluntary program in which local civic groups would finance the cost of a certain number of children. He believed this could cost as little as 30 cents a day.
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4
Thursday, February 15, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Racism Revisited
We all know about, or at least have heard about indirectly, the numerous transgressions and atrocities committed upon blacks in this country during the past three hundred years: the lynchings, shootings, beatings, rapings, maimings, threats . . . , the list goes on ad infinitum, as do the casualties.
But the black has come a long way since those days. In fact, he is to the point where political and economic individuality and independence are very much within his grasp. Realizing this, blacks the world over have formed a coalition dedicated to the eradication of capitalism and racism. The former I will not comment upon; the purpose of this writing is to comment upon the latter—racism.
Remember the old days when segregation was in its prime and there were "colored" water fountains and "white" water fountains, "colored" restrooms and "white" restrooms and even "colored" commodes and "white" commodes? Those days are gone (but not so long ago; about ten years past) and so is Jim Crowism, to a large extent.
But the black is still not even with his Caucasian counterpart. Enter the black coalition. One of its stated goals is the elimination of racism, a good and noble cause. The question that comes to my mind is: How is the coalition going about attaining that goal? Ironically enough, from what I've seen, they are using segregation as their prime mover.
Strange weapon, segregation. It implies the inferiority or superiority of one group over another. The black has been fighting segregation for about 100 years (it didn't become a widespread policy until the 1890's); now that he's seen some light in his up-to-this-point dreary and ominous history, he's turning around and
retreating into the depths of the social injustice and indignity that he just spent one hundred years fighting through.
As a "former" black (I say "former" not because it's the way I think of myself, but because its the way my black brothers and sisters think of me), I think that this method of attaining black independence, social justice and self-reliability is a poor one at best.
Black students congregating in dormitory cafeterias make it a point to display to everyone within listening distance who they are and what they think about the subject of "honkies." In some dormitories heckling of individual whites by groups of black students is common practice. Even heckling of fellow black students who may not be as "aware" as the rest of the group is not above reproach—and all of this for the abolition of racism?
I find it very difficult to believe. One does not fight a fire with a flamethrower. And what does the future hold for 'this regressive move? For the black militant it means control of the world by oppressed blacks. For the black coalition it will mean a dream come true—or at least half of it. Capitalism may or may not be abolished, but at the sacrifice of the abolition of racism.
But that's okay; I don't think blacks really wanted to abolish racism in the first place—just reverse it. For me—well, I probably wouldn't be around. I'd leave—assuming I didn't conveniently "disappear" first. I am just as adamantly opposed to black racism as I am to white racism and I will refuse to exist and keep my mouth shut under either one.
—Gregg DeLonnie Smith Guest Editorial Writer
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON - Presidential press spokesman Ron Ziegler has described as "wrong, wrong, wrong," our report that the White House has instructed the Justice Department to nail" us.
Yet after the Jan. 31 FBI raid on Adams' apartment, Hyten signed the criminal complaint, charging him with possessing stolen documents. Our FBI in formals say the FBI was really laying for us and timed the raid to catch Whiten in the net.
For weeks, Indian leader Hank Adams had been trying to arrange the return of the team he had taken from government files. He had managed to secure a few papers and other stolen items, which he turned over to the FBI. He was also given a receipt for them on Dec. 11.
Adams' role as the negotiator, merely try to return the stolen documents to the government, was well known. The respected Indian writer Vine Deloria, author of *We Talk, You Listen*, and "Caster Diederle Your Sins" also involved the people of the involved in the theft knew that Adams wanted to return everything.
There is pictorial evidence that the FBI's undercover man, John Arellano, knew it too. For an unshown ABCD TV film depicts Arellano, in his Indian pose, siting on a balcony, when Adams announced the documents would be returned "in a short period of time."
We will be happy, if Ziegler is correct to accept Pressure Nixon's apology for jailing Les Whittier while, that Whitten was arrested and his notes ripped out of his hand while he was covering a story for this column. We also evidence that his arrest was a setup.
He was charged with possessing stolen documents and converting them to his own "use and gain." But here's the real shocker. The FBI knew the agents' agonies pounced on him. Here are the facts, which we can now document;
Reporter Was Framed by FBI
An ANB film crew for the "Reasoner Report" set up their camera in Adams' apartment not far from the White House on Jan. 18. The producer, Aram Boyajian, told us that a number of Indians are shown clearly in the movie, and none other than the FBTs informer John Arellano, who was listening as Adams spoke.
Boyjian read us Adams' exact words from the transcript: 'We have some information on the nature of the documents that they were written in, and these documents also will be returned in a short period of time. And then the government will continue to lie. They'll say, you know, they weren't really written or some were still missing.'
The incident is also recalled by two prominent Indian journalists, Richard LaCourse and Tom Sweeney. The FBI undercover man) was only four feet from Hank when he was talking about getting the things back," said LaCourse. And also recalled Adams' words.
This evidence of the FBI's duplicity is supported by massive additional documentation about Adams' innocent role as the middle man trying to persuade his more militant Indian colleagues to give back the stolen papers. From the White House on Wednesday, government officials about retrieving and returning documents. Here are just a few of the witnesses who are available:
—A few weeks after the documents were taken last November, Los Angeles Times reporter Paul Houston spoke with the FBI. He admired the documents he gave him a large manila envelope to mail. Houston recalls clearly that it was addressed to the FBI with *admonition* address. The FBI knew, objections came from documents came from them.
"A New York Times story, featured prominently, reported that Adams told a press conference on Dec. 8 that the Indian papers would be returned "as fast as is humanly possible."
Agency Seeks to Define Truth
WASHINGTON -Of all the Federal regulations that I yet have read, and I have read thousands, the regulations issued on Jan. 19 by the Commissioner of Food and Drugs must be accorded a certain awesome supremacy.
These are the most autocratic, most arrogant, most infuriating orders ever decreed by a Federal agents, Commissioner, Governor, and detrites to establish by bureaucratic decree that absolute condition which has eluded mortal man since time began. In addition, Dr. Edwards and opinion, Dr. Edwards now establishes what is "false."
James J. Kilpatrick
He not only establishes the false. He also would require the entire food processing industry, and it was important to abide by his version of truth. He finds as a fact, for example, that "mineral nutrients in foods are not significantly affected by storage, transportation, cooking, and other processing." Neither is it surprising that soil nutrients or soil foods are grown in. After Dec. 31, 1974, any processor who implies any such thing may be sent to prison for false labeling. Dr. Edwards' regulations
the Federal Register. The new rules would require, in general, that all foods that are fortified or enriched must hereafter bear elaborate labels, printed in type not less than one-sixteenth of an inch high, specifying their precise percentages of what vitamins they contain. Recommended Daily Allowances' of vitamins and nutrients. Other regulations deal with dietary supplements.
My copy of the Register falls open at page 2147. These, if you would believe it, are findings of fact:
"There is no rationale for allowing the promotion of dietary supplements of vitamins or minerals in American population for the purpose of treating diseases or symptoms. . . Lay persons are incapable of determining by lay person's knowledge to vitamin or mineral deficiencies. Vitamin or mineral deficiencies are unrelated to the great majority of symptoms like rickets, malnutrition, and run-down condition. . ."
These are facts? Since when are they facts? To be sure, are they facts? To be sure, are assertions. Other experts deny them. If two and a half years of
earnings established one point, it was this: Nutrition is not an exact science. Dr. Edwards has no such humility. Thus he declares it flatly "false" that certain bioflavonoids have nutritional benefits and that they are "inherently misleading," and in no instance will it be permitten
The new regulations would forbid any processor to suggest or imply that "a diet of ordinary foods cannot supply adequate amounts of nutrients." The language echoes an earlier proposal that would have declared that vitamins and minerals are supported in daint amounts by commonly available foods." Dr. Jean Mayer, the noted nutritionist, called that proposal "meaningless, childish, fallacious, and silly," but here it is once more, in only slightly formed form, and becomes "misbranding" to disassess.
of primary concern to all consumers."
These sweeping edicts, you must understand, are for our own good. They are intended to teach us the importance of being of Americans." They are for the people's "own health and welfare." They stem from Dr. Jenkins' conclusion of law that "the development of nutrition labeling... has become
Primary concern? All consumers? The language accurately reflects the unmigrated arrogance of the regulations as a whole. Here the whole might and the majority are mindful that movement are behind an edict establishing "the proper use" of a fortified cake mix. The criminal law must be mobilized because "there are persons in the United States who are receptive to suggestions that human beings should be treated by using vitamins and minerals."
In my own view, the Food and Drug Administration has a responsibility, at law, to protect the public from fraud and contamination. But when that agency recklessly converts more opinions to "findings of fact" and to conclusions of law," and then consumers to determine their "primary concern," they are confusing bureaucratic power with divine power. We know how Dr. Edwards came to be Comprehender. It is not so clear who god.
after they had been copied for the edification of the tribes.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
LETTERS POLICY
--as a reporter. Whiten, of course, did not in steping the documents and at no time possessed them.
Letters to the editor should be typewritten, double-spaced and should not exceed 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Students must provide their name, year in school and home town; faculty and staff must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
By Jan. 11, Adams had dropped the idea of waiting for the documents to be copied. He would never refer to her in theference, as also reported by the New York Times, that he "would personally endeavor to obtain and return" the stolen document outside an outrage date of Feb. 16.
—On Jan. 24, the communications director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Tom Oxendine, has announced reconstructing certain BIA files, asked Adams whether he still hoped to get the documents back by mid-February. Adams, as well as the staff's in the process of happening."
- On Jan. 29, Adams personally informed Jane Wales of the Congressional Quarterly that he hoped to have the documents back at least by Feb. 10. She published the tip in CQ's highly-respected "News Features" report for editors two days later.
On Jan. 31, even as QS was informing editors of the imminence of the papers' return, Adams had a 10 a.m. appointment at BIA with Dennis Creech, an investigator for the House Appropriations Subcommittee. Adams planned to turn over the documents to Creedon, though he had also ordered plans. Thirty minutes before the arrest, Adams called Creedon to sav him "on the way."
Certainly, the FBI agents, who had been scurrying all over the country in a futile search for the Indian documents, read the press accounts and their own informer's reports on Adams' activities. They knew Adams was trying to collect and return them to the state, but they were rested the innocent negotiator, Hank Adams, after the first large stash of stolen documents reached him.
Their real object, of course,
was to nail Whitten, who had
persuaded Adams to let him witness
the return of the documents
Then what was his crime? He was enterprising enough to track down the documents that the embarrassed FBI couldn't find. He extracted the news from several documents and wrote the saga of the Broken Treaties Papers for our column.
Our stories told how the Nixon administration, like those that preceded it, had cheated and neglected the Indians. We reported the Indians as stripped government files. But we also laid out evidence from the papers that the government had helped white exploiters to steal the Indians' water rights, claims and other resources.
Whiten is guilty only of embarrassing the Nixon administration. The White House, apparal would like to make this a crime.
Copyright, 1973,
hy United Feature Syndicate. Inc.
Cattlemen, Conservationists Battle on the Lone Prairie
iy MARGIE COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
The existence of a Tallgrass Prairie National Park in Kansas is dependent upon the outcome of a controversy involving cattlemen and conservationists. Cattlemen want to use conservationists for the park as pasture; conservationists want to preserve one of the sites as a park.
The best tracts of tallgrass prairie remaining in the nation are in Kansas on the east slope of the Flint Hills. Two sites, each less than 60,000 acres or 94 square miles, are suitable for the department of the Interior to preserve as a Tallgrass Prairie National Park.
The Everglades in Florida, the Redwoods in California and the Deciduous Woodlands in Tennessee are examples of natural regions that have been set aside. Yet, no adequate samples may be obtained until they are preserved, and fewer areas are to be found each year, according to conservationists.
"The tallgrass prairie is as different from the other kinds of prairie as an eagle is different from a meadowwark," according to E. Raymond Hall, professor emeritus of systematics and ecology at the University of Kansas.
Hall, a former member of the National Parks Advisory Board, is currently serving on the park advisory committee established in April 1970 by park proponent Gov. Robert Docking. Hall is also a member of a new national organization, Save the Tollgrass Prairie Inc. The group's president is the president of the group whose goal is to promote establishment of the park.
According to Hall, the nation's three major types of grassland are shortgrass, midgrass and tallgrass. He said the Department of the Interior should prioritize to preserve an adequate sample of each.
Tallgrass once covered more than 400,000 square miles of the central lowlands of North America from southern Canada to the Gulf of Mexico, and east from the longitude of the Flint Hills to Indiana. Hall said less tallgrass prairie remained than shortgrass or midgrass prairie.
A bill Rep. Wiley Winn, R-Kan, submitted to congress in July 871 used the preservation and extension of taxation.
The animal population on tallgrass prairie is different from the population on other kinds of prairie. Eighty species of mammals, more than 300 species of birds and more than a thousand other kinds of animal organisms live among several hundred kinds of plants.
The Prairie National Park Natural History Association's pamphlet, which answers frequently asked questions, contends that preservation and enjoyment can go together. The association states that some camping and educational programs would be available to visitors who live in the park and would probably be provided outside the park. Roads would be limited.
region. His bill stated that the park should be established "... in recognition of the influence of the grasslands upon the progress and economic development of our country..."
No bill proposing the park has been submitted to Congress this session. However, Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan, will probably submit his bill, which will submit last session, according to Stouw.
Legislation for a Tallgrass Prairie National Park has always been backed by the Secretary of State.
When Walter Hickel, a native Kansan from Claflin, was Secretary of the Interior, he urged Kansans to get organized as quickly as possible. He said the Interior Department would not force a park if Kansans did not want it.
The park is opposed by cattlemen who question changing a productive area into a National Park. They contend that the best areas for the park are ideal and enduring grazing lands. Cattlemen already see their land as a park, and a productive one at that.
Park proponents who know the strength of the cattlemen's lobby argue that the amount of land wanted for the park is less than one third of one per cent of the state's total grazing land.
Secondly, park planners say that the industrial industry would benefit more from the park than any other business because of its location. The Mid-America State University Association.
In 1961 the Center for Research in Business at KU published a study by Glemm Miller Jr. about the economic possibilities of a then proposed site for the park.
The study said, "The anticipated increase in land value, together with additional residential and commercial construction that can reasonably be expected to take place, can be expected to more than offset an ultimate loss of taxable property."
The study said that a Prairie National Park would be one of the cheapest National Parks to finance and stated an economist's view that the park's size could allow low value on the park's amusement capacity.
An inmeasurable service, according to the study, would be to show Kansas in the historical setting of the overland trails, which had a major influence in the formation of the American character.
In the 1800's grass grew high enough to hide a horse and rider, Hall said. Elk and buffalo were the primary consumers of the tallgrass prairie, be said.
Today "for every two acres taken, one year's meat supply for one person will be lost" is the challenge of some cattlemen. Theirs is an important viewpoint in an evaluation of the park.
Finding an adequate area of tallgrass prairie to preserve has been studied since 1925. Then there were many suitable areas; today there are only two. The decision between park and pasture is imminent. The tallgrass prairie is almost gone.
Griff and the Unicorn
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
NEWS STAFF News Adviser . . Susanne Shaw
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail subscriptions to: KUUNiversity, 260 W. 57th St., Kansas City, MO 64041. Accommodations, services, and employment offered to all students without regard to color, breed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended to represent the views of any individual.
Editor Joyce Neerman
Editorial Editor Sarah Grifft
Campus Editor Bob Simpson
Editorial Editor Bob Simpson
Joyce Dunbar, Akira Knopp, Hai Hitter, Steve Hale
Copy Chiefs Linda Chaput, Gimie Lee, David Schlit
Assistant Campus Editors Robin Groom, Silly Morgan
Feature Editors Elena Lennon
Interpretation Managers Mary Lind
Sports Editors Eminen Lynn, Cathy Sherman, Gimie McKean
Wire Editors Jim Kendall, Cathy Sherman, Gimie McKean
Makeup Editors Harry Wilson, Akira Knopp, Hai Hitter
Photographers Ed Lalu, Dan Laung, Chris Cunisba
Camera Editors Sara Weiner
Editorial Writers John Christopher Caldwell, Robert Dunear,
Babette Johnny Walker
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
Business Manager Check Goodwill Carol Dirks
Assistant Business Manager Check Goodwill Steve Conner
Assistant Manager Check Goodwill
Assistant Advertising Manager Check Goodwill
National Advertising Manager Kathy Sanders
Promotional Manager Mike Hidreth
Promotional Manager Claire Dartnell
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 15, 1973
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County Plans for Landfill
By DAVID HEALY Korean Staff Writer
Douglas County should have a sanitary landfill for solid waste by February of 1975, according to the Douglas County Solid Waste Disposal Plan.
excepteter, $10 dations, without essarily
The plan calls for the county to develop a solid waste sanitary landfill within two years after the county had passed Thursday and last Friday. The county commission appointed Dean Sanderson as solid waste administrator. Sanderson is already an engineer and county official of public access.
ebermann Carlsbad Rive Irel Zanatella Morgan Dlander Morgan Lind Winters Micke Annellina landsted Annellina Ouneen purlock
He said that the plan, which was approved on April 26, calls both bodies to the appointment of an advisory committee of five to eight county residents who would help with its implemen-
David Blackman, Lawrence graduate student and assistant to the county engineer who has worked with the solid waste project since its conception, said Tuesday that the plan was developed by a 20-member county committee established by state law in 1970.
The plan requires that solid waste collection be mandatory in all Douglas county cities and available to all rural residents on a subscription basis.
Blackman said that the first steps in implementing the plan would be an examination of solid waste collection as it was currently being done in the county, a task he had already accomplished on how to finance the engineering study required to select a landfill site.
Between now and 1975, the county hopes to use the Lawrence landfill, Blackman said, but has not yet approached the city about doing so.
Blackman said that the county hoped that the landfill would pay for itself. Presently Lawrence charges residences **$2.50** and apartments **$2 for collection and disposal to finance** landfill private rural charges who uses the landfill his customers **$3. Blackman said**.
He explained that solid waste was any solid thing that no longer had value to its original purpose.
Arraignment Ordered For Haskell Student
In a preliminary hearing Wednesday in Douglas Conty Court, James Joaquin Brown of Shur, Nev, was bound over for the second day of court on a charge of second-degree murder.
Brown, a 22-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student, is charged in connection with the Jan. 25 stabbing death of Brent Carrie Garnier, 19, of Santa Fe Pueblo, N.M.
I Dirks
Goodsell
Cosner
e Wood
sunders
Hildreth
Dysart
In Thurday's hearing, the bond was reduced from $15,000 to $8,000. His investment would be $6,000.
disposal--incineration, composting, recyclc and sanitary landfill.
Campus Briefs
Of the first three methods, Blackman said, "The volume reduction methods." Blackman added that some of the methods
"A sanitary landfill is the engineered harm of solid waste so that no hazards are released."
He said that all that was required was a bulldozer and some land.
"You dig a trench and each day solid waste is dumped in one end," Blackman said. "A bulldozer runs up and on it to compact it, at the end of the day, covers the solid waste with a six- to eight-inch cover of dirt."
Advertising Meeting
Geoffrey Vaughan, Melbourne, Australia, will speak tonight on "Science (all kinds) in Australia" at a meeting of the KU chapter of the Society of Sigma Chi. A business meeting for election of new members will follow Vaughan's speech.
Science in Australia
Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, will meet at 7:30 tonight in Room 35 of the Kansas Union. Anyone interested in advertising is welcome.
To help protect the environment, large animals, explosive wastes and anything toxic would not be allowed in the landfill, he said. It would be supervised so that fires would not start.
He said that once a trench was filled, it was covered with about two feet of earth and was usually suitable for agricultural use. However, he said that most communities use former landfills for parks or golf courses.
Blackman said Dougals County was not much suitable land available, there was not much suitable land available.
Indian Affairs Meeting
Thomas McClain, a geologist with the State Geological Survey, said Wednesday that people who deal with landfills were not in agreement about where to place them.
The KU Committee on Indian Affairs will meet at 7 tonight in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union. Indian students who need a tutor in any subject are urged to attend.
He said that any waste that would go into solution with rain water would go into the groundwater and, therefore, the landfill and the sewage off of water would not pollute water supplies.
Sailing Club to Meet The KU Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Richard J. Baldauf, director of education at the Kansas City Museum of History and Science, will be guest lecturer at the monthly meeting of the Jayhawk Audubon Park Recreation center. His topic will be "The Need for an Ecological Conscience."
the present city landfill, he said, is in the
Speech on Ecology
The Women's Coalition will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Women's Center for a short business meeting and to discuss organization of a self defense group. State Rep. Michael Glover, D-44th, will speak on issues of interest to women at 8 p.m.
Glover to Speak
Nassau River valley and sits upon a base of sand and gravel. In invariably any water which passes through the landfill ends up in the river, although usually downstream, he
The University of Kansas was among 76 colleges and universities that received money from the Maytag Company Founded in Maytag Maytag employees and retirements last year.
McClaim said that there was also the potential for flood in flooded yards, the trash wash and a lindell valley
During the 14 years the plan has been conducted, employees and retirees have contributed a total of $89,373 to colleges and universities throughout the United States.
Counting matching grants for the same period, the total amount of aid given to higher education under this foundation program now comes to $196,746.
The Student Council for Exceptional Children will have a membership meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Bess Stone Center at 745 Ohio St.
Because there is no commonly agreed place to put a landfill, he said that every prospective site must be studied for its own problems to the groundwater supply.
KU Recieves Contributions From Maytag
Exceptional Children
Deadline Set For Entries In Exposition
The deadline for entries in the 33rd annual Engineering Expo at the University of Kansas is March 1, according to Kirk Vann. He will be senior and publicity chairman of the expo.
the theme of this year's exhibition, to be
the April 20-22, is *Wearing!* Earth's
Resilience.
The purpose of exhibits this year is to make the public aware of the serious problems that could arise if the Earth's central resources are not conserved, Vann said.
Anyone in the School of Engineering is eligible to enter an exhibit and should contact Vann, 842-1977, or Rick Hirsekorn, 842-1075.
Vouchers for material expenses may be picked up from Gene Taylor, 842-5600.
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ANNOUNCEMENT OF CANDIDACY
19W. 9TH ST. LAWRENCE
BODY BIZARRE
For President of the Student Body
I am today announcing my candidacy for president of the student body.
During its four year history the Student Senate has done much for the betterment of student life:
I run because I believe student government plays an important role in the life of our institution. Students are committed to the concept of a viable, functioning government that deserves the support of those it represents and the respect of those with which it works. The office of student body president is the position from which one can best coordinate this effort.
o student life:
— It was responsible for the new student health center
BUSINESS GRADS
Share your talents thru Peace Corp or VISTA. Recruiters at Business Placement Office, Feb. (Monday). Sign up for interview.
- it has taken control of the student activity fee to provide student control and administration of student funds (a number now close to one half million dollars)
it adopted the Student Code of Rights, Responsibilities, and Condu-
it currently finances Feedback for teacher-course evaluation
In my two years on the student senate and a previous year on the Board of Class Progress, I have taught two courses in progress. My service has taught me both the values and limitations of particular committee functions, legislative enactments, and financial allocations. I have witnessed and experienced the frustrations of a bureaucracy that so our energy and resources are lost.
The time has come to not only recognize these errors but to redirect ourselves into this process—run—to set those policies and procedures that will encourage, rather than restrict, property owners.
However, I also run because I am convinced that student government all too often be misinformed by its bureaucratic function that it discourages participation by all, but I still, although
- it currently finances Feedback for teacher-course evaluation;
- it finances the Consumer Protection Association to name a few.
MERT BUCKLEY Wichita, Junior
I believe my experience in student government and university government has
left me with the impression that I am not qualified to work what responsibilities I have in continuing and expanding the work of the student
government.
For Vice-President of the Student Body
In time, I will visit many of you and speak to the speciacies of these issues, for I feel there is more at stake in this election than simply titular positions.
In the past four years student government has been the brunt of much criticism. It has been labeled as inefficient and unrepresentative. Before I join the ranks of many and I level any criticism towards the Student Senate, it is my responsibility to work to improve it. In order to do that, I can gain this accountability most effectively as vice-president of the student body.
I am announcing today my candidacy for Student Body Vice-President as Mert Buckley's running mate.
Responsibility for the allocation of the student activity fee was given to the student and will be managed by the organization, but it is important and questionable uses of our funds. The roof of this problem does not belong to person or any small group of individuals, but rather it is the by-product of our community. We must find a way to make sure that the organization. The student senate has begun to take steps to curb some of this misuse by enacting such things as the Capital Disposition Bill. Merl and I believe that more than just legislation need to correct these problems. For this reason I have written a letter to you.
NANCY ARCHER
Anamosa, Iowa, Senior
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sat. Sat-Sun-Mon. 1:50, 4:1
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"THE WORST FILM I CAN RECALL SITTING THROUGH...EVER. A young victim is seduced into smoking the devil weed...No one seems to inhale, but it must be powerful stuff. Before the film is over, they all become screaming manias lumbering around like Frankenstein monsters, murdering people, leaping out of twelfth floor windows and tearing at their throats shouting 'Give me a reef!'..." An incredible series of gross and ludicrous distortions that thirty six years later becomes hilarious when seen from the other side of the generation gap, a gap this film did so much to create."
Kevin Saunders, ABC, T.V.
WITH 3 STOOGES COMEDY & ROADRUNNER FESTIVAL
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Mat. Sat-Sun-Mon. 4:15 only
Eve. 7:40 & 9:30
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
WHERE IS THE REAL TALENT?
1. Finnigan & Wood 2. David Bromberg 3. R.E.O. Speedwagon 4. Wishbone Ash 5. Dan Hicks and his Hot Licks 6. Muddy Waters 7. Ebony Rhythm Funk Campaign 8. Ozark Mountain Daredevils 9. Finesse Area Bands (Nafion, Stonewall, Campions, Backwood Memory, Five Star Cadillac Band, Flight, Hummingbird, Teddy & Dotty Bale, Ezrah Pile, Ron Crick & His Group)
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SO - THIS FRI. & SAT. DON'T MISS OUT ON
BACKWOOD MEMORY
Those of you who have seen some of these shows know where it's been HAPPENING... those who haven't . just where HAVE you been hiding?
6
Thursday, February 15, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Hurdler Sets High Season Goals
By BILL CAMPBELL
Kansan Sports Writer
Gregg Vandaveer, the University of Kansas' high hurdler from Shawnee, Oklahaa has set two goals for this year. first place in the Big 12 tournament and second performance in the Big-8 outdoor finals.
Although he is scholastically classified a sophomore this is the third year Vandaveur has competed with the Jayhawk track team. In his first two years, Vandaveur twice captured third place in the 120-yard high hurdles at the Bier-Birgert Park and in the finals of 13.9 and 14.0. Last year he took sixth in the 60-yard high hurdles at the Bier-8 Indoor.
In three indoor meets this year, Van deaver has grabbed a first, second and a third.
Vandaverne began earning distinction as manager of the state championship in the high hurdles with a time of 14.1. He also placed second in state competition that year in the 18-year low hurdles. Vandaverne was twice a member of the Oklahoma All-State track team.
However, when college recruitment time came, the speedy hurdler, who was also an all conference defensive back, received more football offers than track offers. The Oklahoma State football team of Oklahoma State schools which wanted Vandavever's services.
However, Vandavaer said, "I really wasn't that interested in playing college football. I like track as a sport more than basketball and you get to meet more people."
Vandaveer chose KU because, he said, "I felt they had the best rack program and team. Kansas is probably one of the best track schools in the nation."
Vandaveer, who has already qualified for the NCAA indoor finals this year, said that he felt two things had helped his running this season.
"I got tired of running third," he said, "so this year I'm working harder and I'm gaining confidence because I'm doing a lot better.
The other factor, Vandaveer said, was the addition of Thad Tail as hurdles coach. Vandaveer said that he felt Tally had helped him on his technique and especially on his starts. Vandaveer also said that Tally's work-outs had increased his speed.
Vandaveer he thought his goals for this year were obtainable, with his toughest competition coming from teammate Delario Robinson. Los Angeles junior, he assert that the presence of Robinson in daily practice had helped him in his running.
"If you see your toughest competition working out alongside you, work harder." Javier said.
Ali Triumphs In Vegas Fight
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Muhammad All slashed a cut over the left eye of England's Joe Bugner in the first round yet went the full 12-round distance enroute to a unanimous decision at the Las Vegas Convention Center Wednesday night.
An 8- favorite, the former heavyweight champion from Cherry Hills, N.J., found all he could handle in the 22-year old European champion, nine years his junior.
Bugner had never been cut in his 48 professional matches, but Ali opened a cut over his left eye in the opening round and worked on it the rest of the way.
Although the ex-champion landed sharper punches, he failed to hurt his opponent.
particles, he needed to halt his opponent.
There were no knockdowns but each fighter drove the other back on several occasions.
Celtics Edge Kings
OMAHA (AP) -The Boston Celtics came after trailing by 15 points late in the first half and defeated the Kansas City-Omaha Kings 104-101, in a National Basketball Association game before a capacity crowd of 9,738 Wednesday night.
Time-wise, Vandavera said he hoped to reach 7.0 or 7.1 mark in the indoor high hurdles and a 13.5 outdoors. More important than the time is consistency, Vandavera
"The main thing at a national finals meet is consistency. You have to run three good matches."
Vandavear said that an extremely fast but inconsistent runner would often lose out to a slightly slower but consistent man because of the necessary preliminary heats at a large meet. Vandavear said he felt that consistency had been one of his strengths.
"I'd just like to be consistently a little faster," he said.
Vandaverde said that a large crowd helped him to get mentally prepared for a race. He said he felt that being mentally prepared was very important for a race.
Vandaverse said, "If you don't think you can do it, you won't.
The Jahawk track man have one more meet in which to prepare for the Big-8 indoor finals. That meet is a dual with the University of Iowa University to be held at KU on Feb. 24.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
The KLWN 1973 1,000.00$$ Treasure Hunt is here — Good Luck!
FM Stereo 106
KLWN
SENATE TREASURERS OFFICE
Today's the day! (also Fri. and Sat.)
ATTENTION!!
ALL SALES FINAL-ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED.
Our Fabulous— TRANSFER SALE
Organizations Funded by Student Senate Activities Fund
The President, Vice President and Treasurer of all organizations funded by the Student Senate Activities Fund MUST sign a Capital Disposition Contract in the Senate Treasurer's office (104 B Kansas Union) on February 13, 14, or 15, from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Organizations which fail to meet the 5:00 p.m., February 15 deadline will have their funds FROZEN.
the VILLAGE SET
OPEN THURS.
'TILL 8:30 p.m.
We've gathered all the reduced, beautiful fashions from our other stores—marked them down again, and brought these items to our Lawrence shop.
COME SHARE IN THE SAVINGS!
922 Massachusetts
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Have you tried McDonald's big, thick, hot, juicy Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with Cheese
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We start with a quarter-pound of 100% pure beef . . . cook it up just right . . . serve it with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions on a toasted sesame seed bun. The Pounder-Poucher cheese comes from all of the above plus two slices of mellow, golden cheese.
After we have tried them, we know you will agree. They're a great McDonald's menu addition.
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Brushed Denim Bells reg. $9.50 only $6.99 Famous Brand!
Brushed Bell Bush Jeans reg. $10.50 only $7.99 Famous Brand!
Sweat Pants reg. $2.49 only $1.00
Fruit-of-the-Loom Pocket t-shirts $1.00
Straight leg Corduroys $3.00 Famous Brand!
Blue Denim Slim Jeans $1.00 Famous Brand!
1 group Short Boots AND Black Oxford reg. $19.95 $5.00 pr.
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Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 15, 1973
7
HEY CULLIGAN MAN!
CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONING WARNING
WATER CONDITIONING
SALTS AND SERVICE
Visual Clutter Infringes on City
By DANGEORGE
Korean Staff Writer
There's a major pollution problem in Lawrence, according to several concerned citizens, but it has nothing to do with the fouling of the air by local industrial plants. Or with the scarcity of clean water in the Kaw River.
It's called visual pollution—and is caused by crops of billboards that spring up on the way into town and ugly images of sex, drugs or violence are a part of every American city.
According to local environmental leaders, George Coggins and Dick Ruppert, it is especially prominent in Lawrence, where they say poor planning and individual interests have taken over the business of several of the main thoroughfares.
The major objects of their are 23rd, Iowa and Sixth streets, all of which are dotted with various grocery stations and franchise restaurants.
"Our overall attitude," said Cogins, professor of law and president of the local Sierra Club, "is one of dmays at the hinky-character of 23rd Street, which comes from a lack of planning on the part of the city commission."
"TWENTY-THIRD STREET is notorious for visual blight," said Ruppert, professor of economics and president of the Douglas County Environment Improvement Council, who said Stretch is not really an aesthetic delight.
“It’s a major problem in Lawrence, and perhaps the major kind of pollution here if it’s combined with congestion and traffic hazards.”
But Coggins said that the problem was not confined to only those areas.
"It also takes into effect dilapidated buildings, the atrocious approach to building without old mull there and, of course, the developments on 23rd, Iowa and Sixth," he said. "All of these things go together in making it a whole lot worse than before."
Ruppert said failure of city planners to follow through on past proposals was a principal cause of such visual pollution.
"The comprehensive plan of ten years ago," he said, "shows the major throughfares to be divided, like the planting of a field or the plants planted along the middle of them.
"But if you look at 15th Street now, you don't have trees planted down the middle. You've got former trees with utility wires on them. I wonder how much simpler it would have been to run those wires underground?"
ANOTHER PERSON concerned about the haphazard appearance of these areas, but from an aesthetic viewpoint, was Dolo Brooking, museum assistant at Spooner Art Museum. Brooking said the clutter and confusion created feelings of insensitivity and craziness that tended to dull the spirit.
"It says we have been insensitive to how our environment affects us visually," she said. "This is a conflict in our society between the public good and the private. If needs to be discussed. An offensive sign infringes on everyone's welfare."
Although housing and outlying areas were mentioned, there was little doubt that the biggest source of concern for the campaign was Ruppert was the commercial areas.
"When you talk about pollution the first thing that's mentioned is 23rd Street," Brookins said. "It's almost a cliché, a joke in the city of Lawrence."
The most noticeable aspect of 23rd Street and its related thoroughfares is the preponderance of signs and commercial businesses.
ACCORDING TO Ken Jorgensen,
Lawrence building official, each
business is limited to two wall signs and
one ground sign. The wall signs may not
be attached to the wall or to the
wall to which they are attached and
must be at least eight feet off the
ground but not extending over the
building's roof. The ground sign may be
not exceeding 9 square feet, unless
approved by the city commission.
Jorgensen said it was rare, however, for the commission to refuse a request because of the lack of experience although businesses were limited to three signs, there was no limiting of additional businesses that might want to locate on 23rd or other commercial streets.
Most of the billboards and business signs in Lawrence are supplied by two firms, Martin Outdoor Signs, Topeka, and Barnard Signs, Lawrence. Spokesmen for both companies said that although there was a trend to eliminate signs for environmental reasons, they have received no specific
complaints from individuals or civic groups.
"We try to comply to the rules and regulations," Larry Hirshey, office manager for Barnard Signs, said. "We just go along with the building inspector's instructions. It's all regulated."
"The idea that businessmen are entitled to make a profit has led the city commission into unnecessary uplification," Coggins said. "But anymore I think it realizes it's in the process of creating a monster."
VIEWS ABOUT the possibility of improving the visual pollution situation in Lawrence, range from Cognays' outright pessimism to Rupert's outright pessimism.
"A change for the better is inevitable.
If you let your slide and you build up to a crisis, then something drastic is needed. Sooner or later, it'll happen here."
Ruppert, who said the Mr. Steak restaurant, 920 W. 22d St., and the University State Bank, 955 Iowa St., were examples of care in planning, said he was discouraged because of the lack of knowledge when the city showed to its problem.
"I was hopeful a year ago," he said, but I've become more pessimistic, noting the tendency to put more signs in Iowa between 23rd and 27th streets.
"It's bad because we have an advantage with this type of pollution in that we can handle it or the local level if we can't," said Hogan, a more stringent enforcement of them."
Kansan Photos
NORTHWESTERN HOSPITALITY GROUP
DISCOUNT
UNION 2195
8
Thursday, February 15, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Parking Problem Remains
An attempt has been made by the staff of the Kansas School of Religion to meet with Day Care Center to try to resolve a parking dispute. Phyllis Floyd, secretary of the Kansas School of Religion, said Wednesday. But so far, she said, the religion school has not received a response from Hilltop.
Applications for summer jobs in Europe are now being accepted by the Summer Jobs in Europe program of Vacation Work Programs to support Mynea Leith, program consultant.
Floyd said that she recently left a message at the day care center requesting a time to meet with the center's staff about her problems. No one returned her call, she said.
the drive and limited parking area
to the school had caused many
mproblems.
The parking problem has been intermittent since last May, when the religion school put a chain across a drive that was the only access to the front of the day care center, Judy Bencivengo, director of Hilton, said last week.
The chain is not always up, however. But when the chain is across the drive that belongs to the School of Religion, parents of over 50 children are forced to walk with the children to the day care center, Bencivengo said.
It is hard for one parent to take two or more small children to the center on icy days, she said.
Bencvengo said Wednesday that she thought it was pointless to meet with the dean of the School of Religion unless a student from the school of Religion and Hillop was present.
The small parking lot is limited to 11 parking spaces for a staff of 18, Taylor said.
European Job Applications Now Available
Lynn Taylor, dear of the School of Religion, last week the parents' use of
Applicants are offered three job choices. The program features a four-day orientation in London. Documentation and work permits are provided for $129.
The program, based in Oxford, England,
offers young people salaried or volunteer
jobs in hotels, offices, archaeological digs,
gardens, family homes and other
categories.
At times it is impossible for the staff of the School of Religion to use the lot at all, and there have been automobile collisions because of congestion, he said.
The presence of the chain had not only caused problems in delivering children to Hilltop. Bencivenga said, but trash from the chain was picked up and food could not be delivered.
Taylor said the presence of unattended children in the parking lot was another problem.
A brochure providing additional details of available jobs can be obtained by sending a stamped, business-sized return envelope to 453-2768 Ladd Law Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio 45220.
Campus Bulletin
School of Religion: 22 noon, Alcove A, cafeteria, Kansas
sallard Center Benefit, 12 p.m. p.m., Kansas and Curry rows
Human Helations Training: 12:30 p.m., Alcove C,
Human Relation Training: 12:30 p.m. Acevedo Cafeteria.
12:30 p.m. Acevedo D. Cafeteria.
Psychology: 12:30 p.m., Alcove D, cafeteria,
Worlds of Fun Audition: 1. p.m. Big 8 Room.
P.O. Box 2107, Northampton, MA 01063
Works for Fair Audit, p.i.m. to Hotel
Worlds of Fair Audit, 4 p.i.m. to Hotel
Bloomingdale Inn, 9 p.i.m. to International
Speech Communication, 1 p.i.m. to International
Speech Communication, 1 p.i.m. to International
Speech Communication 3 p.m. in the
Normal Room
Bill Ripley Hall 4 p.m. in the
Balcony
2 p.m., 5 p.m., 8 p.m., Woolf Auditorium.
ICE Meeting 4 p.m., Governors Hall
Freshman Reception for Dr. Roy: 4:30 p.m.
council meeting
First Nightier, 8 p.m., Wm. Wilson,
132 E. Third Street, above D. cafeteria,
Irish Student, 6:30 p.m., Sunflower Cafeteria.
Spanish Student, 5:30 p.m., Sunflower Cafeteria.
The Way : 7 p.m. Camellia Room
Campus Framed: 7 p.m. Pursons A.B.C and Oread
aum society: 7:30 p.m. Woodford Auditorium.
LDR institutes: 9:15 p.m. Herbert Room.
College of Education: 6:30 p.m. International Room.
C Ala Paha Polk Concert 7:30 p.m. High Room.
Chicago Public Library: 7:30 p.m. Curry Room.
Conference on Italian Affairs: 7:30 p.m. Curry Room.
Alpha Delta Epsilon: 7:30 p.m. Woodford Cafeteria.
S U.A. Board: 7:30 p.m. Governors Room.
U.S. Board: 7:30 p.m. Governors Room.
SENIOR SKI TRIP TO ASPEN
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Not limited to Seniors Only
Unfortunately no transportation is provided.
Clip and mail coupon-Absolute DEADLINE March 5
Yes, I am interested. Here's my check for $55 (Check or money order only).
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7
TACO GRANDE
With This Coupon
Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
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Except on Wednesdays.
(National Taco Day)
Offer expires Feb. 28
1720 West 23rd Street
1973-Year of the Taco
Mail to: Tobin Inc.
1025 Garner St. 11A
Colorado Springs, Colorado 80905
5 day period beginning Mar...to Mar...
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William Shakespeare
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IN DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
Once - a - Year Buys for YOU!
CHOPPIN' EVENT
Be Sure To Read The JOURNAL-WORLD
Tomorrow—Fri., Feb. 16. For All of the Outstanding
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 15, 1973
9
Five New Applications Received for Coed Hall
Only five new applications for residence in a coed scholarship hall were received in the Offices of the Dean of men and the dean of women by the 8 p.m. Wednesday
The deadline was set by Lorna Grunz, assistant to the dean of women, and Frank Bencivengo, assistant to the dean of men, at a luncheon in Schlumberger Hills at a meeting last Friday.
The meeting was necessitated because of a shortage of applicants to fill a proposed co-eed scholarship hall for next fall in the present men's Stenhamship Hallship.
At a meeting at the University housing committee last week, the committee ruled that the students, as consulted by Grunz and contributions to the coed ball to try to fill the ball.
The university housing committee compriSES William Bailford, vice chancellor of the University of Pennsylvania and Emily Taylor, Dean of women; J. J. Wilson, director of University housing, and Alex Thomas, president of the Association of University Residents (AUHR) and senior. SEMINAR.
Bencivengo said applications from three women and two men were received Wednesday, but that "it would have been preferable to have received eight women's
Forty-three persons, 19 women and 24 men, in five different balls, which has a capacity of 80 gallons.
"The university housing committee has said the coed hall can operate with 22 women and 30 men," Bencivengo said. "We need at least three more women to fill the
There are still six spaces for men to be filled in the coed hall, but Bencivengo said there were 11 men on an alternate list, plus the two new applications submitted Wed.
The five new applicants for residence in the coed hall will be screened by students from the eight scholarship halls and Grunz and Bencivengo, with recommendations by the proctor or housemanager of the applicant's hall.
To be eligible for residence in the coed hall, applicants had to have previously lived in a scholarship hall or be a present resident of a scholarship hall.
The screening process will be completed
K.C. Fun Park Plans Auditions In Union Today
Auditions for Kansas City's Worlds of Fun, a new $2.5 million, 140-acre family recreation center, will start at 1 p.m. today in the Big B Room of the Kansas Union.
The park is looking for performers to work in its clubs when the park opens this spring.
Worlds of Fun is a project of Lamar Hunt, owner of the Kansas City Chiefs. The park is internationally themed and divided into five areas: Scandinavia, Scandinavia, Africa and the Orient.
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS.
Red Dog Building
Sate every Monday Nite
7am
iy Monday. Signed contracts must be
benchmarked in Strong Hall by Feb 23,
benevolentiy said.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
842.7098 anytime.
Lift the Handle of Furniture
Let Us Sell It For You
Major attractions will be Cotton Blossom—the stern-wheel riverboat used in the movie "Show Boat," a giant swing, a flame ride, a three-masted man-of-war with a Hollywood history, a living floral display patterned on Copperberg's Tivoli Gardens, a type of roller coaster, a sky ride and a petting zoo with a show of trained porosises.
Worlds of Fun is located ten minutes northwest of downtown Kansas City, Mo., on Interstate 70.
Casa de Taco Delicious Nutritious Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
TWO for ONE SALE
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS CREWEL
TUBE GREEL
CUPBOARD
15 East 8th, 841-2656
10:5 Monday-Saturday
Buy one large pizza at regular price and get identical small pizza
FREE
ITALIAN
PIZZERIA
5-9 p.m. Thurs. 15 Feb. & Friday 16 Feb.
Not good on home deliveries
809 W. 23rd Street 843-1886
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILM?
OLYMPIA, PARTS 1 & 2
Classical Films
directed by Leni Riefenstahl
Woodruff 7:30 & 9:15
Wed. Feb.21 75c
TEOREMA
TEOREMA directed by Pasolini Starring Terence Stamp
Woodruff 3:30,7:30,9:30
Thurs. Feb. 15 75c
REEFER MADNESS —plus—
Tod Browning's MYSTERY of
LEAPING LEAF starring Douglas
Fairbanks on Pop. Films.
May 11-12 Only 60c
Prairie de Paris.
Spotlight on Modern Dance
DANCING PROPHET
ACROBATS OF GOD
SERAPH DIALOGUE
Special Films
Paramount Pictures Presents
HAROLD and MAUDE
Part five of Captain Marvel
Woodruff 7:30
Mon. feb. 19 75c
Woodruff 7 & 9:30
Feb. 16 & 17 60c
Popular Films
THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE
Episode four of Phantom Empire
Science Fiction
Science Fiction
Ballroom 7:30
Tues. Feb. 20 75c
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
FESTIVAL
+
A
ROGER VANN SPECIAL
SPEAKER
JESUS PEOPLE
SINGERS
JESUS PEOPLE SINGERS, AND SPEAKERS WILL BE FEATURED GIVING TESTIMONY OF GOD'S REALITY AND LOVE THROUGH HIS SON.
JESUS
7:30 P.M.
FREE!
COME:
Bic 8 Room
STUDENT UNION FEB.15
KIEF'S
BILLIE BROTHERS
The Malls Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
SLADE—Slayed?
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
polydor
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Reg. $5.98
$299
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students in the institution. PLEASE RING ALL CLASSIFIED CALLS TO 1117 FLINT HALL
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.1
NORTH SIDE SIDEN Shop–3 blks. No. of Kawaui Bridge Bridge gas, gasoline, gas and cooking cookware, bicycles includes 10 speedometers, oil pot, oil pot pan, gasoline gas pump, bushel baskets and wooden crates, fireplace cord price, Baked alafia, brome and wheat straw, Coffee pods, Dairy products, Door 9 to 17 days 842-383-Hirsch Allenbergh, 0 to 9 days 17 days 842-383-Hirsch Allenbergh.
FOR SALE
ANTIQUE CLOTHES—1823 Main, Wainton, MA. 945-3730 or 614-4444. Victorian madrone of blue cotton, size 18-24. Victoria may require a wash. $150.00.
CARS BUOY AND SOLD. GI. For the best deal
TOWS BOGUS. GI. Joe's Used Cars. 8-450
842-8088. 842-8088.
AUDIO STEREO WARHORSE The Hotel
Rockefeller at Lake Michigan. K8041, Phone 69041, Phone 282-9577 - 16
ARC St. Bernard Hospital Champion blood lines
Bernard St. Bernard, 841-253-6000
Mont Brouse St. Bernard, 841-253-6000
2-19
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. I see them.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysts of Western Civilization."
2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't
New Anatomy of Western Civilization
Available now at campus Mad大厦, Town Crier,
5-8.
Powerful, 20 watt Mammacav AM-FM Deluxe
powered by Dell. $199.99 for a 1722 model
1928 model. $199.95 for a 1328 model
$199.99 for a 1328 model
AKC St. B. Bernard puppy, 5 mom, Female, very
righ call. 842-8499 an early 2-19
PICKONON In BACK-Recycled and antique
purses, these are in the collection of
Bodion Hodson Reclined Clothes II Vermeer
and Gustave Drouillet.
Entire stock of Michelin Radley Belt Belled
tini now 29%, off at17 at Rocky Stoneback
10%
1970 btege WV, good condition, belted radial tedel
tiem, AM/ FM best. Best offer. 822-438-3250
2-15
Excellent used Magazin Console Midlreastern
Midlands £1950, excellent used Magazin Console
only $299 up Hay Bionatee, 929 Mason
2-15
Minolta single lens reflex (no mirror) w/normal and wide angle 35/2.8 lenses $155.00; Manjama-Secker 560TEL (built-in mirror) W/normal and wide angle 32/2.8 lenses $160.00. Call back at 5066 to see.
Three Days
25 words or fewer. $2.00
each additional word. $0.2
Deadline: 5:10 a.m., 3 days before publication
1967 Chevy Impala convertible; air conditioning,
full power, good tires, low mileage. Call 843-216-
6260.
MUST STOCK: Mini-bike, new ladderamber;
MUST STOCK: Mini-bike, new ladderamber;
watch that retails for $950+ make offers.
Can be combined with any other offer.
Mobile hockey in lot in bourbon Springs, 20 miles north of Bremerton. Holds a 60-horse bed; Brackets 14 x 48 inches; 2 bathrooms; A/C fully carcassed room; 300-square-foot kitchen with granite counters.
69 Javelin SST. Replaced metallic green full
body with white. Replaced clear exterior
with excellent condition. Aparment $150
USD.
For Sale: Used Armstrong Flute in good cond-
tion. #60 Calgary Sensation Lounge evenings; 2/15
1969 Austin America. Forced to well. Good shape.
naggis, 1316. Kentucky. No. 4. 814-2543.
Wright, 1306. Kentucky. No. 4. 814-2543.
GTO 270 D-BT JH, yellow with black vinyl back.
GTO 310 D-BT JH, yellow with black vinyl
cellent condition. GTO 3498 - 3908 after 5 p.m.
- 12 p.m.
BOKONOM, ORIGINAL. ANTICQUE CLOETERS
of Montreal. $100.00.
and obsolete Robinson Retired Clothes, $100.00.
and obsolete Robinson Retired Clothes, $100.00.
FOR SALE - 1863 Ford Fairland Station Wagon
Ford Trucks - 1500-2499, 1515-2499,
4414-2499 between 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
- 2-15
Record Collection for sale. Over 300 albums,
mostly rock Call Jim, 814-287-288, 5-29
1-29
PIONEER model SX-626 stereo receiver. Worth
buying. Phone, 854-317-1188, Dan. age: 2-16.
Phone, 854-317-1188, Dan.
R.M.C. Cor. 1953 Alfa-Romeo conv. 3 speed. *speed*
brackets. brakes $1360 - 1380. Bassett gasket.
brakes $1360 - 1380. Bassett gasket.
1960 Rambler Station Wagon, $50 or best offer,
843-1223. 2-20
For sale. Upgrade Panasonic Tape Record with
Uptopener 600 IH, Antiplex 190 each, 842,
Utopener 600 IIH, Antiplex 190 each, 842.
Stereo component package AM/FM Stereo stereo 2 miles, BRH changer headphone, and 10 black speakers, BRH changer headphone
312–Z/ 28 Cauar, Fx. condition - 14,000 miles
(316)-345-434 (Impulse, AKPER) AFTER 6-20
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all in coverer, Eureka, Eutrelia etc. - w-21
B19 Mass A
5 weeks, $287 inclusive. London depart-
ing travel (ages 18-30). Also Europe,
Africa, India, 3-11 weeks. Write: Whole
Travel, Ltd., Box 147, K.Co, M.Cho.
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Tony's 66 Service
be Prepared:
tune-ups starting service
run-ups startup service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
+ +
& RAP
GAY COUNSELING
info. center 864-3506
♂ ♀
64 TR-4. New head, recent valve job, good job,
540. 343-7687. 2-20
4-Channel Stere component system, AM/FM
channel, PSB 85H 6000 changer 1, Speaker bar,
PSB 85H 6000 charger 2
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 841-5270.
2-19
Father 202 Receiver Ace. 28 watts RMS per
factor 2, NPK=watts 12, w=1’ 3’ speakers
Peripheral 202 Receiver Ace. 28 watts RMS per
factor 2, NPK=watts 12, w=1’ 3’ speakers
FOR RENT
DOWN PARKA with hood, two inch loft, blue,
lightly sized, used 380 - 843 - 593-7
2-21
Let us now say you a Knotes, Auto- reflex A, with
which you can move the knot. Also available,
in addition, knoties and Postaux cameras.
A complete list of equipment is included.
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP
To a 2 bedroom bed, directly across Music.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
parking lot. Enclosed swimming pool; security,
swimming pool; security service. Reasonable rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates or couples. In Sanitizer Apts., 1123 Ind. Apt. 9
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over block away from the new Nashville Park, in an extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms (kids' rooms) are enclosed by a steel-clad black
PEUGEOT
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
Cave be and its two adjacent apartments Rend
Bahadur are in the same building. Water
tills are well placed of various lengths are
included in the drawings.
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet street with a few nice shops. Priefer it is only 10 blocks to the main square, but you can easily reach the coffee shop.
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
Warnings can be reduced
2411 Louisiana 842-5522
Peugeot uo-s $117.50
COLLEGE, HILL, MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing 1 and 2 bedrooms, furniture and unfurnished apartments, heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities included. Call 843-8290 or see us at 917 W. 19th, apd. 5R
TRAILRIDE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings; bedroom; bedroom w/study; library; pool; golf course; banan land; Pool and gas-light, landed courtyard; Excellent management. 2500 West 6th Avenue, Chicago, IL 60613.
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
FREE DAILY SERVICE
For the later period in rental
for Lawrence Rental Exchange, 880-249-7631
www.freedailyservice.com
Must Sublease—one bedroom apt. one block from $120/month plus ele $18,520. Available on $260/month.
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall
patio, panelled walls, off street parking, 2 bleu
lights, stainless steel appliances.
4 bedroom house, 3 porches, full basement, part furnished $180/month; Day calls 844-1601 or 1612; phone number 571-349-4524.
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for
15 and 2 blocks from Union. Phone 843-567-8967
NOTICE
Serious Student New front room in quiet home. Utilities and linens furnished. Student-owned.
For Rent-private warm room-two blocks from campus-Kitchen shared-842-4475 2:20
best apartment value in Lawrence, Convenience,
management and cleanliness. Make reservations
now for 1 and 2 bedrooms from $100. Excelent
accommodation, including Cedarwood Bedroom
845-113-2144 2144 Oudahl. 2-15
ATTENTION RENTERS
RIDE ON BICYCLES
151 Michigan St. B-B-Q. B-B-Q Bar-B-Q in an
150 W. 4th Ave. S. Bar-B-Q in an
A slab at a店 here $2.40 Large rib plate
$3.99 Deli plate $5.99 Buffet
Befit and $6.50 Scound of beef $1.50 chicken
$1.60 Ice cream 11:00 am Closed sun
$1.80 Ice cream 12:00 am Closed sun
Houses, apartments, departments, farm, all areas.
2430 S. 10th St. 824-6100
311 E. 7th St. 824-6100
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
1401 Mass.
No charge, let your business, apartments, dislikes
your business know you are waiting for more info come Home Locator.
Lawrence Auction House. Bell your household
for competition call 812-709-3645.
For contingency calls call 812-709-3645.
Contact them in the Union, Fraser, or Strong Hall.
Recruiters on Campus:
Feb. 19-23.
843-8484
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items. *Discounts valid at Country Shop, 707 North 2nd and Open 9-7 days.*
Will pay $160 with my Naimith Contract for Spring 75 taken over by Male or female CALL 843-269-4700.
To need submit my apt immediately, clean
up your computer with AC and off a clean
parking. Call 864-6478
GY LIEBERIACTION IS GOOD FOR YOU: Monday-business, 7:00 p.m. on Friday- FRIDAY-Saturday, 8:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. for officers; COSMETIC COURSE HAP-HA-684-32-304 for sales-BF-112, BIL-112, 864-684-304, DC24, Lawrence
WANTED
Must Submit - Spotters, ally, furnished one
Emergency Room Appointment. Excellent Tests. 843-8250. Available In-Store.
Depressely need someone to come in my math.
I have a 3rd grade math problem I cannot reasonable amount if you could help me?
Saxophone lessons wanted for serious student.
Call Dave, 841-6084.
2-19
Wanted: female roommate to live in house with
6 girls; private large room; near campus;租
house for 5 people; 2 bd/1.5 bath; 300 sq.
ft.; 800 sq. ft.; 2nd floor.
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and antiques. 842-7088 tf
Wanted: Used Buffet clarinet in excellent condition. Call 843-5250 after 5 p.m.
2-21
Wanted: Desperately ride from KC (1-3/8)
Southwest on Tide, 60 min. Call KALYA on Caly...
(714) 529-3600
ROGMATE MATE To share a nice one
month including all utilities. Call 843-6529 or
monthly include all utilities. Call 843-6529 or
LOST
Lost-Main "black" daytimer, wallet, possibly
Daytimer "black" Threat on Feb 2 & Reward
8-242 or 8-223 or 8-225
Reward for return of small black and tan mowed lawns or mowed grass. Call 811-6431 or 842-
Mississippi-district door or call 811-6431 or 842-
SALRS HELP WANTed-Merrings, apply in
person, Mr. GUY 900, Mass 2-20
Least much loved kitten 1 week ago. Fluffy white.
Half grown kitten 2 weeks ago. Colorful or Charmilee
Kitten #84-0304 or #84-0324.
HELP WANTED
Employment Opportunities
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses.
Weekend and weekend hours. Phone 83-650-
9747.
Product Development Assistant. Rapidly growing department has opening for ambition person. Must have experience in mechanical and electrical engineering. Must be able to work with draftsmans. Should have understanding of machinery and working with hands. Communicate with experience. Only qualified need apply. Apply at www.masterminds.org.
If you know farming, talk to the Peace Corps, Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fear and Strong Hall.
PERSONAL
The Needle Point, Men's and women's needle
needles are available online beginning February 22. Come match with us at $35
for men's needles or $40 for women's needles.
Experienced in typing these, dissects, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter and plain type机. Accurate and prompt service. Fully qualified, applauded correcting. Plumber 843-9544. Mrs. Wright
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
I SURE BEATS
WHATEVER'S SECOND
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
DATSUN
TONY'S
500 E.23rd
IMPORTS-
DATSUN
842-0444
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 737.4 must pick up a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday *thru Friday*. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
.
10
Thursday, February 15, 1973
University Daily Kansan
2016D
21. $ \alpha = - 3 $ $ \beta = 2 $ $ \gamma = 1 $ $ \delta = - 1 $
1 60
School of Education Plans New Program
An alternative teacher education program is being developed for the 1973 fall semester, Evelyn Swartz, professor of English at the University of Georgia, committee for the program, said Tuesday.
"The program will offer a fair amount of individual studies and a lot of opportunities for work in the field," Lelon Capps, associate dean of education, said.
Plans for the program were begun by the School of Education school assembly between Jan. 8 and 12, said Dale Scannell, dean of education.
Scannell said the assembly voted to commit 35 per cent of undergraduate students to a finance program. No less than 25 per cent would be committed the following year. In subsequent years the funds would be proportionate to the number of students enrolled in the program.
The school assembly also temporarily relinquished governing power over the program by the Teacher Education Council, allowing a committee comprising representatives from all departments in the school to control during the first year, Scannel said.
The Teacher EducationCouncil provides a system through which governing can be carried out faster than through the school assembly, Scannell said.
"We've had some hope for federal support," he said, "but we knew we couldn't count on it, so we developed a program to work within our resources."
Swartz said that a majority of the education school faculty and personnel from the State Department of Education have offered training to workers working out specific points in the program.
The general feeling about the program is that it will be a teacher program based on the student's own efforts.
national trend of teaching programs, according to Swartz.
"The program will be self-paced." Swartz said. "The student works on his own level."
Although the mechanics for selection of students to participate in the program have not been decided, Swera said, information must be made available to students this spring.
Docking to Speak At AAUP Meeting
Gov. Robert Dockling will address the Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AUP) at 7:15 tonight in the Kansas Room at the
John Glinka, associate director of libraries and AAUP president, said Docking's talk would be after a dinner at 6 p.m. and would last about an hour. Afterwards the AAUP will conduct a short business meeting, he said. Docking will speak on "Government for the People: A Definition."
The scheduling of athletic events during final exam periods, changes in the 1973-74 calendar and a means for dealing with faculty grievances will be considered at a meeting of the University Council at 3:30 p.m. today in 108 Blake Hall.
Earl Nehring, associate professor of political chairman of the University Senate Calendar Committee, said his committee had studied the rule that no more than one athletic event may be scheduled during final exam week.
Nehring said his committee also would offer suggestions to amend the calendar for the coming academic year to adjust it to a common calendar applicable to the six state
The committee will recommend that the rule be changed, he said, to allow the Jayhawk Classic Basketball Tournament to take place during exam periods.
James Moeser, associate professor of organ and chairman of the council's Organization and Administration Committee, said his committee was considering a recommendation to be authorized as the "receiving and expelling agency" for faculty grievances.
Athletic Events To Be Studied During Finals
Feel
'Jumpin' Jack Flash' run through your blood on Superex Stereophones.
For an incredible physical experience, try this experiment. Place a pair of supersex Feather-Fones on your head, and turn on the music. You'll feel rushes rush through your veins, a bell over your right eyebrow, or a drum roll up and down your spine.
Chances are, you'll get up and dance. So the Superex Feather-Fone has a 15 foot cord. And is so lightweight, at just 8 ounces, that you may forget you're wearing, it! However, the performance is heavyweight. Superex guarantees it for one year.
This experiment will cost you $24.95.
At that price, and for that performance,
you'll see why the Superex Feather-Fone is
the best sound investment around.
Superex Stereophones Feel what you hear
ST-7
Super Mesh
Price $24.99
For Free Literature Wiki. Superware Electronics Corp. Dept. F, 151 Lukodl St., Yonkers, N.Y. 10705,
In Canada. Superware Electronics Inc. Montreal.
ENGINEERS
The Peace Corps can show you how to use your knowledge where it will do the most good. Recruiters at Engineering Placement Office (Marvin Hall). Feb. 21. (Wed.) Sign up for interview.
THE SANCTUARY
presents
AT
O
A
OAT WILLIE
W
WILLIE
Without a doubt, the hottest band in Lawrence. Keeping its promise to bring you the finest entertainment, The Sanctuary is bringing Oat Willie back to town Friday and Saturday night.
MAKE SURE YOU ARE A PART OF THIS MUSICAL HAPPENING
THE SANCTUARY
...A Very Private Club... Always Bringing
You to Town.
Directly Above the Stables.
Members and guests only
Memberships available
BELTS
SANDALS
HANDBAGS
WATCHBRands
LEATHER GARMENTS
LEATHER ACCESSORIES
ALSO:
MOCCASINS
FRYE BOOTS
HIKING BOOTS
PRIMARILY
LEATHER
craftsmen of fine leather goods:
812 Massachusetts
THE PLANETS
Steinberg, Boston Symphony Orchestra
Deutsche
Grammophon
BEETHOVEN
IX SYMPHONIE
SYMPHONIE NR 8
Behner Philharmoniker
HERBERT VON KARAJAN
BEETHOVEN
IX SYMPHONIE
SYMPHONIE NR.8
Berthene Philharmoniker
HERBERT VON KARAJAN
COLUMBIA CENTRAL UNIVERSITY
SCMABIN: POEM OF ECSTASY
TGHAIRO'SAY, ROMEO AND JULIET
Born in Tampa Bay, Florida; educated at Columbus, Alabama.
1850-1923
ENTIRE CATALOGUE $ 86
REGULAR
*6.98
PER DISC
169 170 K: STRAUSS; Axis钢琴 Zakharapian/BPO/s琴
171 172 K: STRAUSS; Piano Concerto No. 2 in B flat, Fiat/Eschbach
173 RACHMAN/NOFF'; Piano Cto. No. 2 in Pride, Svatsatlav Richter
174 RACHMAN/NOFF'; Piano Cto. No. 2 in Pride, Svatsatlav Richter
175 MOZART; Require! BPO/Karajan
176 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 1 & 2/BPO/karajan
177 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 3 in B flat, Kemperf, BP/Lekner
178 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 5 in Eroica/BPO/karajan
179 HAVDN; "Surprise" and "Clock" Symphonies/BPO/Richter
180 HAVDN; "Surprise" and "Clock" Symphonies/BPO/Richter
181 MOZART; Symphony no. 1 & 2/BPO/karajan
182 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 3 in Eroica/BPO/karajan
183 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 5/BPO/karajan
184 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 7/BPO/karajan
185 MOZART; Symphony no. 40 in Eroica/Madigana' sound-freak
186 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 1 & 2/BPO/karajan
187 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 3 in Eroica/BPO/karajan
188 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 5/BPO/karajan
189 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 7/BPO/karajan
190 MOZART; Symphony no. 40 in Eroica/BPO/beshn
191 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 1 & 2 in E Double Cdo in D'mi David & Iger
192 BEETHOVEN; Symphony no. 1/S.Richter, Piano VS/Karajan
193 SCHUMANN; Symphony no. 1 in B flat, "Spring"; Dno. 4 in D'mi David
194 HANDEL; Water Music Suite; Royal Fireworks Music/BPO/kubelik
195 HANDEL; Water Music Suite; Royal Fireworks Music/BPO/kubelik
196 SCHUMANN/GRIEZ; Symphony no. 1 a Julie Geza Anda, Piano BPO/
197 BACH ORGAN WORKS: Toccatas & Fugue in D mi Karl Richter, Organ
198 STRAVINKY; Rite of Spring/BPO/karajan
199 DVORAK; Symphony no. 9 Old II in 5, "New Wrirt"; BPO/karajan
200 DVORAK; Symphony no. 9 Old II in 5, "New Wrirt"; BPO/karajan
201 BRAHMS; Symphony no. 1 in C mi BPO/karajan
202 BRAHMS; Symphony no. 2 in B PO/karajan
203 BRAHMS; Symphony no. 4 in E mi BPO/karajan
204 BRAHMS; Violin Concerto/Christmas Theme/BPO/karajan
205 BRAHMS; Violin Concerto/Christmas Theme/BPO/karajan
206 SIBELIUS; Violin Concerto; Finlandia Christian Ferraz, Violin BPO/
207 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
208 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
209 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
210 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
211 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
212 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
213 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
214 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
215 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
216 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
217 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
218 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
219 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
220 SIBELIUS; Violin Concerto; Finlandia Christian Ferraz, Violin BPO/
221 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
222 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
223 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
224 BERLIQ; Symphonies Fantastique/BPO/karajan
225 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
226 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
227 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
228 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
229 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
230 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
231 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
232 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
233 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
234 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
235 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
236 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
237 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
238 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
239 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
240 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
241 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
242 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
243 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
244 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
245 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
246 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
247 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
248 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
249 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
250 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
251 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
252 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
253 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
254 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
255 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
256 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
257 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
258 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
259 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
260 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
261 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
262 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
263 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
264 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
265 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
266 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
267 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
268 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
269 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
270 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
271 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
272 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
273 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
274 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
275 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
276 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
277 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
278 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
279 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
280 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
281 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
282 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
283 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
284 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
285 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
286 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
287 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
288 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
289 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
290 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
291 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
292 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
293 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
294 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
295 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
296 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
297 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
298 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
299 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
200 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
201 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
202 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
203 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
204 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
205 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
206 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
207 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
208 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
290 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
291 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
292 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
293 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
294 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
295 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
296 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
297 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
298 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
299 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
300 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
301 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
302 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
303 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
304 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
305 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
306 SIBELIUS; Pictures at an Exhibition/RAVEL; BPO/karajan
307 SIBELIUS; Finlanda, Valise Tiste, Tapio, Swan of Tuonia/BPO/
308 TAIKOINWA; Symphony no. 4 in F Minor, BP/Lekner
290 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
291 BEETHOVEN; Violin Concerto in D/Christmas Ferraz/BPO/karajan
292 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
293 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
294 BEETHOVEN; Violin in D'Capriccio/Italy Christian Ferraz/BPO/karajan
29
PER DISC
139 100 BEETHoven: Piano Sonatas, "Moonlight," "Pathetique," "Appasaponata."
**KLEIN, F.**
132 133 aka "Kenpelt"
134 135 bA/BIOPOKEIV; Symphony No. 1, "Titan"; BVS/Rukelik
136 137 PROKOFIEV; Symphony No. 3, RAVEL; Ctoa in C/Aglerich/BPO/
138 139 BEABAMS; Clarinet Quintet in B mi/Kari Leister; Clarineti; Amadeus
139 140 CAERF; ORCFM; Burana/Curaha & Orchestra of Gerbera Opera
139 142 SCHUBER; Wanderer Fantasy, Op. 5; Momenta in C/Aglerich/BPO/
142 143 CHOPIN; Ctoa #1/LUSZT *#1* / #1/AG勒希/O/SbAbbe
143 144 CHOPIN; Ctoa #1/LUSZT *#1* / #1/AG勒希/O/SbAbbe
144 145 DRORIGO; Concierto de Anajust; Pantasia para un Gentil Ihombre/N.
145 146 J. S. BACH; Goldberg Variations/Viatman Kenpo, Piano
146 147 JOHANN STRAUSS; JR JOSEPH STRAUSS; Wattez, Polak & Marches/
147 148 DREBSKY; Three Places in New England; RUGGLES; Sumtreater/BSO/
147 149 DREBSKY; Sonatas; Violin & Cello; Plato; Flute; Viola & Harp/
147 150 GERSHAWN; Piano Ctoa; MacDOWELL; Piano Ctoa 2; Roberto Szidon,
150 151 BEETHOVEN; Symphony 9; Vienna Phil. Boehner
150 152 TCHAIKOVSKY; Symphony 10; In G 1 "Winter Dream"/BSO/
150 153 TCHAIKOVSKY; Symphony 10; In G 1 "Winter Dream"/BSO/
150 154 MOZART; Sereneat 9; Sereneat 6; BPO/Boehner
150 155 HOLEMAN; Sk concerta/BPO/Karjan (inc. music from "Elvira Madagascar")
150 156 HOLEMAN; Sk concerta/BPO/Karjan (inc. music from "Elvira Madagascar")
150 157 TCHAIKOVSKY; Overture / BPO/Karjan
150 158 DREBSKY; Images; Aberton of a Fianzo/BSO/Therese
150 159 PORTER; IVES MADAGASCAR; BPO/SbAbbe
150 160 BIZET; Symp. in C; Scenes from "La Jolie Fille de Perth"; Jeux d'Eteau/
160 161 DREBSKY; Swan Lake Suite; Sleeping Beauty; BSO/Barjan
160 162 TCHAIKOVSKY; Swan Lake Suite; Sleeping Beauty; BSO/Barjan
160 163 TCHAIKOVSKY; Grain of Pearl; Sleeping Beauty; Scherzo/Michangeli, Piano
160 164 OFFENBACH; Gate Parainheme Excerpts; GOUNOD; Ballot Music from
160 165 OFFENBACH; Gate Parainheme Excerpts; GOUNOD; Ballot Music from
160 166 BITET; Music from OPERAS; AIDEA; UEGEN O.NEIGN;
160 167 DIOCONDAI/O. IGORIA/KARJAN
160 168 DIOCONDAI/O. IGORIA/KARJAN
160 169 INVITATION TO THE DANCE; Music by Weber
160 170 HINDIMEDIAT; Symphony "Mathis Der Maleer" // BSO/Thomas
160 171 STRAVAINKV; Rise of King of Artists; Hirsching Sir Rudolf
160 172 BIRTH IN VENICE; Manier Themes in film /BVS/Kubel/
160 173 PAECTROVI; Dances from TERPSICHI/DARMON; SCHIN/
160 174 BEETHOVEN; Symphones 8 & 9 // BPO/Boehner
160 175 BEETHOVEN; Symphones 8 & 9 // BPO/Boehner
160 176 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 177 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 178 BIRTH IN VENICE; Manier Themes in film /BVS/Kubel/
160 179 PAECTROVI; Dances from TERPSICHI/DARMON; SCHIN/
160 180 BEETHOVEN; Symphones 8 & 9 // BPO/Boehner
160 181 BEETHOVEN; Symphones 8 & 9 // BPO/Boehner
160 182 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 183 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 184 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 185 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 186 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 187 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 188 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 189 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 190 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 191 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 192 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 193 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 194 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 195 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 196 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 197 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 198 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 199 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 200 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 201 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 202 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 203 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 204 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 205 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 206 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 207 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 208 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
160 209 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 210 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 211 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 212 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 213 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 214 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 215 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 216 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 217 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 218 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
161 219 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 220 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 221 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 222 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 223 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 224 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 225 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 226 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 227 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 228 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
162 229 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 230 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 231 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 232 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 233 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 234 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 235 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 236 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 237 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 238 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 239 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 240 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 241 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 242 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 243 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 244 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 245 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 246 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 247 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 248 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
163 249 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 250 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 251 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 252 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 253 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 254 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 255 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 256 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 257 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 258 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
164 259 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 260 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 261 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 262 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 263 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 264 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 265 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 266 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 267 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 268 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
165 269 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 270 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 271 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 272 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 273 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 274 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 275 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 276 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 277 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 278 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
166 279 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 280 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 281 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 282 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 283 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 284 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 285 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 286 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 287 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 288 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
167 289 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 290 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 291 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 292 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 293 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 294 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 295 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 296 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 297 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 298 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
168 299 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 200 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 201 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 202 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 203 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 204 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 205 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 206 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 207 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 208 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
169 209 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 210 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 211 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 212 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 213 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 214 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 215 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 216 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 217 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 218 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
170 219 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 220 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 221 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 222 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 223 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 224 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 225 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 226 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 227 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 228 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
171 229 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 230 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 231 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 232 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 233 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 234 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 235 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 236 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 237 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 238 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
172 239 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 240 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 241 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 242 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 243 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 244 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 245 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 246 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 247 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 248 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
173 249 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 250 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 251 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 252 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 253 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 254 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 255 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 256 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 257 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
174 258 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 260 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 261 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 262 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 263 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 264 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 265 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 266 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 267 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 268 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
175 269 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 270 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 271 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 272 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 273 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 274 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 275 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 276 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 277 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 278 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
176 279 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 280 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 281 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 282 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 283 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 284 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 285 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 286 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 287 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 288 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
177 289 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 290 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 291 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 292 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 293 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 294 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 295 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 296 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
178 297 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 200 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 201 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 202 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 203 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 204 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 205 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 206 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 207 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 208 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
179 209 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 210 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 211 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 212 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 213 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 214 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 215 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 216 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 217 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 218 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
180 219 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 220 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 221 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 222 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 223 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 224 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 225 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 226 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 227 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 228 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
181 229 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 230 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 231 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 232 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 233 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 234 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 235 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 236 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 237 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 238 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
182 239 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 240 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 241 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 242 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 243 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 244 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 245 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 246 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 247 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 248 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
183 249 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 250 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 251 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 252 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 253 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 254 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
184 255 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 260 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 261 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 262 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 263 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 264 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 265 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 266 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 267 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
185 268 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 270 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 271 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 272 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 273 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 274 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 275 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 276 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
186 277 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 280 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 281 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 282 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 283 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 284 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 285 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 286 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 287 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 288 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
187 289 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 290 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 291 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 292 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 293 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 294 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
188 295 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 200 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 201 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 202 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 203 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 204 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 205 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 206 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 207 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 208 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
189 209 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 210 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 211 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 212 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 213 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 214 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 215 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 216 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 217 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 218 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
190 219 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 220 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 221 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 222 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 223 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 224 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 225 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 226 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 227 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 228 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
191 229 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 230 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 231 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 232 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 233 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 234 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 235 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 236 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 237 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 238 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
192 239 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 240 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 241 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 242 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 243 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 244 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 245 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 246 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 247 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
193 248 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 250 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 251 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 252 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 253 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 254 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
194 255 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 260 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 261 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 262 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 263 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 264 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 265 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 266 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 267 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
195 268 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 270 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 271 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 272 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 273 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 274 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 275 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 276 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
196 277 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 280 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 281 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 282 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 283 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 284 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
197 285 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 290 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 291 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 292 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 293 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 294 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
198 295 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 200 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 201 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 202 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 203 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 204 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 205 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 206 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 207 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 208 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 209 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 210 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 211 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 212 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 213 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 214 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 215 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 216 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 217 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 218 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 219 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 220 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 221 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 222 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 223 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 224 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 225 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 226 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 227 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 228 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 229 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 230 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 231 SMETANA; My Fatherland (Ma Viaja); BPO/Kubel/
199 232 SMETANA; My Fatherland (
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CHILLY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roy Attacks Executive Actions
83rd Year, No.92
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, February 16, 1973
See Story Page 3
Kansan Staff Photo by CHRIS CANNELLA
Gov. Robert Docking Fears Higher Education Jeopardized by Republican Legislature
Added AVR Thursday night at the U.S. House
Reconstruction Aid Sought
WASHINGTON (N. J.) Secretary of State William P. Rogers asked Thursday for congressional approval of postwar aid to North Vietnam and for healing of the wounds at home caused by the long Southeast Asian conflict.
Rogers predicted that reluctant legislators would in the end be persuaded to make an administration sought "small investment" in postwar reconstruction help to all of Indochina. He said this was needed for a lasting peace.
At a news conference Rogers made an emotional defense of administration policies of refusing amnesty to draft immigrants in 2013, and rekindled reconciliation with the former enemy.
"As far as the administration is concerned, we want very much to get on with the business of peace and reconstruction here."
"I think it is time that all of us took a little pride in our country."
With voice quavering and eyes moistening, he continued, "And I can't think of anything that gets us off to a better start than to watch these returning POWs. If that doesn't make America proud, then I don't know what will."
Rogers' 50-minute meeting with reporters preceded his departure late next week for the Vietnam peace guarantee conference which oows in Paris Feb. 26.
He remained optimistic about the chances of the peace accord despite repeated allegations of cease-fire violations. He characterized current outbreaks of fighting in parts of South Vietnam as expected "local snugabbles".
"We are confident the cease-fire will be carried out and will be effective in South Africa."
He also said he expected and hoped that a
cease-fire agreement would be reached in neighboring Laos by the end of next week. In wider-ranging remarks Rogers made these other points:
The U.S.-Cuba antithacking agreement he signed Thursday morning means "there will be no safe haven for hijackers either in Cuba or the United States."
However, the accord does not signal a change in overall U.S. policy toward the Communist Castro regime. On the possibility of Washington-Havaan reconciliation, the said Cuban government was continuing its antagonistic posture toward the United States and "we don't note any change in the Cuban attitude."
- The United States has stepped up its behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts to initiate direct or indirect negotiations between the rival Middle East parties.
—The United States hopes to continue improving relationships with the People's Republic of China. He mentioned increasing trade and exchange of visitors. Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger is now talking with Chinese leaders in Peking.
Rogers was put on notice in an appearance before the House Foreign Affairs commission, and the commission does not want the United States to rush in too fast with economic assistance to North Vietnam. The Vietnam peace terms were set forth in a series of terms, without setting any specific amount.
Kissinger, in his recent Hanoi visit, agreed to a joint U.S.-North Vietnamese economic commission to deal with postwar reconstruction aid. The Nixon administration has yet to spell out what amounts it will wanis Congress to appropriate.
On the amnesty issue, Rogers denied any contradiction between President Nixon's amnesty denial policy and reconciliation with the former enemy abroad.
He said that the administration policy on issuers or draft evaders "is not a failure of the system."
When people resisted or deserted military service he said, others had to serve for them, and some may have been killed, or were beaten up. When their lives should not be forgotten, he said.
"Those who violate the law should be dealt with by legal processes," he said.
Funding Endangered Docking Tells Profs
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
Konson Staff Writer
Gov. Robert Docking said here Thursday that the Republican-dominated Kansas Legislature was apt to jeopardize higher education and to finance higher education to finance public schools.
Docking spoke at a dinner meeting of the University of Kansas Chapter of the American Association of University Teachers in the Kansas Room in the Union.
"They already are threatening—as they did in 1971—to rob Peter to pay Paul," Docking said. "They are threatening to rob funds from higher education, from the tuition grant program, from the retired teacher programs and from the business center, to fund a school finance formula that will increase taxes by as much as 75 per cent for some families."
Docking warned that the Republican leadership's proposal to raise income taxes by 1½ per cent would really cost taxpayers in either 48 and 74 per cent more in taxes a year.
He said the tax increase would raise only $62.8 million for the $245.5 million school finance program. The legislature still needs $123 million to carry out the program, in addition to the money raised by the tax increase and from other sources, he said.
If the Republicans raise the $123 million, "on
If the Republicans raise the $123 million, will be at the expense of higher education, Dr. Brennan said.
Docking said his own program of financing schools was a sound one, that required no tax increases. Property taxes would be reduced under his program, he said.
During a question and answer period after the speech, Docking clarified his program for financing public schools. About 60 per cent of the funds would be allocated to districts according to their number of students, he said, and the remaining 40 per cent would be allocated according to the number of faculty members as the number of faculty members or the number of faculty members holding masters degrees.
He said that during the first year, a "grandfather clause" would apply. No school district would receive less than 90 per cent of the funds it now receives.
He said he also recommended appro-
prating $40 million in additional funds to
Kansas must revamp its school finance system because the present system has been declared by Johnson County Court to be unlawful. A subsequent clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Equal educational opportunity requires that the quality of a child's education not be dependent upon the wealth of com- putees, nor on the financial finances or property taxes, as they present are,
The professors brought in the question of faculty salaries and fringe benefits. One professor asked about the prospects for the Board of Regents' request that faculty salaries be increased by about 10 per cent a year during the next three years.
"It the Board of Regents recommended it,
it will be given careful consideration.
If you have a question, please call."
wealthier communities have more money for education.
Docking said fringe benefits for faculty members were deleted from his budget because he wanted to examine the issue of overpayments before he recommended appropriations.
He said he wanted increases in faculty fringe benefits to have some conformity with increases for other state employees. His proposed retired teachers program already has met with some disagreement concerning fairness to other employees, he said.
Docking at first answered the question by saying that the state could not earmark funds for every job and that a program for student success was passed through the University Administration.
After the results of an affirmative action study of two years ago were mentioned, 10 of the participants were reenlisted.
A woman in the faculty said that a special appropriation for equalizing the salaries of men and women of the faculty was needed. If a 5.5 per cent salary increase was used to increase the salaries, there would not be enough money left for them to realize the full 5.5 per cent increase.
Docking he favored returning money from revenue sharing to the homeowner through his circuit. The owner retails of between $100 and $150 for incomes up to $20,000.
Docking said he was proud of the commitment his administration had made to
Docking also commented on Congressional Bill 1202 alluring the federal funds for education, from kindergarten through graduate school, to be channelled through one source; the bill could have been utilized in the allocation of educational resources, be said.
His administration is somewhat hesitant about immediately forming a board to give his students representatives soon will go to Washington, D.C., to discuss suggestions made by a task force about establishing a board. The task force works from many types of schools, he said.
report or of salary inequities and that he was "more interested" in affirmativeenkal than KH1.
He said he did not want Kansas to follow the footsteps of Missouri, where an illegal immigration law was passed.
No. Viet Spokesman Verifies POW Release
SAIGON (AP)—The chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegation, Bui Tin, here said Thursday that 20 American students were released in Hanoi on Saturday or Sunday.
Asked when the U.S. POWs would be needed, Perhaps tomorrow or if and when the day after,
an said that some technical problems needed to be worked out. He did not specify these problems, but they did not appear to be major.
A subcommission of the four-party Joint Military Peacekeeping Commission met the Wednesday.
KU Arts Center Delayed
By GARY ISAACSON Kansan Staff Writer
"Last year, I signed into law appropriation bills for fiscal year 1973 for the state colleges and universities—excluding the University of Kansas Medical Center—which include $75.5 million from the state general fund, the fund which is made up mainly of income and sales taxes collected from the individual taxpayer," he said.
TOPEKA—The University of Kansas will probably lose a year in the planning of a new visual arts building, Chancellor Raymond Nichols told a joint session of the Kansas Senate and House Ways and Means committees Thursday.
U.S. Dollar Steadies; Value of Gold Rises
Bankers and other financial sources interviewed here warned that a number of banks had already unsettled the next day or even weeks. But none predicted a further crisis selling wave of dollars in the spring, which last one week which forced Washington to delay.
LONDON (AP)—The U.S. dollar steadied on Europe's money markets Thursday for the first time since it was devalued Monday night, suggesting that the world monetary crisis of the past two weeks is coming to an end.
Foreign exchange dealers said there were signs that money markets were adjusting to the dollar's new exchange rates after the 10 per cent devaluation. These rates include a limited high or ceiling level, a central level, partly, and a permitted low or floor level.
A rise in price prices, however, had been generally expected as one result of the dollar devaluation. It remained to be seen whether the Fed would touch off more monetary trouble.
new ceiling rates and moved more or less steadily down. But in much of Europe on Thursday the dollar began moving back up toward the new ceiling rates.
Normally, a rapidly rising gold price is a sign of lagging confidence in the value of paper money. In major European centers gold jumped more than a dollar an ounce Thursday to close at higher ticks of 73.37 and $73.62 in London and $75.26 in Paris.
Most of the world's leading foreign exchange markets were closed Monday and Tuesday. When they reopened Wednesday, the devalued dollar started generally at the
The dollar improved in Frankfurt, London, Paris, Amsterdam and Milan. It fell in Brussels, Zurich and Tokyo. The generally steady pattern, however, was the dollar's best daily performance this month. It traded at $124 against the euro in Europe for the second straight day.
"An ominous sign," a French banker said. "Confidence has been yet fully grown."
Nichols said that the preliminary plans for the project would not be ready for the state architectural service until September or October.
"In view of the change of scope of the ba imitium move to more in the preliminary imitium," Nicholas said.
Keith L. Nicher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said that the 1972 legislature granted KK $3,600 to an estimated cost on an estimated total cost of $3.4 million.
"But because of the planning already done, it has been determined that the building will cost approximately $5 million," he said.
Because the funds for preliminary planning were figured as one per cent of the total cost of the building, Nitcher said, the project would cost $80,000 to complete the preliminary plans.
for the final plans would cost the University a year.
The delay in the preparation of the preliminary plans was partly the fault of the University's campus planning personnel, Nichols said.
"I did not make a request for the final planning funds because we would need the preliminary plans for justification of the higher appropriation, and they are not able to justify their request. We have to give their approval to a higher appropriation request, and they have not."
The University had originally planned to ask this session of the legislature for $80,400 to support the state's facility. The state Board of Regents approved this request, but Gov. Robert Docking did not recommend it in his budget. He did not make the request on Thursday.
Nichols said that because of the higher estimate of the total building cost, the $80,400 would not be enough to fund the final planning.
"We had to come up with something on our own," he said.
He said that the state planning manual
should be given to private bus facilities.
Nicholas he said he thought the chances for approval of the supplementary $18,000 for the preliminary plans were good. But he said the delay in the appropriation of funds
Regent Jess Stewart, Warnemo, presented an appeal for all six state schools in which he urged the legislators to retrain three students from governor deleted from the original request.
Stewart also asks for a one-half per cent payment to the faculty retirement committee.
Stewart said that the Regents would not raise its salary increase request, although they could do so now because of the lifting of President Nixon's Phase Two restrictions. However, Stewart asked for the reintroduction of $251,000 required to fund a faculty disability and life insurance program.
Stewart's final system-wide request was for funding for computer operations at all six state schools. He said that a coordinated plan for providing computer service to the campuses and the state had already been released and was ready for implementation.
The Regents requested $612,314 for the project, but Docking cut $400,000 from that request. Stewart asked the legislators to reinstate the entire amount.
"We think that everything possible should be done to make Kansas colleges and universities attractive places in which to work," Stewart said, "and, again, this is one of the fringe benefits which would help prepare students for college to provide the best, positional faculty."
North Vietnam had announced Tuesday that 20 Americans would be freed within the next few days as a sign of good will. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong released 143 Americans this week, and the next week a group of them is to be around the middle of next month.
It said that teams of the International Commission of Control and Supervision and the joint military commission would leave for Hanoi on Saturday to be on hand to observe the POW release, as required under the peace agreement signed in Paris Jan. 27.
The second flight in a three-plane airlift bringing 60 more returned American
prisoners of war home took off for Travis
Bass in California early this
afterword.
The third planeload of 20 men was scheduled to follow four hours later. The first of the three flights left Thursday morning.
POWs on the second flight included the LRJ, a fighter jet, the Navy, Nav JL Comdr. Ewerd Avauge
The last 20 of the 142 POWs brought to Clark from Hanoi and Linh Nouch, South Vietnam, on Monday were scheduled to depart for the United States on Saturday.
A cheer of recognition and delight went up from several hundred school children as Alvarez, who was held in North Vietnam nearly nine years, stepped off a hospital bus that brought him and 19 others to the flight line to board the departing C141 Starlifter.
Speaking for the 20 men on the 15-hour trip to Travis, Alvarez said: "It's been a long time coming. But we're finally going home, home to the greatest country in this world."
He walked over to a squealing group of American school children and young mothers.
They were holding a large brown paper sign which said, "Feliz Viva L. Cmdr."
See 60 POWs Next Page
PETER DAVID BARNARD
Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Nichols and Regent Jess Stewart Before Legislators . Tenit to joint session of House and Senate Ways and Means Committees . . .
1
2
Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansan
60 POWs Return
(Continued from page 1)
Alvares and fellow returnees. Many happy
members of the Spanish words
means have a good trip.
Five of the eight civilians released Monday by the Viet Cong in Linh Nghia also were on the second flight. They were the eleven civilian POWs to be returned home.
Among them was State Department specialist Douglas Ramsey, who has been held by the Viet Cong since Jan. 5, 1968. A sixth catholic was to return on the third of the day.
The 20 released military prisoners on Thursday's first flight to Travis included some men apparently requiring continued medical care.
All but three of the men were in uniform as they stepped off a blue hospital bus to walk across a red carpet for salutes and to shake hands with the commander of the 13th Air Force, Lt. Gen. William G. Moore, before boarding the aircraft.
Three of the men, all Army returnees from prison camps in South Vietnam, were taken to Germany.
Operation Homecoming officials announced the names of returned American prisoners of war departing today for the United States in three planes.
The first plane was scheduled to leave
airport at 13:48 flight to Travis Air
Force Base.
Air Force Lt. Col. William H. Means Jr., Topeka; Army Spec. 4 Keith A. Albert, Thibodau; Navy Spec. Eugene W. McBurney, N.Y.; Air Force Lt. Col. James Q. Collins, Concord, N.C.; Air Force Maj. Thomas E. Collinson III, Ulma Miss, Army Spec. Frederick H. Crownson, Army Spec. John R. Greenwood, Daugle, Napoleonville, La.; Air Force Maj. Robert N. Daughtrey, Trollex, Tex.; Air
Force Cap. Jerry D. Driscoll, Chicago; Marine L. col. John H. Dunn, Neptune Beach, Fla.; Navy L. Cmdr. Ralph E. Gaither, Miami, Fla.; Navy L. Cmdr. Porter A. Halyburton II, Davidson, N.C.; Army Mj. William J. Macdonald III, Hastedon, OK; Oakland City, Air Force Lt. Col. Alan P. Larue, Cleveland; Air Force Cal. Raymond J. Mercritt, San Gabriel, Calif.; Air Force Carrel, Darrel Pele, Compton, Califf; Army S.gt. Felix Neco-Quinones, Santa Maria, Rio Riedas, P.R. Army, Marial Raymond C. Schrump, Tomahawk, Wis.; Air Force Cap. Jerry A. Sington, Greeland, Co.
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Everett Alvarez Jr., San Diego, Calif.; Air Force Mgt. Richard E. Bolstad, Minneapolis, Minn.; Norman J. Capone, Minneapolis, Minn.; Force Capt. Edward A. Brudu, Quinny, Mass; Air Force Col. Fred V. Cherry, Suffolk, Va.; Air Force Sgt. Sgt. Arthur Cormier, Bay Store, N.Y.; Air Force Lt. John Berry, Davenport, N.J.; Joffice Jr. Cruz, civilian, Williamstown, N.J; Army Spec. Gary J. Guggerbon, Cold Spring, Nim.; Army Spec. 4 Richard H. Springman, Long Beach, Calif.; Michael H. Kjone, civilian, Decorah, Iowa; Army Spec. T. Kendall, civilian, Decorah, Iowa; Force Mgt. Nonjur. A. McDaniel, Fayetteville, N.C.; Marine Lt. Col. Edison W. Miller, Tustin, Calif.; Air Force Lt. Col. Robert B. Purcell, Louisville, Ky.; Douglas K. Ramsey, civilian, Boulder City, Ky.; Railway Officer Berdelsen, D.S.-R. Richard W. Uecht, civillian, Fayetteville, N.C.; Marine Capt. James P. Walsh, Jr. Winston, Conn.; Navy Capt. Walter E. Wiper, Navy Millstone, Pa. Those scheduled to be aboard the third
Those scheduled to leave on the second flight were:
Those scheduled to be aboard the third aircraft were:
U.S., Cuba Complete Hijacking Agreement
WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States and Cuba signed an agreement Thursday to restart diplomatic relations.
But the five-year agreement, which was signed separately in Washington and Havana, retained the traditional American policy of sheltering political refugees.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Airport Security
WASHINGTON - A three-judge federal panel Thursday refused to stay new airport security regulations, and the rules requiring armed police at boarding gates go through a process of review today. Beginning today airports are to station police officers at all points where passengers are being screened and having their luggage inspected before boarding. A Transportation Department administration said the vast majority of airports assured that they would comply.
Environment
WASHINGTON—President Nixon proposed Thursday new legislation to permit establishment of protected wilderness areas in the eastern states, set federal safety standards for drinking water and regulate commercial fishing off U.S. waters, and established a mandate that the President's 1875 message to Congress on environment and resources, which, for the most part, urged Congressional action on bills previously proposed.
Death Penalty
TOPEKA—A hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on bills which would restore the death penalty for certain "super" felony murders will resume at 11 a.m. Friday. Atty. Glen, Vern Miller, who drafted a bill before the committee which imposed a temporary mandatory upon conviction for 14 types of murder was among four witnesses Thursday who supported retention of the death penalty in Kansas.
Because it was an executive agreement and not a treaty, the document did not require Senate ratification and went into effect immediately.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers, who signed the agreement for the United States, said it served notice to hijackers in Mexico and is safe haven in the United States or Cuba.
The agreement, signed simultaneously by Rogers in his office here and Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa I in Havana, defines a hijacker as "any person who after她 seizes, removes, appropriates or diverts a craft or vessel registered under the laws of one of the parties and brings it to the territory of the other party."
Such a person, the agreement provides,
"shall either be returned to the party of
registry, . . . to be tried by the courts of that
party in conformity with its laws or be
brought before the courts of the party whose
territory was reached for trial."
Rogers told reporters later, "I expect there will be more prosecutions than extraditions," indicating that hijackers could to serve their sentences in foreign prisons.
Both countries pledged to try blackjackers under existing laws providing "the most severe penalty according to the circumstances and the seriousness of the acts."
One possible loophole was closed by a clause stating that extradition is mandatory if the hijacker has not broken the laws of the nation to which he fled.
Regarding political asylum, the agreement says a nation receiving a refugee "may take into consideration any extinating or mitigating circumstances in those cases in which the persons responsible for the acts were being sought for strictly criminal purposes" and the minion danger of death without a viable alternative for leaving the country."
This does not apply, however, if the refugee extorted money or threatened to harm "the members of the crew, the crewers or their persons in connection with the hijacking."
When asked whether the tight restrictions defining a political refugee had limited the right to grant political asylum, U.S. officials said they had not because the country such a person would determine whether the conditions required the refugee to flee.
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Air Force Maj. Charles G. Boyd, Rockwell City, Iowa; Air Force Cap. Ralph T. Browning, Orlando, Fla.; Navy Cmdr. Gerald L. Coffee, Los Angeles; Air Force Lt. Col. David B. Hatcher, Mount Airy N.C.; Air Force Cap. Edwin A. Hawley J., Birringham Ala.; Navy Lt. Cmdr. John Heilg, Miami, Florida; Air Force O. James O. Carroll, Pasadena, Pa.; Air Force Samuel R. Johnson, Dallas; Air Force Maj. Murphy N. Jones, destination Air Force Medical Center, Keesler AFB, Miss; Air Force Maj. Paul A. Kari, Columbus, Ohio; Air Force Lt. Col. Richard P. Keirn, Akron, Ohio; Air Force Cap. Thomas J. Klomann, Oak Forest, III; Air Force Cap. Galand D. Kramer, Tulsa; Air Force Maj. Warren R. Myers, Air Force Lt. Col. Armand J. Eugene, Eugene, Newhaming, civilian, Hambun, Tex.; Air Force Col. Robinson Rimser, Tulsa; Air Force Maj. Wesley D. Schierman, Lancaster, Wash.; Air Force Lt. Col. Bruce G. Seeber, West Monroe, La.
9th & Iowa
Maj. Gen Daniel James told newsmen that American pilots had flown about 100 more daily strikes this week than they did last week "because of increased enemy activity and further requests for assistance by the Royal Laotian government."
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Pentagon disclosed Thursday that U.S. bombers had intensified strikes against Communist forces trying to drive Laotian government troops out of key positions before an expected cease-fire.
U.S. Intensifies Bombing in Laos
The escalation means that U.S. tactical fighter-bombers and B 52 heavy bombers are flying an average of 300 sorties a day to keep them in battle. In Latra, a aircraft is one flight by one plane.
James, a ranking Pentagon spokesman, also acknowledged that U.S. planes had continued ranging over Cambodia in support of hard-pressed government troops and Cambodian operations as being "at a very low level" but still tens of sorties a day.
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their North Vietnamese supporters.
This concert is free to all students with ID, Faculty and Staff $1.00. General admission $1.50.
Tickets can be purchased at SUA office, Student Union Starting Wed., Feb. 14.
If you liked the DUKLA you'll like this one.
James voiced the hope and expectation expressed by many U.S. officials that a cease-fire agreement would be achieved in Laos.
He said nothing about a cease-fire in Cambodia, where a unilateral halt in the fighting announced by the government at the end of the war was ignored by Cambodian insurgents and
James refused to go into any detail on targets being struck, but it is known that U.S. war planes based primarily in nearby Thailand have been flying in support of Royal Lao regulars and CIA-backed mountain tribesmen try to stem Communist thrusts in several important regions.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 16, 1973
3
[Image of a man in a suit gesturing with his hands, standing next to two women in formal attire. The background is a metallic curtain.]
Kansan Photo by BARBARA KELLY
Rep, Bill Roy, D-Kan., Discusses Budget Problems
. . . Students talk to Roy after his Thursday night speech . .
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN Kansan Staff Writer
Money Cuts Favored To Deter Impounding
Rep. Bill Roy, D-Kan., told an audience of 100 persons here Thursday that he would favor cutting the operational funds for the executive branch if Congress could find no other way to stop President Nixon from impounding appropriated funds.
Roy said that the impoundment of congressional funds had historical precedent, but that Nixon's recent action was the first time a president had acted "in bad faith" by ignoring the intentions and wishes of Congress.
Roy spoke in the Kansas Union Ballroom in an address sponsored by the University of Kansas.
"If the Congress of the United States doesn't do anything," he said, "the President will become a constitutional monarch."
The constitutional crisis is heightened, he said, by the fact that Nixon is also discarding many social programs which the candidates had initiated without consulting with it.
Roy said that he thought the spearhead of the congressional attack on Nixon's budgetary amputations and impoundments at the handing of these social programs.
The two financing proposals have been the subject of recent controversy in the Kansas Legislature. Because of a federal court ruling, the legislature must institute a new public school finance plan to replace the present county property tax system.
"The CONGRESS has to force the Presidency hand, as these programs are built."
According to Roy, the fact that Congress has been guilty of over-appropriations doesn't justify Nixon's monetary hand-slapping through executive impoundment.
A sharp exchange between Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge, and Kenneth Fisher, assistant superintendent of business and facilities for Lawrence public schools, Thursday pointed out differences in two plans for funding education in the state.
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
During Thursday morning's "Eggs and Issues" meeting of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, Fisher applied two plans for financing public schools to the Lawrence school district. One plan, which was formulated by a Special Senate Education Committee, attached the other was Gov. Robert Dockinger's counter-proposal.
Funding Controversy Stirs Debate
Father's application of the two proposals answered that the Governor's plan would be more effective.
than the plan supported by Harder. However, the committee's proposal would provide greater property tax relief for Lawrence taxavers.
Under the committee's plan, the present Lawrence general education fund and social security fund of $7.53 million would be increased by $97,000 to about $8.24 million. However, the budget would be effectively increased by about $180,000.
The size of the effective increase would be due to the state's assumption of a greater share of the transportation costs and management programs. Formerly these costs were figured in the general fund. Under the new proposal, they will be handled in a separate fund category so money prevail over those used for other general fund obligations.
In what he termed a non-partisan address, Harder defended the committee's proposal and pointed out what he said were advantages to the governor's proposal.
According to Fisher, the committee's proposal would reduce the property tax for Lawrence residents by about 14 mills. The proposed increase would be increased by about 1.5 per cent.
would increase by about $220,000. The governor's proposal would reduce Lawrence property tax by only 4 mills but it would add no income tax.
Harder said that the committee's proposal would guarantee full funding of the project.
He said that the proposal would equalize educational opportunities through its system of district wealth measurement. The committee's proposal would use a system based on both property value and income. The amount of state aid given to a district is determined by that district's wealth.
"The committee plan meets the problems of school finance head on," said Harder. "The governor's program works backwards, a budget, then applying it to education."
And, Roy noted that Nixon was not faultless in his spending policies.
Much of the cause of congressional ineptitude in handling the nation's business, Roy said, is inadequate staff and research resources. For example, one ten-man team was fitted in the House of Representatives has only one attorney to do research for it.
"This President has been the biggest wonder in the history of the United States," he added.
"The Pentagon spends more money each year making out it's budget requests than is spent on the whole congressional committee system," he said.
Under the governor's plan, total state a i i
Roy focused part of his speech on the monetary crisis caused by the second devaluation of the dollar in less than two years.
HE LISTED the U.S. balance of trade deficit, increasing capital outlays to foreign countries in the form of industrial export taxes and foreign aid, as the causes for the current devaluation.
The result of devaluation will be an increase in the price of foreign imported goods and in a decrease in the American dollar, which is attributed to the rest of the world, he predicted.
Roy said the devaluation would ease the trade deficit, but he warned against continued overseas spending and any "dive for over-protectionism." Such a protectionism result in international trade wars which are increasingly harmful to U.S. agriculture, he said.
In a question and answer period following the speech, Roy said that he was preparing to campaign against Sen. Bob Dole so that would have a fair chance if he decided to run.
HE SAID THAT he wouldn't run against either Gov. Robert Docking orAtty. Gen. Vern Miller in the Democratic primary for two reasons. First, he said, such competition would splinter the Democratic party and assure the re-election of Dole.
Also, he said, "I don't think I can beat Bob Docking or Vern Miller."
In reply to another question, Roy charged that White House advisers knew about the impending fuel crisis this winter, but didn't know when it would be of pressure from the oil and gas industries.
After the speech the freshman class held an informal reception for Roy in the Cementery.
Prof Gets Fellowship
H. Lewis McKinney, associate professor of history at KU, has been awarded a 12-month fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies. McKinney will start work in September on a biography of Alfred Russel Wallace, an English naturalist.
Red Tape Hampers Passport Processing
By ERIC MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
Students who plan to travel abroad this summer should apply for passports now, according to Lucille Allison, clerk of the Douglas County District Court.
Processing passport applications takes more than six weeks, even longer if the applications must be resubmitted, Allison said.
Photographs cause the biggest problems, she said. Many students' applications were rejected last year because of unacceptable pictures.
"Most of the students applied so late that when their applications were rejected they could hardly get new applications processed in time for their trims." Allison said.
Photos may be in black and white or color, but they must be printed on a special unthinned胶纸. Applicants must be fluent in English, and have corresponding to U.S. Passport office regulations.
The office also requires that photos be clear, front views of the applicants' full faces against light backgrounds. Two photos for each application are required. They must be between $ 2 \frac{1}{2} \times 2 \frac{1}{2} $ and $ 3 \times 3 $ inches in size.
Home store and Polaroid picture just won't do," Allison said. "They fade too badly. Students should really see a camera photographer who understands the regulations."
STUDENT UNION Activities (SUA) at the University of Kansas has sponsored passport photo services for the past three years.
The KU Photo and Graphic Arts Bureau will take the photographs for SUA this year. Students involved in SUA tours should inquire at the SUA office. Photos will be taken Tuesdays and Thursdays through the end of February starting Tuesday.
"THE PICTURES SUA send down here last spring were full of shadows and didn't have a light backdrop," Allison said. "I hated to turn them down, but finally the passport agency told me to send them to the police office in their office and they would refuse them."
She said a student should send $2, his name and his date and place of birth to the Bureau of Vital Statistics at the capital of the state in which he was born. The bureau would send him a certified copy of his birth certificate.
THE STUDENT then should take the photos and the copy of the birth certificate to the clerk of the district court or to any other official who must complete a wage application.
Another problem with processing passport applications is the requirement of a certified copy of the applicant's birth certificate, she said.
A fee of $10 for the passport and $2 for the application will be assessed.
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Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Hard Times
Like a protagonist in a Hardy novel, the University of Kansas is finding that deeds of the past are inescapable. Small appropriations for faculty salaries in the past have undermined the quality of education at the University, and unless this trend is reversed, the quality of education here will continue to decline.
A combination of factors has conspired to sap the vitality of the University. Low appropriations from the state in past years, a decline in tuition fees and small decline in private support have caused KU's financial欠惠.
Some of the consequences of low funding have been a decline in faculty morale, a decline in the prestige and competitive hiring position of KU, and an inability of KU departments to purchase all equipment necessary. Low funding also makes it difficult to retain qualified educators.
Personal hardships, or at least inconveniences, burden the faculty
here. Some professors note that low salaries prevent them from attending professional conferences. Others find it difficult to balance their personal budgets. Research also suffers in an atmosphere of austerity.
But the truly frightening aspect of low funding is the vicious cycle that it perpetuates. Low funding, in addition to lowering the quality of education, lowers the reputation of a university, lowering its attractiveness and discourages contributions from private sources. In short, low funding yields more of the same.
The University of Kansas has consistently held a position of prominence among state institutions of higher learning in this country. That prominence is being challenged. Unless state and federal support for KU is restored, frightening now soon will become a nightmare—a nightmare in which the words "you get what you pay for" are constantly repeated.
—Steve Riel
Great Expectations
Long live its fame, and long live its glory and long may its story be told.
Three cheers for the democratic system. Representative government is so popular on this campus that only one student team had filed for a seat in the body president and vice president by the filing deadline Wednesday.
The student code states that all candidates must file 30 days before spring break. The deadline was Thursday, so bring out those stimulants or bubbly depressants. Celebrate now, before mid-terms set in. You can always relent and party again next month after the election.
A successful write-in campaign seems highly unlikely. It would be a lot of work. Write-in presidential and vice presidential candidates have to have been student senators. Their senatorial positions supposedly replace a petition of support to prove that at least 500 students approved of
their candidacies, Candidates must run and actively campaign as a team. Considering the level of responsibility and initiative demonstrated in the past by most student senators, I doubt that a write-in campaign will emerge from the grassroots of this sogy campus.
We, the students, have a toe in almost every pie at this University. A patterning horde of student representatives has crowded every nook and cranny of KU's governing structure. This breed proliferates with determination, but as the number of student representatives has increased, interest in student representation has decreased.
The brave, courageous and bold clamor for increased representation to solve every crisis, real or imagined, from behind drown them out.
—Linda Schild
Jack Anderson
Reporter's Jailing Stirs Outcry
WASHINGTON - The jailing of my friend and associate Les Whitten has taught me a lesson about America. He was arrested in the act of reporting a news report that Ms. Whitten were violated by FBI agents who had sworn to uphold the Constitution. His notes were ripped
from his hands and he was stopped from writing a story that would have embarrassed the FBI.
Fireman's Story
Dauenbspeck, a fireman two years, has a 2-year-old daughter of his own.
Editor's Note: Earl H. Dauenpeck, 27, sat down in the quiet of his Philadelphia Home. Jan 15 and wrote about his rescue that day of a little girl from a burning house. He wanted to preserve the emotions he experienced the first time she lived. His story never intended for publication, was sent to the Philadelphia Bulletin by his wife without his knowledge.
His wife said she had opposed his decision to become a lawyer. She pointed out that he was the first job, which I should have had from the very beginning."
Rv EARL H. DAURENSPECK
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—The call came in at 5:33 p.m. we hurried into our boots and coats, we had no idea what we were going to do. When we turned onto the street we saw a person who was seen by smoke coming out of the windows and filling the street.
There was a woman at the third-floor window yelling for help, she was told to go inside the building and lead her to stairs.
Arvived at the third floor I could hear a child's crily partly muffled by the noise of another fireman breaking windows with his trumpet.
I tried desperately to figure out where the cry was coming from. I found myself in thick smoke, stumbling over kitchen chairs, tables and other household furnishings in the smoke-filled house.
I picked up several things I thought might be a child, but I held them close I could see they were only a doll or a stroller.
I crawled across the floor in what I knew was the direction of the child's crying. I could hear myself yelling, "For God's sake."
Then suddenly there she was, all curled up in a corner of one of the bedrooms between some kind of a chest and the wall. I picked her up and held her in my arms as though she were my own little girl, and thanked God that she was still awake. She carefully and she and her mother were taken away by a Rescue Squad to a hospital, I still wondered if she would be all right.
Soon after, I was back inside looking for someone else who might be trapped in the burning building. There was no one else. We put out the fire, cleaned up and returned to our station.
Back at the firehouse, I called the Rescue Squad that took the woman and the child to the hospital, and I learned that both were all right. The little girl was 2 years old and the mother was expecting another child.
This was my very first rescue of a human life. No matter how routine my job may become, I'm sure I'll always have the beautiful feeling and sense of doing good that I have today.
of the FBI. He had inspected thousands of the documents and had extracted the news from the reports of the country in vain for them.
Then as the final indignity, Witten had showed up to witness the return of the first big batch of documents. Frustrated FBI documents, Hank Adams or to locate the stolen papers, swooped down on Indian leader Hank Adams before he could deliver the documents the last steps to the government. Witten was present to report the news.
He was expected. The FBI he been emboldened, we now know by word from the White House t make a case against us. For th White House also didn't like who he had been writing. Our res crime, in other words, was to di out stories that made th be wrong, and to insist we must mistake about it. That's the onl reason 2 of Whiten was accuser
I was outraged, of course. Then some heartening things began to happen. Sen. Ed Muskie, D-Me, met me on the desk from his desk and rose slowly on the Senate floor. Only last year, we had obtained documents from his own private files and had published some embarrassing statements about standing tall in the Senate, defending our right to do so Muskie said of the Whitter arrest: "The Administration has opened a new front in the Firs Amendment."
for details of the arrest. He said he would seek a probe of FBI activities.
Another legislator who has felt the prick of our needle, Rep Peter Closkey, R-Callif, phoned us
Sen. Frank Moss, D-Uttal, took the Senate, "Now the Administration has achieved the goal of giving the means to strike back at the dynasty of muckrakers which leads from Upton Sinclair and Lincoln Beinecke through new zealand and New Zealand Jack Anderson and Les Whitten."
Rep. Lloyd Meeds, D-Wash., chairman of the House Indian Affairs subcommittee, invited us to testify on what we have learned about the government's mistreatment of the Indians.
Rep. John Moss, D-Calif, said he was urging the House Freedom of Information Committee to make a formal inquiry. And Rep. Jerome Waldie, D-Calif, charged the Nixon Adjournment to systematize and conscious campaign to harass reporters.
The moment Rep. Ogden Reid, D-N.Y., heard of the arrest, he phoned Written's wife, Phyllis. Fred Rooney, D-Pa., didn't hear about it until later. Then he put in an immediate call to the police and asked his personal bond if necessary. Sen. Jim Abourdez, D-S,D, also made inquiries on behalf of both Whitten and Dan.
In the Maryland legislature, Charles Docter offered a joint resolution saying the arrest "smacks of harassment of newspaper reporters and censorship of news, which cannot be tolerated in a democratic society."
The outpouring of editorial support was also overwhelming.
“Mr. Whitted and Mr. Anderson are being punished for revealing the contents of the papers—not only that he was bound to them,” the Nashville Temesnew wrote in an editorial. “If the reporters had concealed the contents instead of writing about what happened, the arrest would have been made.”
The Buffalo Courier Express wrote, "This brazen attempt to intimidate reporters by arrest, public humiliation and jailing is a frontal assault on investigative reporting which, if successful, could mean that no news about the incident would ever be printed unless government officials wanted it to be."
"Actually," wrote the Reading Times, "the (Indian) papers were paid for by the taxpayers and they would pay the public long one. One thing we are sure of, we haven't heard the end of this arrest. Those who know Jack Anderson knew he not one, but neither it's with the FRI or ITT.
But perhaps most gratifying of all was the flood of letters from everyday Americans who ledged their support. They angered from a conservationist executive who sent Whitten a bountie cake with a file sticking out of it. The businessman who wrote simply, "I just learned of your unfortunate situation with the government and wanted to lend you some support."
Yes, Whitten's experience has strengthened, not shaken, my faith in America.
Nicholas von Hoffman
San Jose Parents Get Power Via Schools' Voucher System
SAN JOSE, Calif. — This town has the feeling of a gigantic truck stop, a flat valley city of ever-proliferating Shell stations and Taco Bell franchises. Not a town where you'd expect to find something singular happening, but in the Alum School District on
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Can Economic Elixir Strengthen U.S.?
BY JOHN CUNNIFT AP Rucinace Analvet
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK—Many economists believe that in the past 18 months of dollar crises and attempted solutions, the nation has cut ties with the past and with old ideology and maybe has severed the irons that made it a dragging giant.
The past was the post-World War II world in which the United States served as a banker, protector of sea ships, teacher, non-communist nations. But now the United States is no longer the most talented and productive competitors.
Despite this, much of the world adhered to old notions. While berating the United States for not putting its house in order, other nations have used the web of obstacles to U.S. sports to prevent the desired order.
Peel out the outer layer of almost any international economic years and you'll find the U.S. payments deficit at the core, ranking and sourcing economic, and even social relations.
Added to this was the U.S. self-
imposition of omnipotence, a leftover
belief that was exploited during the
late 1860s, when the nation
attacked and slaughtered home and
a war abroad without higher taxes.
Inflation soon raged.
The ankle iron that hobbled the nation as the crisis peaked was the growing international payments deficit.
The old faith was buried in 1971, when the country devolved the dollar for the first time in its history and imposed price constraints traditionally deplored in a country dedicated to free enterprise.
The deficit, or dollar outflow, fueled inflation abroad. And, because the economy is not available, they became less desirable to hold. They were considered overpriced, so those currencies had fewer of them for stronger currencies.
It was the major element in Monday night's 10 per cent dollar devaluation.
weren't. They stayed abroad.
Moreover, other considerations were worsening the situation. In order to fight food-price inflation, import restrictions were lowered, and the deficit was reduced the deficit. The need for oil imports also added to the problem.
government and its citizens have sent, spent or invested more than $50 billion more overseas than the driver has ever had the drain been so bad.
If they had been returned to the United States in payment for American goods, there wouldn't have been a problem. But they
Some of what left came back, of course, because the United States is a big exporter of goods, because forglers want to invest and trade with them, and because investments and dividends are now returning dividends.
It was carried in the pockets of tourists bent on a good time and sent there as investment capital by American companies.
But billions didn't come back. Foreigners chose not to buy American, partly because prices were high, the result of inflation. But, even when that was reduced, the problem remained.
economists interviewed before the Feb. 12 devaluation believed the worst of the deficits were behind and the U.S. competitive stance was vastly stronger than in 1970 and becoming more so.
The money went in many ways: it was used to aid friendly nations, to pay for huge imports of German and Japanese goods, and to support military establishment in Europe and to support the war in Vietnam.
Albert Cox, chief economist for Lioned D. Kide, consultant, said, “In terms of the last 100 years of American history, the economy will go through a process to the rest of the world’s economies, it looks darn good.”
In spite of problems, many
If returning strength was noted before the devaluation, the economy will be much stronger. It could also be a 'action', many economists feel.
Among immediate possible effects of the devaluation is an influx of dollars to the American stock market because shares now can be purchased by foreigners for 10 per cent less.
A devaluation is a recognition of reality, that a currency is worth only what the market is willing to pay for it and not what it has its value. And recognition of reality is seen as economic sanity.
A deficit which lasts many years is considered a weakness, suggesting that a nation is living beyond its means. Continued, it distorts currency relationships and, eventually, world trade.
Big deficits also are reflected in the job markets. If the United
States has an imbalance, as it has, with Japan and Germany, it means that these nations are more to us than we to them.
If continued for years, it means depressed employment in the American industries affected.
These are the U.S. payments deficits-surpluses for the past 10 years:
1963 minus 1.9 billion
1964 minus 1.5 billion
1965 minus 1.3 billion
1966 minus 1.1 billion
1967 minus 1.4 billion
1968 plus 1.6 billion
1969 plus 2.7 billion
1970 minus 9.8 billion
1971 minus 9.8 billion
1972 est minus 11.6 billion
How do you remedy such a situation? To say simply that you lower U.S. spending abroad while encouraging foreign spending is here merely to define the question. The question is how to do it.
After years of relatively ineffective action, the United States felt a critical need for a sudden devaluation that, in turn, could make its competitive and imports more costly, thus reducing the deficit.
TRADE POLICY DOLLAR
A dollar devaluation means that Americans must pay out more dollars for foreign goods, so
imports are discouraged. In contrast, American exports to foreign nations become less expensive and foreign currency is worth more.
1963 plus 5.2 billion
1964 plus 6 billion
1965 plus 4.8 billion
1966 plus 3.7 billion
1967 plus 3.8 billion
1968 plus 0.6 billion
1969 plus 0.6 billion
1970 plus 2.2 billion
1971 minus 7 billion
1972 minus 6.4 billion
Eventually, it is hoped, devaluation will correct a negative correction hasn't appeared yet seems less discouraging to private and government trade unionists those who trade in currencies.
This is the trade balance, one segment of the payments balance:
In maintaining a payments and trade balance or surplus, fund managers should help ensure limitations on private investments overseas help some, but not all, of these investments eventually pay in a return flow.
Import restrictions also tend to maintain a payments balance, but they also are considered dangerous antidotes because they kill all the foreign nations. Surcharges also have the same weakness.
In fact, Robert Roosa, former Treasury undersecretary and now an investment banker, said he believed the return on private investments coupled with government and royalties on American technology would be a big plus in coming years.
The best antidote for long-range payments stability is a curtailing of inflation. An infiltration rate lower than that of other nations makes a nation's exports more attractively priced.
Inflation is shadow and substance of a deficit. If one is surprised, you should also for big government spending, whether overseas or at home; if it doesn't contribute to economic growth, creating or worsening inflation.
The U.S. payments deficits
deepened as inflation persisted.
From January 1968 to January
1970, prices climbed 5.5 per cent
in the United States, compared to
only 2 per cent in Germany and 3
per cent in Italy. The deficit has
worsened.
What caused inflation? Big spending for war without a compensating tax increase, for one thing. The continued burden of war has pushed the world and social programs at home. Lagging productivity.
But international tensions may be easing. The war is wound up because the United States has wound up. The United States now has the lowest consumer price inflation of any trading nation. It came from March 171 to March 172.
United States, 3.1 per cent.
Japan 5.0
United Kingdom, 6.5
Japan, 3.0 Italy, 6.0
Germanv. 5.9
France. 6.1.
France, 6.1.
Canada, 4.8
Later figures, when available for all nations, are expected to show the same relationship.
Even before the devaluation, the United States was becoming more competitive. The imbalance in trade had not been reduced, but devaluation is impact is expected to show up this year.
The 1971 trade deficit was the first since 1888. Still another is expected this year, but there is general agreement among the companies to be less than in 1972, perhaps below $3 billion and $4 billion.
If the United States could merely improve the trade account to the figure attained in 1700, $2.2 billion, he points out, the entire payments deficit might be eliminated for 1973.
Though trade is only one segment of the payments picture, it might be the key to erasing the entire deficit, according to Prof. Robert Ahlfer of the University of Chicago, a former consultant on trade.
Of equal significance, he observes, is that fully two-thirds of the existing trade deficit is with Japan, which accounts for 18 percent of the United States has taken on trade with that nation and the value of its yen.
To get even this one program off the ground hasn't been easy.
the wrong side of the freeway, they are conducting the first attempt to put the long-talked voucher program into effect.
"This is the only school district willing to try it," says Joel Levin, the program's director. "Literally hundreds of districts were told about it, but every professional who worked with me even the NACP, is against it. Christ! you're giving power to the parents."
The families in the Alum School District are poor. Fifty per cent of them are on welfare. More than half are Mexican, and 12 per cent are black. The returns from the real estate tax were so skimpy last week that by $ per capita we spent on it over the per capita expenditure per pupil was less than half of what New York City spends.
The Alum District is hardly the ideal place to out the voucher plan, a scheme which simply means that, instead of the state education system, you must attend unless their parents can buy out into private education, the school district gives the parents a cash voucher worth what the child's education would cost. The parents then use it to pay the tuition for their child at a school of their choice.
In theory the system would produce schools and teachers who are more responsive to the parents' desires now that they have been changed into paying customers. Unfortunately, California law makes it impossible for parents to pay a pure voucher program because private and parochial schools must be excluded.
This, as Levin says, is the ultimate form of local control, because the parents determine the allocation of money by the parents and children in. Unlike the school system we used to, here it's the principals and the teachers in the local schools who think up the competing educational programs the parents choose. These schools have a complete discretion in how it will spend the revenues it attracts.
One program has bought itself a bus because it emphasizes
This experiment has had to be limited to six public schools in the district, which contain some 4,000 children and 155 teachers. The six schools offer a total of 22 educational programs, vary from the traditional hickory-stick approach to a more modern pedagogy of pedagogy. The program that attracts the most students gets the most vouchers and therefore has the most money to spend.
jetting the children out into the community's civic and economic life. Another has put its money in professionales, and so on und so forth.
Thus far the choices offered the parents are essential differences in pedagogical methods. The voucher system could also be used to get school administrators and politicians on the hook on controversial issues. Sex education, for example, could be taught if it is one of others so that parents who want it will get it while parents who abominate it won't see their children forced to undergo it.
Even this limited voucher program has only been rolling since the fall, so it's still years too early for making judgments, but some answers are coming in. You can go to School District, given what is in effect a complete freedom of choice in attendance, have shown no inclination to segregate themselves racially. Hence it may be that a voucher system would allow school may turn a child away could get us over this tedious quarrel about busing.
It is also becoming clear that the voucher program is no simple mechanism that can be instituted by passing out copies of the new rules and regulations. It requires a school system in a school system, Joel Levin thinks it can be done, and if he is right, then the voucher system and Mr. Nixon's federal money that is making it possible here to afford more education at fair-rate schools in American public education since it was frozen into its present form back in the 1870s.
(Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
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Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
Great New Paperbacks Hit Market
The excitement in Sue Walton's The Grasshopper (Crest, 95 cents) is unusually different. The hero is a sexual superman who invades a quiet English town, seduces women right and left, and gets ready to save them. The villain uses other plans for him. Good for the town.
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60444.
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Morton Cooper's The Cameron Story (Crest, $1.25) has similar joys in store for you—a bedroom community in Connecticut, a 13-year-old girl who dies from an overdose of methamphetamine. A real estate, parents cavorting about in various beds, and a murderer who settles down in
Cameron for awhile. Peyton Place reviated?
Next comes a paperback original, Don Tracy's The Editor (Bookt, 95 cents). It takes place in 1932, the town is over-ridden by bootleggers and prostitutes, and the town is overrun by the Stein's The Husband ($1.25) is about infidelity and a dying marriage.
Andrew Neiderman's Sisters (Pocket, 95 cents) is about two middle-aged women and the attractive young man who upsets him. Joel Mendelsohn Serena Mayfield's Stranger in the House
By MARGARET SEVERSON Kansan Reviewer
'Matchmaker' Merry, Boisterous, Enjoyable
For a very mery evening, see "The Matchmaker," at the University of Kansas in Lawrence, KS, and next Friday and Saturday nights. It is directed by Tom P. Rea, with a perhaps conventional, but nonetheless theatrical approach to the comical, farcical efforts to spring right
The play is the sort of nineteenth century face that many would have regarded as obsolete. A good deal of resourcefulness and a stage filled with boisterousness that is broad and funny, lifts the play to almost pure enjoyment.
There are intimations that mankind is wonderfully foolish and money looms moderately large for all its caperings and charm. But even more foolish is how wildlife misrepresent the human species.
Not much happens in "The Matchmaker" except that a scherming widow, played admirably by Cynthia Appley, tricks Mr. Vandergelerd, a rich merchant of Yonkers, to marry her and get married to marrying her. "Money," says Dolf Levy, "is like manure. It's no good unless its spread around." And she proceeds to expand her expense account. In the course of the story, two of Mr. Vandergelerd's clerks rebel against drudgery and take a whirl with two New York millers, while his wife wins his consent to her marrying an artist.
The set, designed by James Gohl, is probably among the most well done of painted sets around. It and the actors seem to be inspired by the formations at the finale), which keeps you aware of 'watching a performance'. The play ends with a wish for its 'ad audience and joy and the right proportions of adventure and staving at home.
Costumes by Chez Heahl suit the characterizations and offset the scenery. But the exact date of the play is, because of a leak in the screen, characters left to the viewer's imagination.
The exact time all this is taking place, though, really matters little, as can be explained by the program notes on the plav's history.
Dolly and Mr. Horace Vandergeler give a quite pair, except for a difference in
(Pocket, 55 cents), which takes place in a spooky old mansion hidden in the elms and
Historical fiction always abounds, and there are three interesting new offerings in paperback. Jean Plaidy has told us about various kings and queens, and in The Wandering Prince (Creat, 39 cents) her hero was a king of the kingdom, monarchine before he came to the throne and became the Merry Monarch of Restoration days.
their ages, Neal Fenter plays his character to the hilt. Appeals seem to lack that calm wisdom which comes with the maturity of age and so the audience is not quite sure of what happens when she does come out to an extent in her solitude near the end and she is enchanting at times.
Seventy-seven singers and dancers from Jlubjuba, Ugoslavia, will perform at the U.S. concert in New York on Friday.
The group, composed of two societies, the France Marolt Dancers and the Tone Tornic Choir, will perform folk songs and dances of Yugoslavia.
F. Van Wyck Mason is rostering about in the past, too, in The Brimstone Club (Pocket, $1.25), which tells us about young Jeremy Brett and his adventures with some of the most notorious figures sex and bauchery. The book is based on a real-life club known as the Heliell Fire Club.
Colin Machness also tells a good story, and in Three Years to Play (Pocket, 95) he describes his early days where he gets in a tussle between two gangs—the Venice Doge and the Genoa Doge, and a young playwright named Jesse interested and writes a play about it!
Two westerns by Hal G. Evarts round out the list of popular fiction—The Night Raiders and Renegade of Rainbow Bastin (and each), Evarts writes a good herd oer gorse.
Their appearance is sponsored by the KU
group's only appearance in the Midwest.
And finally for some classics. Pocket books has brought out, in extremely attractive editions, the center of interest in the art of visual lettering, literary intaglio and visual glossary, literary allusions and notes and critical excerpts an edition called "Enriched Classics". The new titles are accompanied by a series of the eray's Vanity Fair ($1.25), Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hydre (75 cents), Hardy's
Irene Malley is lovely to look at, however Barby Bauer plays more the aggressive mother type to this viewer. Carroll McKee and Dan Lyons, as Cronelius Hackl and Barnaby Tucker keep the tone high and lively with rather believable characters full of life and youth, and Minnie Fay played by Barbara Hldsak is a delightful addition.
Slavic Singers And Dancers To Play Here
MUSIC
Area Concerts, Movies Brighten Up Weekend
After the war, a mixed choir was formed. It took the name of Tone Tomic, a member of the original choir who had been killed in the war and had become a national hero. The France Marolit folk dancers were founded at the same time.
Weekend Scene
SANCTUARY: $2.50 cover charge for music and all you can drink. Red Dog Inn,
Both organizations were founded by France Marolt, a Yugoslavian ethnomusicalologist and collector of Slovenian folk songs and dances.
Marolt founded a men's chair in 1928. The counsellor was in World War II, when the country suffered. He played the piano.
THE MARTIAN SPACE PARTY—FIRESIEN THEATER and REEEER MADNESS! These movies are the featured entertainment at the Red Dog Img Saturday through Tuesday. Shows will be at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. every day except Sunday when there will be a matinee at 3:30 p.m. and a show at 7 p.m. Admission $1.25.
The choir, directed by Marko Munich since 1983, has been conducted by Janez, Lojze Grosz and
The Mayer of Casterbridge (75 cents), George Eliot's Shilas Mariner (75 cents) and Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (75 cents). These are good buys.
BACKWOOD MEMORY. Tonight and Saturday at the Red Baron. Show begins at 9 a.m.
The groups have appeared in almost all European countries, in Northern Africa and the upper half of Asia.
STEVIE WONDER: 8 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas. Tickets are $5 in advance and $6 at the door. They may be bought at Team Electronics.
Heading the list of non-fictional books this month is Thomas Whiteside's The Investigation of Ralph Nader (Pocket, $1.25). This book is a documentation of General Motors' efforts to silence or discredit the controversy over the exposé called "The Book that may frighten even those folks who are not entirely in love with Rainh Nader.
Another is a reprint of James A. Michener's The Bridge at Anauu (Crest, $1.25). This is a memorable account based on Michener's interviews with several people who fled Hungary after the collapse of the rebellion of November 1956.
University, Tickets are available in the SUA office, at Kief's and at the door for $2.
SPEAKERS
POETRY READING, GENE FRUMKIN:
5 p.m. tonight in Parler at the Kansas
U.S. Capitol
Of special interest to many readers will be three new books that deal with the Indian, Harold Courlander's The Fourth World of the Hopis (Premier, 95 cents) treats the folklore, legend and myth of the Hopi Indians. Frank Waters' The Man Who Killed the Deer (Pocket, $10) is a novel about a man who uses a Matera's I, Nulikug (Pocket, $1.25) is an edited book about a Canadian Eskimo and his primitive life.
REEFER MADNESS: 7:40 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at Hillcrest 1.
MOVIES
LADY SINGS THE BLUES: 7:15 p.m.
and 8:45 p.m. at Hillcrest. 2.
JEREMIEAL JOHNSON: 7:30 p.m. and
9:20 p.m. at HILTON C. 3.
Entertaining and frequently scholarly is Barbara Stanford's *Myths and Modern Man* (Washington Square Press, $1.49), a collection of stories of mythology of various people.
THE POSEIDEN ADVENTURE: 7:30
n.m. and 9:50 m.m. at the Varsity.
HAROLD AND MAUDE: 7:00 p.m. and
giving tonight and Saturday in Woodruff.
and Admiral
THE SWORD AND THE STONE and
7:00 p.m. and 9:40
p.m. at the Granada.
SABOTAGE and BROKEN LULLABY:
Double feature starts at 7:30 p.m., pongn
at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread
St. Admission $1.50.
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"THE WORST FILM I CAN RECALL SITTING THROUGH...EVER. A young victim is seduced into smoking the devil weed..No one seems to inhale, but it must be powerful stuff. Before the film is over, they all become screaming maniacs lumbering around like Frankenstein monsters, murdering people, leaping out of twelfth window windows and tearing at their throats shouting "Give me a reef!"." An incredible series of gross and ludicrous distortions that thirty six years later becomes hilarious when seen from the other side of the generation gap, a gap this film did so much to create."
Hillcrest1
WEED FROM THE DEVIL'S GARDEN! Kevin Saunders, ABC, T.V.
WITH 3 STOOGES COMEDY & ROADRUNNER FESTIVAL
NOW THRU TUES.
Mat. Sat-Sun-Mon. 4:15 only Eve. 7:40 & 9:30
NOTWILIGHT PRICE
Rated PG Adults 1.75 Child .75
Classified ads get results
HATCHET DAYS Washington's Birthday Sell-A-Bration
SATURDAY & MONDAY, FEB.17 & 19
C. G. LEE 1950
Quote—This will be another "Sidewalk Bazaar" Bargain Days. The Bargains are hot . . . But, at these prices the owner has a chill!!
MESSAGE FROM OWNER:
OUR BUYING MISTAKES ARE CLASSIFIED INFORMATION
1. Men Wanted
WANTED—Men with
great taste and of
the right size for
sport coats & suits
at values $60 to
$110 NOW
$29.95 & $39.95
WANTED—A home environment is needed for a large group of slacks. Were $16 to $30.
2. Lost - Found - Straved
LOST— We lost our minds in buying knit sport shirts. Now we must sell $10 and $14 shirts at $4.99
$6.99 & $11.99
Now
MEN
FOUND— For the man who wants great ties—expensively made $6.50 to $8.50
Without hairpieces are wanted to buy our sport hats . . .
values to $8
Now $2.99
Now $1.99
STRAYED—Our good sense strayed when we bought casual pants. Were to $12.00.
Not many left
3. Weather Report IT'S COLD NOW—Six more weeks of winter —Then a cold Spring. Buy a winter coat at a ridiculous price
wore $37.50 to $95.
Now
$18.95 to $47.95
Now $3.99
4. Too Late to Classify
TOO LATE to get retail on this group of $9 to $14 dress shirts
Now we'll take $4.99
- NO PHONE ORDERS
SITUATION WANTED
Owner wants customers to relieve his inventory
5. Collector's Items
SUITS—One of a kind
thank heaven, we're
tired of looking at
them, so here they
go at . . . $24.95
HAVE FUN with us on this day, but don't ask for our expert fitting & tailoring on these clothing items. Strictly Cash & Carr
6. Wool Market Quotations
THE
Sweaters are up 25% next year. One of our remaining groups of sweaters are down 50%
TOWN SHOP
839 Massachusetts
- NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS
6.
Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KU Professors Attest to Increasing Financial Crunch
By DANGEORGE
Kansan Staff Writer
"We had to have several people go on leaves of absence and one member of the faculty was on leave without pay. We even sent a colleague in an informal arrangement by the Haskell Institute."
When Grant Goodman, professor of East Asian Studies, described the salary problems his department faced as a result of financial cutbacks during the last fiscal year, a complaint that has become common on the University of Kansas campus.
Because of decreases in the total amount of fees paid by students and in the amount of funding available from the federal government and because of more rapid inflation and an increase in the expenditures, the number of faculty members, office, more than one department on the academic side has felt the financial squeeze.
The drop in federal funds has caused appropriations from the state of Kansas to
become even more important. KU showed no loss of state funds in 1972. But neither did it show a sizable gain.
Improving upon this situation was the major concern of representatives from the University when they appeared before the joint Kansas House and Senate Ways and Means Committee Thursday to present their budget request for fiscal 1974.
The departments of Western Civilization, economics, history, mathematics, Germanic languages, and physics and astronomy were among several departmentals that reported substantial decreases in funds spent in fiscal 1972 from fiscal 1971.
KU's overall operating expenditure, as shown by the University's financial report for 1972, was $51,638,626. Although this was a drop of $13,970 from the previous year's expenditure of $1,719,158, the actual increase is more than three-tenths of a percent from 1971.
In the report, the expenditures are broken down into three categories: salaries.
general expense and equipment and minor improvements. Only one of these, equipment and minor improvements, showed a loss. But it was a substantial one from $2,901,640 to $1,537,911, from the $347,849. Minor increases of $135,738 and $72,400 in salaries and general expense only partially offset it.
According to Ronald Hamilton, University Comptruppier, the drop was due in part to tighter budget controls established by the University in 1972.
"It was simply because of the tight money situation," Hamilton said. "The general expense increase was much larger to the classified employee increase granted last April.
"As far as salaries go, we can do one of two things, either freeze them or terminate some positions. We have much more flexibility and control of what we can do in equipment and minor improvements, and so we tightened up there."
"We're not in as good shape as we were several years ago," David Beard, professor of physics and astrometry, said. "Because of the cutbacks, some rather highly paid members took leave. And 'ne very good students' had to leave, cut our staff from 23 to 21 members, and three of those are extremely junior and lowly paid people."
decrease in tuition fees. Also, he said, a greater number of students are enrolling on only a part-time basis and thus are paying less.
And, despite the overall increase in trauma, often the place they were hurt the most was their back.
With the administrative offices showing an increase of $95,155 in expenditures in the last fiscal year, the academic departments must be alert to attract the most by the tight budget situation.
Prof Praises Writings Of Japanese Novelist
McCarthy told an audience of approximately 180 persons that Mishima was
Other than physics and astronomy, which showed a salary drop of $43,711, some departments that experienced major decreases in salary were anthropology ($32,498), chemistry ($44,857), economics ($41,169), history ($41,181), Germanic languages ($30,085) and mathematics ($30,017).
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Staff Writer
uncarthy, who is writing his doctoral dissertation on modern Japanese literature for Harvard University, said that it was necessary to understand Mishima through his writings in order to understand the violent suicide by which he ended his life.
Paul McCarthy, acting assistant professor of oriental languages and literature, spoke last night at the Forum Room, in the Kansas Union on the life and works of Japanese writer Kafka. The Japanese novelist and playwright known to the world as Mishima Yukio.
McCarthy described this as Mishima's protest against all that post war Japan stood for and the constitution which forbade the raising of an imperial army.
Mishima's death caused widespread shock in Japan and the rest of the world when he publicly committed harakiri on November 25, 1970.
"Next year," Goodman said, "we expect no federal funds for East Asian grants. We have had federal support since 1989 under Title 6 in the next year. And with no federal funds, we're going to be forced to make some drastic changes."
McCarthy traced Mishima's early life as an adolescent writer, saying that his first major work was "Confessions of a Mask," which dealt with a young man's development and his tendency toward inversion, or homosexuality.
A primary reason is that an even greater percentage of federal funds appears invaptible.
proximately 170 miles by bushland and revival with New York" when he came to this country in 1962. Before returning to Japan, he left for a visit to Greece, for which he had only praise.
Mishima's works, McCarthy said, depicted beauty, strength, pain and violent death. His idea of heroic death may have originated in the early 1930s, an early death as a sign of favor from the gods.
John Landgrebe, professor of chemistry,
said his department might be forced to give
him a promotion.
The film, titled in Japanese "Yukoku," was written, directed and acted by Mishima. McCarthy commented on the film, which was based on an unsuccessful coup in 1936. He said that it was almost as if Mishima had decided to put on a uniform to do justice for the film; he depicts the self-execution Mishima chose for his own end.
But another reason for the slight exception was that there simply was less money.
The talk was followed by a brief discussion in which members of the audience participated. A film, "Rites of Love and Death," was also shown.
McCarthy said that Mishima had raised a private army "to defend the Emperor" in 1968, in the hope that this would be the model for a new imperial army. Because of his views, Mishima was accused of militarism, fascism and insanity.
and, according to many professors the situation is likely to make worse if it gets better.
It was a death, McCarthy said, that shook the world and inspired a book by Henry Miller, called "Reflections on the Death of Mishima." He said he thought Mishima was denied much of the credit due him because of his radical political stance, but that Japan would give him praise 50 years from now.
McCarthy read passages from the works of Mishina to illustrate the turbulence of thought and pathology of sexuality reflected in them.
for he wished to see Japan a martial nation as of old.
"At the end of this year, we will have lost two faculty members," he said, and "we've been given no indication they'll be replaced."
The financial report divides the funds into three sources—state appropriations, general fee and restricted funds. State appropriations increase by $19,685 in 1972, less than a per cent jump. The increase in restricted funds, which include both federal and private grants to be used for specific purposes, minuscule, from $19,384,486 to $20,088,819.
accounting the circumstances of his suicide, McCarthy said Mishina made an impassioned plea to a group of young officers to rise and form an imperial army, discarding both Marxism and materialism. This meeting was met by materialism itself, said Mishina decided to show the assembled officers what heMcCarthy said,
About this time, McCarthy said, Mishima became obsessed with the science of combat and the martial arts. His work reflected his revulsion for the new Japan,
He stabbed himself in the stomach and was beheaded by a follower in the next day.
Landgrebe said that the University was budgeted to have 23 fewer faculty members next year, and he expected 70 per cent of them to graduate from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
This, according to Hamilton was due to a shift in the in-state to out-of-student state ratio. Although the total enrollment at KU is about 62%, it means that students is dropping, which means a
There was a noticeable drop in the genes' fees, however, from $8,733,869 to
Salary, however, was not the only place the academic side was hurt. The big cut in equipment and minor improvements has adversely affected numerous departments.
"Some additional salaries will have to be picked up by the University because they'll be going off federal grants." Landgrabber Jeff Bass said the year. We haven't seen the bottom yet."
Perhaps hurt the most was physics and astronomy, which, according to the financial report, suffered a drop from $35,526 to $1,694.
"We have usually kept our stockroom well filled," said Bearden, "but in the last year we've had to let it go. Now we have to buy them again." Students buy them ahead of time at lower rates. Because of this, some graduate students aren't able to finish their experiments."
Gordon Wiseman, professor of physics and astronomy, said perhaps it was simply a matter of the different departments attempting to do too much with the funds they
"Maybe it's just our fault," he said. "Maybe we shouldn't be so ambitious." But, as Landgrebe told me, the University up each of the last five, the University up each of the last five, and liberal arts departments, such as
Salesman Returns Check After Magazine Sale
Wallace set Thursday that she and her suitesmates had purchased $13 worth of magazines from a salesman who was canvassing Naismith Hall.
"Originally we though it was for a good cause." she said.
At least one magazine salesman has recently refunded money after an order was withdrawn, according to Terry Wallace, Minneapolis, Kan., freshman.
The salesman said he was a Vietnam veteran who wanted to get a job selling insurance she said, and they had to evaluate how good the firm's terms to tell howood the salesman he was.
Wallace said that shortly after the salesman left, her suitmate's boyfriend told them of a story in Wednesday's Kansan about a complaint filed with the Consumer Protection Agency about high-pressure magazine salesmen in Lawrence. The complaint had been forwarded to the state attorney general's office.
chemistry and psychology, have especially increased.
"We were lucky and had 12 new faculty members in the last year," said Charles W. Barker, a professor of education enrollment increased 15 per cent in each of the last two years and has quadrupled over the last ten years. So, even with the faculty member's faculty-student ratio is still the same."
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said that he would not like to see the law changed. The University supports open admissions, he has achieved highly successful under the present policy.
---
"Self selection in involved under the present system and we get high quality results."
SPECIAL SALE: fur coats
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ALE: fur coats
Velvet dresses
Wool & flannel
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at
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The salesman first tried to defend himself after he was shown the Kansan story, Wallace said, but eventually he did return the money.
Winter, who is a member of the Senate Ways and Means subcommittee on higher education, said that a proviso might be added to the present law that, under certain conditions, would give the regents restrictive power over enrollment at the colleges and universities.
Wallace said that they went to the salesman, who was still in Naismith but on a different floor, and asked him for their money back.
TOPEKA-Sen, Wint Winter, R-oitta,
asked the state Board of Regents Thursday
to consider changing the present Kansas
statute which requires state schools to
admit every graduate from a state high
school.
Bokonon Recycled clothes 819 Vermont
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A Letter of Welcome, which expresses our respect and pride for our returning POW's and MIAs, is currently awaiting your signature at Sandy's Restaurants.
Winter Asks State Restraint Of Enrollment
On his return, each serviceman who resides within our state, will receive a copy of the letter, and we hope, thousands of "We're glad you're home" signatures.
According to a Traffic and Security investigation report, the salesman has been identified as working for Publix Circulation Service Inc., the same company mentioned in relation to the complaint forwarded to the attorney general's office.
Come, welcome home
our own POW's and MIA's
Sign an open letter at Sandy's
---
THE POW-MIA Welcome Home Letter will be available for your signature at Sandy's Friday through Sunday. Come, sign your name. Let them know how much we care.
The Peace Corps can show you how to use your knowledge where it will do the most good. Recruiters at Engineering Placement Office (Marvin Hall). Feb. 21 (Wed.) Sign up for interview.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 16, 1973
7
KU Library Workers Petition to Unionize
By DIANE YEAMANS Kansan Staff Writer
A hearing to determine whether to grant a petition for a labor union by the University of Kansas library staff was scheduled for Thursday. Employer Relations Board Thursday in Topeka.
The Communication Workers of America, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO, presented the petition on behalf of the library staff. The petition was received with support from the communications workers union.
A letter from the University rejecting the proposal accompanied the petition.
Robert Mitchell, library employee, said the date would be contested. An earlier date would be better for the library employees, he has seen many of them leave at the end of the semester.
With the date that late, it would be difficult to hold the union elections before the vote was taken.
THE BASIC ISSUES to be decided by the board are the size of the bargaining unit and the classifications that should be included in it.
The classifications, which would account for about 90 employees, are security officer I, library assistant, clerk-kypist I and keypunum officer II, secretary III and IV, research assistant, head of security and delivery, accounting clerk I and bindery supervisor.
Charles Oldfather, university attorney,
said the University opposed the bargaining
unit because it was too small. However, the
board has the power to determine the size of
the university.
The University prefers that there be larger and fewer labor unions instead of many small ones, he said, because this would make the processes of bargaining
ROBERT MITCHELL, library employee, said that by trying to force the campus unions into larger groups, the University, in effect, was trying to keep unions from forming. A campus-wide union would not be workable, he said.
To affiliate with the Communications Workers of America, Mitchell said, 30 percent of the proposed bargaining unit must sum card states their interest in the union.
Although the library staff, which is the largest single employee unit on campus, was able to recruit more than 30 per cent of the staff by hiring company signatures from all the civil service employees on the campus, he said. Because the library staff works in one building, he said, it is easier for them to communicate than it is for other employees scattered across the city.
campus
OLDFATHER SAID the University also opposed the petition because some of the classifications listed in the bargaining unit
were supervisory.
Mitchell said he did not believe that the second argument would hold up in the hearing because the supervisory positions named had only limited power. The only power these positions have is over student fees, and they were not without a librarian's permission, he said.
The need for a labor union was first realized with the salary cuts in 1971, when all University employees, academic and civil service, were denied raises. Mitchell said.
David Heron, director of the library system, said that although the University has received about $40 million amounting to about five per cent they were still about five per cent behind the other civil service employees of the state. This lag occurred during the cutback of funds in 1971, he said.
Security, particularly for night employees, needs to be strengthened, Mitchell said. Last spring, one woman employee was raped at gun point in the stacks and another in the courts will not consider physical safety an unreasonable demand, he said.
MANY COMPLIANTS have been filed concerning working conditions, Mitchell said. Each time the library staff has been notified that a librarian told that nothing could be done, he said.
There are not as many restrooms as the
University Council Gives Consent To Jayhawk Classic During Finals
After lengthy debate, the University Council adopted Thursday an amendment to a Senate Rule that will allow the Athletic Department to schedule the Jayhawk Classic basketball tournament during final weeks, as it has done for the past several years.
The University Senate Rules and Regulations had prohibited the scheduling of intercollegiate events during the mid-year exam period, with the exception of a nonconference home game on Saturday night at the end of the first exam week. The amendment also allows a game to be scheduled on Friday night.
The Jayhawk Classic did not conflict with final exams until the University in 1970-71 adopted the early-semester plan in which exams end before Christmas vacation.
The previous rule, adopted in March 1970, did not apply to games already scheduled, because events are often scheduled several years in advance. The Athletic Department continued to schedule the Classic during exams, however.
SEVERAL COUNCIL MEMBERS opposed the amendment because students and faculty have had difficulty driving to their exams and parking because of game traffic.
The amendment, a recommendation by the University Senate Calendar Committee,
Some faculty members said they believed education was more important than athletic events and were in favor of prohibiting the playing of a game that conflicted with an exam.
Several students and one faculty member
Campus Briefs
Mortar Board
The deadline for applying for membership in Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, is Feb. 20. Those women who will be 1974 graduates and have not received a form may pick one up in the dean of women's office.
Clinton Coalition
The citizens coalition for Clinton Lake will have an organizational breakfast at 8 a.m. Saturday in the basement of the Virginia Inn. The purpose of the meeting is to set up discussions about how to enhance the coalfaction. For additional information call Claudette Smith at 843-3199.
disagreed, saying that basketball games
these final exam period during the
final exam period.
The council also enacted a proposal by the Organization and Administration Committee that the Senate Executive Committee (SenEx) be instructed to act as a clearing house for faculty grievances and suggestions.
During the course of discussion, council members said that SenEx could refer faculty members to the proper committee for implementation of their suggestions. SenEx now has the power to hear grievances and intervene. It probably would begin to assume greater role in publicizing grievances and methods of settlement.
Artist Series
Agnes Martin will discuss the hazards of the artistic discipline at 2 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Her talk is part of the Hallmark Visiting Artist Series and is included in exhibitions of costuming and sculpture. The title of her speech is "The Perfection Underlying Life."
THE COUNCIL endorsed a proposal by the Organization and Administration of the Senate to elect the three student members of SenEx from among the 10 students on University Council. It present, only the Senate Members of University Council elect the SenEx members.
Natalie Rolph, Lenexa sophomore, who proposed the change, said after the nuzzling. "I was very impressed."
before the University Senate's next meeting.
The Student Senate will choose three council members to serve on SenEx, she said, although the proposal will not have been officially enacted. She said council members presumably would follow the wishes of the Student Senate.
The council agreed to refer a recommendation to Security and Parking that a teacher will be appointed faculty who have classes or exams to park free in zones for which they have stickers on nights of scheduled athletic events. The teacher must not be submitted at its March 15 meeting.
TWO CHANGES in the 1973-74 calendar were unanimously adopted by the council. The Calendar Committee had recommended the changes to make KU's calendar more accessible, and the calendar devised by the Council of Chief Academic Officers for all state schools.
A holiday during the fall semester that was originally scheduled for Columbus Day, Oct. 8, was moved to Oct. 22, Veterans Day. The council decided that orientation week for the spring semester would begin Jan. 14, one week later than originally scheduled.
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RENT-A-CAR
THE AIR CONDITIONING breaks down in the summer, Mitchell said, and it often causes the temperature to drop.
The only other University, Heron said,
the knew to have a library union was the
University of Oxford.
law requires for the number of employees, Mitchell said. On some floors there are no restrooms, and employees must go to other floors, usually by elevator, he said. The elevators are locked Mitchell said, and there are not enough keys to go around.
Ford RENT-A-CAR
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Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates
Pinto $8.00 plus 8c mile $45.00 plus 8c mile $5.33 plus 8c mile
Pinto Wagon $9.00 plus 9c mile $50.00 plus 9c mile $6.00 plus 9c mile
Maverick— Torino $9.00 plus 9c mile $50.00 plus 9c mile $6.00 plus 9c mile
Galaxie $10.00 plus 10c mile $60.00 plus 10c mile $8.00 plus 10c mile
RMS ELECTRONICS Open 10-6 M-S
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CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The Consumer Protection Association (CPA) Board of Directors are responsible for initiating the association's consumer oriented projects, gathering resources for those projects and seeing that they are completed. In general, board members have ultimate authority over all of the organization's projects.
Saturday, February 17
The Johnny Rivers Show comes to
Baker University
Rice Memorial Auditorium Baldwin, Kansas
Any student, faculty or University staff member interested in becoming a CPA Board member should submit a short written statement to the CPA office. If you have any questions, please contact us at cpa@usc.edu.
Applications must be submitted by 4 p.m. Wednesday, February 21. Interviews will be held Thursday, February 22 beginning at 17:00 a.m., at a place to be selected.
(15 minutes south of Lawrence)
Tickets on sale at SUA Office, Kief's Records, and at the door
9:30 p.m.
CPA 299 KANSAS UNION 864-3963
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Use Kansan Classified
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We start with a quarter-pound of 100% pure beef . . . cook it up [just right] serve it with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions on a toasted bread plate. Our Pounder comes with all of the above plus two slices of mellow, golden cheese. After you have tried them, we know you will agree. They're a great McDonald's menu addition.
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8
Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansam
2
Kansan Photo by CARL G. DAVAZ JR.
Kicking High
Max Mueller, Lawrence 3rd year law student, displays a determined effort as he kicks at Northcott, Prairie Village senior. Mueller, who also is coach of the KU Karate Club, said the team was preparing for the Jayhawk Karate
Tournament that is held at Saturday in the Lawrence Community Center, 11th and Vermont streets. Mueller, who holds a second degree black belt, said he expected over 200 participants to enter the tournament, some from as far away as Iowa. The limitation would begin at 10:30 a.m. and the finals at 7 p.m. Admission is $2.
23 KU Prospects Sign Big 8 Letters of Intent
University of Kansas head football coach Dana Donfambrough today announced the signing of 21 high school players to Big Eight letters of intent, 14 from the state of
Fambrough said, "We feel we had a very good year recruiting, and we are pleased with the results." He listed a doze backs and eleven linemen who have selected
Nine players from the state of Missouri signed with the Jayhawks, five from Kansas City>Toward St. Joseph, and one each from Mound City and Blue Shriners.
Leavenworth and Wichita are each represented with two signes among the Kansas group while 10 other Sunflower communities account for the remainder.
One of the signes, Dale Zook, a 6-2, 180 pound back from Larned, will join two brothers to the KU campus, Dean who will be a junior with the Jayhawks next fall, and John, a former KU standout now with the Atlanta Falcons.
Fambrough said there would be additional signers later. "We are still after some top notch young men," said the KU coach, who added that they too will join our program."
"We're using all the facilities we have," said a spokesman for the physical education and recreation department, "but we can't have more students. Right now we have fewer facilities."
Gym's Handball Courts Shy on Needed Space
BACKS
NAME MT WT
Cook 671 10 Meade
Ron Darborn 672 10 Mandeau
Daniel Carlsbeig 673 10 Monaco
Chris Goldbach 674 10 Shawnee-Mihorn-North
Sam McCaynn 675 10 St. Joseph, Mo.-Beoston
Kevin McCoy 676 10 St. Louis, Mo.-Beoston
Andy Reuben 677 10 Kansas City, Mo.-North
Michael Simpson 678 10 Blue Springs, Mo.
Mike Simonov 679 10 Kansas City, Mo.
Dale Zook 67A 10 Larned
Warner 67B 10 Kansas City, Mo.-O'Karra
Jim De Marea 67C 10 Kansas City, Mo.-O'Karra
Bill Griffin 67D 10 Kansas City, Mo.-Oak Park
Paul Marghetian 67E 10 Great Bend
Don Pipie 67F 10 Garden City, Mo.-Truman
Don Pipie 67G 10 Garden City, Mo.-Truman
Alaskan Jr. 67H 10 Liberal
David Wapker 67I 10 Leavenworth
Blake Thompson 67J 10 Leavenworth
James Tillman 67K 10 Leavenworth
By DAN GEORGE
Kansan Staff Writer
Perhaps Robinson Gymnasium will never be confused with Grand Central Station, but on Monday and Thursday mornings at 8 a.m. there is little resemblance between the two places.
Although the courts are open to the public all day, large crowds cause the physical education and recreation department to be closed until four hours a week for each person.
For on those mornings, Robinson is jammed with people who are willing to wait as long as an hour to sign up to use one of the gym's three handball courts. Many times as many as 50 students and faculty members, stand in a line that winds down the corridor.
Those who wish to use the courts may sign up on Monday at 8 a.m. for a two-hour session on Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, Saturday, Sunday or Monday. The enthusiasm for handball is not limited only to Robinson. Allen Field House has another three courts, which are full of enthusiastic players. They are open to the public. After 11, they are reserved for use by members of the various KU athletic teams for paddleball. Bob Skahan, KU athletic counselor, said that 60 percent of the 280 athletes used the courts.
BUSINESS GRADS
Share your talents thru Peace Corps or VSTA. Recruit at Business Placement Office, Feb. 10 (Monday). Sign up for interview (Monday).
for our needs than places like Emory
(Kansas State Teachers College), Fort
Hayes State or Pittsburg. And we have
twice as many people."
At one time, according to the spokesman, phase two of Robinson Gymnastics, which will include ten additional handball courts, or fourth on the KU list of priorities.
KU Looks to Cowboys For Home Court Win
By TIM WINTERS
Kansan Sports Writer
It used to be that the University of Kansas basketball team won its home games in Allen Field House. The KU fans almost took it for granted that the team would win.
But the Jayhawks have already lost two conference home games this season. The team will face Oklahoma in KState Wildcats and then by last place Nebraska. The two losses put the Jayhawk's home conference record at 2-2, Kansas defeated both Colorado and Oklahoma at
Oklahoma State invades Lawrence Saturday with a 1-6 conference record, now the last in the league. The 'Pokes have beaten Nebraska for their only victory in the conference, beating the Cornmuskers 88-55.
Kansas enters the contest with a 3-4 score in league play. The 'Hawks lost a tough game at Manhattan Tuesday night when Lon Kruger sank two free throws with 22 seconds left on the clock to give K-Suite first lead in the game and also the victory.
Kansas has a commanding lead in the OSU series, having won 48 of the 80 times the teams have met. But one factor in the win was the lack of more games won more conference games against KU in Lawrence than at Stillwater. The 'Pokes have won five times in Lawrence and four
The Cowboys are coming off a loss to Oklahoma that was much like the loss KU suffered to K-State. OSU built a 15-point lead in the second half against the Sooners, but the Sooners backfaced for a 83-78 victory.
The two teams have not met this season. last season the Jayhawks defeated the Celtics. This season, the Raptors and the
OSU Coach Sam Aubrey said "We played a great 30 minutes against Oklahoma, but we lost three starters on fouls and missed a game." He added that an OU was beginning to make its move."
Junior forward Ken Fitzgerald leads the Cowboy attack. Fitzgerald, 6-6, is averaging 16.8 points a game and scored 30 runs in Oklahoma for his career high at OSU.
Andy Hopson, a 6-8 sophomore, holds down the center spot for the Cowboys. Hopson is averaging 12.4 rebounds per game and already ranks sixth on the OSU all-time single season rebound list. He has a 10 point average.
Tum Dicket, 6-6, is the other forward, and Ray Cole, 6-2, and K.C. Kincaride, 6-4, are the guards for the Cowboys. Junior forward Ralph Rusmason, who suffered a broken hand against Missouri, is not expected to play.
KU head coach Ted Owens analyzed the Oklahoma State team carefully saying that the Cowboys were leading the league in winning percentage would be difficult to beat if KU was not sharp.
Owens said he was confident the team had adjusted to the K-State loss and said the Jayhawks would be ready for the Oklahoma State state.
"Like I've said before," Owens said. "We have a talented team but we haven't reached our maturity level. You can't play that way, it catches up on you."
Owens also said that the line-up would be the same as against K-State except for forward Tommy Smith who will replace Mike Fiddelke.
The game will be broadcast over the Kansas Basketball network, WBW in Tulsa.
Aussie Veteran Leads Tourney In First Round
SAN DIEGO (AP)—Australian veteran Brian Crampen, forced to shift courses by a driving rain and hail storm, sliced five strokes off pair with a 67 Thursday and took a share of the first round lead in the $170,000 tournament at San Diego Open Golf Tournament.
Crampton, already the winner of two tournaments this young season, was tied for the top spot with 23-year-old rookie Tom Hale and Hale Irwin, a 400-winner last season.
PEACE CORPS-VISTA
We are looking for seniors and grad students with backgrounds in agriculture, business, home ecom, law and architecture, liberal arts, teaching, and the sciences for our programs.
FEB.19 THRU 23
RECRUITERS IN THE UNION FRASER & STRONG HALL
also in :
Business Placement Office—Feb. 19
Education Placement Office—Feb. 19
Law Placement Office—Feb. 20
Liberal Arts Placement - ntOffice—Feb. 20
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 21
(Sign up for interview.)
--with our
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
TWO for ONE SALE
Buy one large pizza at regular price and get identical small pizza
FREE
5-9 p.m. Thurs. 15 Feb. &
Friday 16 Feb.
ITALIAN
PIZZERIA
Not good on home deliveries
809 W.23rd Street 843-1886
--with our
Disgruntled
Concerts, films, speakers travel program, etc. this year??
Don't let it happen next year. Become a member of the SUA Board.
OFFICER ELECTIONS THE WEEK OF MARCH 5. BOARD ELECTIONS THE WEEK OF MARCH 12.
Festival of the Arts Public Relations Special Events
Films
Forums Travel
Apply in the SUR Office
Fine Arts Recreation Minority Affairs
MCAT
Review and practice testing program for the Medical College Admission Test
For free brochure, write
GRADUATE STUDIES CENTER
a division of The Minehart Corporation
P. O. Box 386 New York, N.Y. 10011
HATCHET DAYS
y
Washington's Birthday Sell-a-bration
Saturday and Monday Feb.17 & 19 Ridiculous Prices on Women's Wear To Close Out Season
were $20$7.99 SWEATERS... Now $2.99
were $40
DRESSES...now $14.99
BLOUSES...now $4.99
LONG to $60
OUTFITS...now$19.99
HATS GLOVES
MUFFLERS ...$1.99
- ALL SALES FINAL
Countr
At the Back of the Town Shop
House 839 Mass. St.
ON 1972 MODELS!
FINAL CUT
LOOK AT THIS . . .
Magnavox Powerful 20-Watt
Component Set
SAVE
$10190
1
NOW $178
$
Stereo FM/AM Radio-Phonon System-
model 9290 offers 20-Watts EIA music power,
Air-Suspension with two High-Com-
piance 6" and two 3" speakers, plus the
Automatic Mark I record player. Dust cove
SAVE MORE THAN EVER BEFORE
on entire remaining stock of 1972 sets . .
30, 50, 75, 100, & 150 watts!
SEE them all demonstrated in our basement storee room!
Accom
ment
are of
color.
ALL C
Open 8:30 a a.m. daily - Open 'til 8:30 p.m.Thurs.
RAY STONEBACK'S
"Come to Where the Quality Is"
929 Massachusetts 843-4170
MASTER CHARGE BANKAMERICARD Revolution Charge
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 16, 1973
KANSAN WANT ADS
9
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
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
Acomodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students in the faculty by BRING ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FILT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE DIPICE Shop - 3 bishes. No. of Kaw River Bridge (biscuit, gas heating & cooking cooks, bicycles including 10 speeds, machine oil & baskets, new bushel baskets & wood crates, new bushel wood, baskets & wood crates, Fireplace wood, baskets & wood crates, Balm alfalfa, brome & wheat straw, home grown honeysuckle, Flower base, F42-849 Herb Allergen, tff
ANTIQUE CLOTHES—523 Main, Weston, Mo.
174-608-5400. Victorian and 169-614-4544. Victorian wardrobes and 169-614-4544.
CARS BOUGHT AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vermont, 844-808-9088
Joe G.'s Joe CarlsBurg
Vermont, 844-808-9088
AUDIO STEREO WAKEREHUE—The theatre in racer at the METRO in New York. Phone 6044-6654. Phone 842-2947.
AKC St. Bernard puppies. Champion blood lines.
Arkansas. Adopted. Stud servant St.
Nashville. Identified. 865-224-8900.
Western Civilian Notes—New On Sale!
1. If you use them,
2. if they are at it.
3. you’re on a daiduvantage.
Erika Heller—new analysis of Western Civilian notes—New On Sale!
4. New Analysis of Western Civilian notes—New On Sale!
5. Town Ch
readerphone Call 852-421-0322
Minolta single lens reflex (no mirror) w/normal
Sekor 507L (built-in mirror) $135.00; Seker-
Seker 507L (built-in mirror) w/normal and
seker 15/2.8 lenses $185.00; Call 852-421-0322
2-16
1967 Chevy Impala Convertible: air conditioning
and good tires, low mileage. Calibration:
after 5-300.
MURST Minti: Minti-bike, row new later semester;
MURST Bikers: Bikers-bike, row new later semester that retail for $95.00 - make offers. Carefully read the instructions.
Mobile home on let in Bonner Springs, 20 minutes to RU—20 minutes to Kansas City. X 107 Buddy J 14 x 60, 2 bedrooms, A/C, fully carpeted, seating and laundry. Call 405-4321, 656-8230.
For Sale. Used Armstrong Flute in good condition.
6410 $480
6410 Call Suan Liam Sunan evening,
2-3-4
86 Javeline SST. Respondent metallic green full
equipment. Has excellent condition. Excellent
ex condition. Asking $495.
M44-805-3000
1969 Auburn America. To sell to. Good shape
$550, notable 318 Kentucky. No. 4, 814-345-
222.
1988 GTO 2-DR. HT, yellow with black vinyl top,
8-4pk. for sale by original owner. Ex-
test condition $41.999 after 5:00 p.m.
Made in USA now on sale. Bags ($3.99) off,
wool shirt $1.00) 15% discount on all dresses
mountain reckoned Recycled Clothes.
mountain reckoned Recycled Clothes.
mountain reckoned Recycled Clothes.
mountain reckened Recycled Clothe
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
B.M.C.O. Car; 1986 Muscle-Horse com, c. 5 peers
B.M.C.O. Car; 1986 Muscle-Horse com, b. 3 peers
B.M.C.O. Car; 1986 Muscle-Horse com, s. 2 peers
5 weeks, $387 inclus. London depart-
ing travel (ages 18-30). Also Europe,
Africa, India, 3-11 weeks. Write: Whole
Book, Laiti, Box, 197 K., C.M.,
Laiti, G414.
Fender
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
Basses
Recorders
Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Madison
145-3007
Open Evenings
SOUL EXCLUSIVELY
• Guitars
• Amps
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Evenings
Record Collection for sale. Over 300 album,
most rock. Call Jim, 841-287-288. 5-29
PIONEER model SX-620 stereo receiver. Worth
buying. Supports 3-mile monthly age, also.
Phone 841-7188, Dan.
1969. Rambler Station Wagon, $50 or best offer,
843-1223. 2-20
(1872)-Z-248 Camaro, Ex. condition = 14,000 miles
(316-318-454) Empaired, KAN, Aperture P 6 P.M.
(316-318-454) Empaired, KAN, Aperture P 6 P.M.
For sale. Upright Panasonic Tape Recorder, with
cabinet, 1000ft², 40mm. Includes Unpropped
Unoffering 100 ft². Amps input 1 each; $825.
Output 100 ft². Amps output 1 each; $825.
Stereo component package. AM/FM Stereo stereo 2 mikes. BBR charger headphones, and 10 blink controls.
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all
hoover, Evercare, Eurekca, Electrolite etc. . . 2-11
818 Mast
W310
64 TR-4. New head, reentra vajol job, good
bad 540, $833-3678.
2-20
4-Channel Stero, component system, AM/FM
player, keyboard, charger, AM/FA speaker,
monitor.
Filter 202 Receiver Amp. 28 watt RMS per
channel 2 Receiver Amp. 3" x 3" aperture
$90.00 $100.00 $42-726
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 841-8270.
2-19
DOWN PARKA with wood, two inch left, blue;
lightly used, pp. 849-593. 2-21
Let me add you a Konica Auto-reflex A, with
the same cell phone numbers as the other.
Also available at www.conica-camera.com
ORIGINAL — SHOCKING! Complete Movie
available for you on tape! TAPE'D MADNESS!
available for you on tape! TAPE'D MADNESS!
day marijuana law! Weed from the Dvars Gar-
land for Ward Quartet or Real to Real, complete just
Sedat Crab or check to SPECTRUM SOUND,
Sedat Crab or check to SPECTRUM SOUND,
6812 Hurry, SUPLY LIMITED PARK, 2-22
DODGE 70 Challenge, special edition, purple
hardcover. For $259.00. Full power, many extra, large, b42-845-638-
816.
New Australian "Dachstein" skirts with tree
clothing and women's clothing. 9-20
complete - 841-300-7655
FOR RENT
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings. 500 w/bakery w/biKY. Quit suburban location: Pool and gas-light; landcaped ban location: Powerhouse and powerplant. 2500 West 6th st = -843-723, Libby Library.
**FDEE DENTAI. SERVICE**
**FREE RENTAL STATUS**
For the last four years in rental in rental law, Lawrence Rental Exchange 2000, 2004, 2006, 2008.
Alexander's
If You're planning on FLYING,
Let Make趴窿port
Do The EWORK For You!!
(NEW Range for
airplane tickets)
—Wide selection of gifts
826 Iowa 842-1320
Wide selection of girls
Cash & carry flowers every day
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
WHY RENT?
HARVESTON LIBRARY
Make Your Spring Break
Maupintour travel service
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwv. 59)
Reservations Early
BUTCHER
PHONE 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
You have the right to call the wrecker of your choice in case of a wreck or just need a fow. Keep this in mind—call me anytime.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
Trap. 2 bed room apt., directly across MES.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, paved parking lot, Free CAMS,
commercial office space, reasonable rates, furniture availability, ideal roommate.
Suite Apts. Suite Apts. 1123 Inc. Appt. 9
phone 843-211-661
REPAIRING
IN IT'S BLANKED UP
WE'LL FIX IT
25½ HOUR WRECKER SERVICE EXPERT BODY & GLASS REPAIR 20 YEARS SAME LOCATION
DICK MILLS - OWNER
724 N. 2ND ST.
LAWRENCE, KS.
TOWING
MALLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet room with a view of the pool. Fraser Hall is only 10 blocks away, so the sunna, or just relax by your fireplace, indoors game rooms, or come by and see these spacious apartments. Rent one sleeper furnished or unfurnished. Gas and water are included; classes of various length are available. **842-7853**
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
KAW BODY SHOP
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing and occupancy, furniture, bathrooms, garages, laundry facilities, Central heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities included. Call 843-8220 or see a list at 919. wtb. 19th, prb. 12
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over building is huge! There are 30 kids' break away blocks by Nainault Park, in extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms (kids' beds) have a large walk-in closet, an electric kitchen with utility hook-ups, stove and refrigerator, carpet, central and dorm wall furnishings, and large window. February 17 at 8:25am *Cedarwood Avenue* Call (864) 252-8000
DAY 641-2800
NIGHT 842-0131
EWBilling call 842-1631
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean furnished, well-to-well-
furnished. $750 per month.
Unfurnished, not on pet. 843-856-767. 2-223
843-856-767.
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for
living in a building with 1 and 2 blocks from Union Station $450.
For Rent: 2 br. apt, AC, w/ carpet, 130, 124
Tenn. #835-5468. 2-22
Serious Student: Nice front window. Bare roof. Student-unfitted, not slum building. 928 Rhode Island. 2-20 For rent: Private warm room—two blocks from campus. Clean room with carpet. For rent: Clean, quiet apts, with carpeting, dishwasher, toilet. For campuses: Apts. 1023 Miami University, 859-425-1214 For rent: 2 bt. apt. AC, w/c wallpapers, $130.1214
NOTICE
TREASURES
Houses, apartments, duplexes, all areas,
too close to situation too. Home Labs
atrium, 311 rooms.
www.berlinresort.com
THE
in the WALL
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843.7485—We Deliver 9th & 11th
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Let Us Sell It For You
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous For consignment information call 842.7098 anytime.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
DRIVE-IN
AND COOP OI
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Will pay $26 to have my Nalismith Contract for Spring 17 taken over, male or female (age 2-20)
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. B-bar-B-Q in an
cooked salad. $20. A clab at here have $20. Large rib
plate. $40. A slab at here have $40. Large rib plate.
B beef sand .$64. Round of beef $3. $1 chicken plate.
B beef sand .$64. Round of beef $3. $1 chicken plate.
B and Tune Phone I-2-9015, 515 Michigan St.
Open 24 hrs.
*QUINTONTON LANDLORD*
No charge.
Handles duplexes,
duplicates, and
pauling. For more info call Hume Loester,
914-256-8300.
Lawrence Auction House, Sell your household
willing to pay for the services. For compartment information call 842-709-6565.
www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items. Country Shop, 707 North Side - 9 W-17th Street. Country Shop, 707 North Side - 9 W-17th Street.
Need to sublease my apt immediately. Clean;
Call 864-8478 for AC and off with
parking Call 864-8478
GAY LIBERATION IS GOOD FOR YOU: Monday—business, 7:00 p.m. UNION; Friday—SOCIETY, 8:37 a.m. 4:30 p.m. for details COUNSELLMENT, 10:30 a.m. BILE-II, 812. Union, 864.898 Room 224, Lawrence
Most Sublease-Supremes, airy, furnished one-bedroom apartment. Excellent term. 842-6053. Available immediately.
WORK ARBOAD! International jobs-Europe.
Work in all fields of Social Sciences, Business, Sciences,
nurses, travel. Include Student Summer Job
and Master's degree. Provide soft area and construction work. Ideas for part-time job are only $400. Money back guarantee. Apply early.
International Employment Box K21-K22. Mass-news-
media. Email us info@workarboad.com.
Buy a landlord's property for him with your payment. When you buy, he will follow along with your diploma to 48 mth rest. Once you have completed it again, why not check into a way to save money without nothing to learn the details. Wheat is one of the foods that can be learned from. Wheat is one of the foods that can be learned from.
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
428 Mass
tune-ups starting service
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
PEUGECT
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Peugeot uo-s $117.50
Peugeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
Independent
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Laundry & Dry Cleaners 19th & La. 843-9631
Coin-Op
DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
1401 Mass. 843-8484
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
--before farming, talk to the Peace Corps.
Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fraser, and Strong Hall.
UDIOTRONICS
DISCOUNT
The Stereo Store
033
8500
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pick up a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday thru Friday. All requests must be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No. requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
antiques 842-7098
tt
Wanted: Used Buffet clarinet in excellent condition. Call 841-3805 after 5 p.m.
2-21
Saxophone lessons wanted for serious student. Call Dave, 841-6844
2-19
Wanted: Desperately need ride from KC (1-35)
Bachelor's degree or higher.
Call Gall Kyights evenings at 243-284-203.
IGOMMATE WANTED! To share a nice mix of
courses and facilities, including all calls. Call 813-562-9588
or visit www.igommate.com
LOST
LOST - Black leather key case. Lot Two on two.
Floor Strong. If you call 684-3212, 2:22
Lost-Man's black "dattier" wallet, possibly
from a 1976 Fendi on Feb. 6. Wear:
52-148-8225 or 843-2897-826.
*
Lost much loved kitten 1 week ago. Fluffy white,
with light brown spots. Used for clare or Charabellite B42-845-094 or B42-845-194.
Brown and black part-sheeped coypu pup
baby at 108 Kentucky. Answers to PEPKR
and BKR at 108 Kentucky. Answers to PEPKR
Employment Opportunities
HELP WANTED
SALERS HELP WANTED - Mornings, apply in
person, Mr. Guy 920 Mass.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses.
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 835-608-
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 835-608-
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Estates Place
sirloin
B
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and always has been
three courses in good food.
1. Nice Nights of the Rose Garden Bridge
Crystal Tower Lakeside Inn
New York, NY
Stellar
Phone: (855) 1811
Open 1-20
Closed Sunday
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent interest in part-time commercial work for TV-radi
A range 18-40. Interview Thursday and Sat
Monday to Friday (city) City Katz 842-3588 (Please bring pictures)
PERSONAL
TYPING
The Needle Point. Men's and women's needle
safety. New York, NY. Beginning February 22. Come stick with us! $15
for a one-hour needle safety workshop.
MISCELLANEOUS
CHEAPER BEER EVERYDAY=$1.00 pitchers and 2c draws EVERYDAY from 6-8 p.m. at the HAVEN, 10:25 and Ovred Play Football, Chess and drink cheaper beer BEVERY DAILY! **2-19**
Friday Nite is Date Nite You and Your Date 3 games each $2.00
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other msc. typing. Have electric typewriter pica type. Accurate and prompt fonts. From one paper to another补错了 corrected. Pg. 84-954. Mrs. Wright.
SERVICES OPENED
Lynn, Larthey, Marsey, Bee, Debraes, Terry U. Niki, Nikit, Bathry, Nancy, Garret, Terry. You gotta be great.
For fast, dependable Volkwagen Repairs: Don
phone 841-320-1638 Elm Street, Lawrence,
phone 841-320-1638 2-22
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTER
15 East 8th 841-2634
10-5 Monday-Saturday
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
SPECIAL
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon till 6:00 p.m.
HU
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Want to Make Some Easy Money?
Sell what you don't need with a Kansan Classified.
Classified Rates
One Time Three Time Five
25 words or less $1.50 $2.00 $2.50
Each additional word .01 .02 .03
Classified Display $2.00 per column inch
Clip and fill out the form below. Bring it by the Ad Office, 111 Flint Hall (with the cash), or mail your ad to us! Classified Ad Manager, 111 Flint Hall. Please include check or money order for the full amount.
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This Box!
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(Print ad below as you want it to appear)
10
Friday, February 16, 1973
University Daily Kansan
---
DELICATESSEN
MASS STREET DELICATESSEN
Kansas Photo by MIKE FORSYTH
Massachusetts Street Delicatessen Opened This Fall in Lawrence
. Owner Bob Schumm brings new taste from east coast . . .
Deli Brings Home Eastern Twang
By EMILY BRELAND Kansan Staff Writer
If the east coast and delicatessens can be thought of synonymously, then Bob Schumm, owner of the Massachusetts Street Delicatessen, has successfully managed to bring a bit of the East to the Midwest.
The 'deli,' 941 Massachusetts St., officially opened in October 1972, after Schumann responded to what he considered a need for high quality food in the downtown area."
Schumm, a 1968 University of Kansas journalism graduate, suggested that the citizens of Lawrence were in need of an establishment to widen variety of was able than was available.
"I think Lawrence has fantastic potential," he said.
Schumm, 28, began in the food business when he opened a delicatessen in Kelly's Bar in the Westport area of Kansas City, Mo., which he later sold.
The Massachusetts Street Delicatessen was planned and designed by Schumann, Bob Lichtenberg.
No Political Contrarieties Between KU Chinese Clubs
Although there are two separate clubs for Chinese students at the University of Kansas, their members contend that there are no political differences between the
Keith Chui, Hong college student and president of the Chinese Students Association said that his club was not political in its views.
"Some of the members are revolutionary and some are conservative, but we are all associated with revolution."
According to Chui, the purpose of the Chinese Students Association is to plan activities for its members and help them with living and transportation problems.
Most of the 40 members of the Formosa Club are from Formosa, but according to Yun Kung Huang, Taipei Republic of China, graduate student and president of the Formosa University was not formed to politically separate Formosans from other Chinese students.
According to Huang, some members of the Chinese Students Association are also involved in teaching.
The club was founded about 10 years ago, he said, to provide fellowship for Formosan students who share the same language and customs.
Neither the Chinese Students Association nor the Formosa Club receives funding from China.
Powwow Planned
a 1971 KU journalism graduate, said it took
the university to find and purchase the
right location for the job.
The Lawrence Indian Club and the Lawrence Indiana Center have scheduled their first powow for 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Community Building, 115 W.
Schumm, Hudspeth and several other persons renovated the interior of the building housing the deli by working from June until October.
The powwow is one of a series of monthly events scheduled by the Lawrence Indians and will be open to the public. There is no admission charge.
Schurman said the delicatessen had 28 full-time or part-time employees 75 per cent of the workforce.
Alleged Defects Cited In Moore Construction
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
Williams, an editorial assistant in the geology department, said light switches and fire alarm switches in Moore Hall were above the normal reach of persons in wheelchairs. He said the rest room door opened automatically into and once a person in a wheelchair got into a stall he was trapped, unless another person would help him get out.
"The remaining 25 per cent are individuals who either have dropped out for a semester to earn more money or who are in school that they want to do in school." Schumann said.
Williams said that an entrance ramp was constructed for Moore Hall, but that the entrance ramp needed to be Geologic Survey is inaccessible to persons in wheelchairs because there were no ramp steps.
The chairman of the Committee for the Architecturally Handicapped said Thursday night that he had found facilities in the building where his patient was present for persons with physical disabilities.
The Committee for the Architecturally Handicapped requested last month that a checklist of standards for the removal of physical barriers be set up.
"Supposedly the state architect has checked the architectural barriers at Moore Hall," Williams said. "But he has failed miserably, because specified state stans were not allowed to make Moore Hall accessible to persons who are physically disabled."
Roger Williams, the chairman, made his remarks at a meeting of the committee attended by about 25 persons in the Kansas Union.
Robert Harris, teaching assistant in psychology, and chairman of the subcommittee on standards, presented the checklist Thursday night.
"It should take about three to four days to train the students in measuring the gradient of ramps and the pressure needed to open doors," Harris said. "I hope to complete the survey of University buildings by our next meeting in mid-March."
The standards suggested by the subcommittee will be applied in a survey of University buildings by a group of 10 occupational therapy students, under the guidance of Barbara Rider, assistant professor of occupational therapy.
The list of standards for removal of physical barriers was taken from guidelines provided by the American Institutes for architectural services, and the booklets, "Design Standards for the Physically Handicapped" and "Making Colleges and Schools Accessible to Handicapped Students," Harris said.
According to Hudspeth, who has managed michelessin since it opened, a variety of restaurants have been.
The students will be trained in conducting the survey by Harris, Don Whipple, director of architectural services, and a member of the standards subcommittee.
"There are a lot of businessmen and women, shoppers and students who eat here," he said. "Generally, the students come in the afternoon or evening. Lawrence has needed a place like this for years in its own right. But I am glad I am glad she has finally done it."
Williams said one of the biggest problems for the Committee for Architecturally Handicapped would be in getting funds to remove the physical barriers.
The delicatessen was described by Schumar as "a unique and colorful place to get specialty foods." The menu includes sandwiches, cheeses, meats, salads, sausages and breads, soft drinks, iced tea, coffee and beer.
"I have written to the Department of Social Welfare in Topeka, and I have also inquired into receiving funds from the University Budget or a federal grant."
"We don't expect every restroom on every floor of every building to be accessible to persons disabled—but some should be accessible."
"One of the major problems at KU is in the inaccessibility of persons with physical disabilities."
"We are still working to expand our menu and improve the design of the delicatessen to create a better atmosphere by using pictures and antiques," Schumm said.
Schumm also owns the Bull and Boar restaurant in Lawrence.
A theory that abberant brain molecules may cause schizophrenia is the basis of research currently being conducted by the University of Kansas professor of chemistry.
Prof Studies Schizophrenia
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
Adams said his research was primarily directed toward finding out it the human brain can manufacture the compound 6-hydroxydopamine, (6-OHDA), a substance which blunts nerve endings wherever it is present.
Because 6-OHDA deadens nerve endings, Adams said, its presence in the part of the brain responsible for self-stimulation is one of the factors that complex behaviors related to schizophrenia.
One definition of schizophrenia, he said, is the apparent lack of access to goal-directed therapy.
Adams is an organic electrochemist who became interested in applying his skills to brain chemistry several years ago. While on a sabbatical he took background courses in electrical engineering at Irvine. At that time, he decided to shift the focus of his research to brain chemistry.
Adams said that he was part of a group of organic electrochemists across the nation who have been trying to integrate their skills in available behavioral science information.
"We're trying to bridge some experiments in behavioral staff with the hard-core chemistry that we know something about," he said.
Adams said that about two years ago two researchers proposed the theory of 6-OHDA in the brain of schizophrenics. He has been doing research on that theory since.
Adams explained the effects of 6-OHDA on test rats. The results of tests on rats with electrolyte disturbance were
The electrodes were implanted in the pleasure centers of the animals' brains and the animals were taught to push a button to stimulate those areas of the brain. The animals learn to achieve stimulation by pressing the button.
Adams said that after this goal-oriented behavior had been established, a small amount of 6-OHDA injected into the pleasure center of the brain blunted the nerve endings and slowed the animal no longer brained the brain and the animal ceased efforts to achieve stimulation.
Since the lack of goal-oriented behavior is a primary sign of schizophrenia, Adams said, the theory of the brain producing molecules of 6-OHDA arose.
"It's a very audacious theory." Adams said, "and yet it has a lot of very satisfying things to it because all previous biochemical theories have requested that there be present in the brain a specific binocular molecular system. (ADS) These have fallen by the wayside, and in a sense they've all been too specific."
The specific objective of Adams' research is to determine if the brain is capable of
William A. Tuttle Jr., associate professor of history, has received an Award of Merit from the American Association for State and Local History for his book, "Race Riot: Chicago in the Red Summer of 1919." Tuttle is on leave and holds a research fellowship at Harvard University's Charles Warren Center.
History Prof Honored
'Tango'Recommended For National Honors
The University of Kansas Theatre production of "Tango" has been recommended for participation in the American College Theatre Festival because of its performance at the Central Regional Festival last week in De Moines.
Three faculty and student members of the trope received honors. Jed Davis, director of University Theatre, received awards of excellence from American Oil Co., one of the sponsors of the festival. Davis recently retired as president of the American Theatre Association and received the award his outstanding service during the last year.
Trom Rae, assistant director of University Theatre, said judges selected "Tango" and two productions from other universities as the best of five productions performed in the regional festival. Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa are in the region.
An award for excellence in acting was given to Virginia Kent, Lawrence graduate
An award for excellence in costume design and in property design was given to Bill Evans, assistant instructor in speech and drama.
An American Theatre Association Central Committee will select the final 10 productions from judges' recommendations from the 13 festival regions in the United States, Rae said. The 10 productions then will be presented by a representative in Washington, D.C., April 23 to May 6. The central committee will meet Feb. 23-24 to make the selection.
"tango" was written by Slawomir Mrozek, a Czechoslovakian playwright and was performed here by the University Theatre last November.
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manufacturing 6-OHDA. The compound can be manufactured electrochemically in the laboratory, and tests are now under way to evaluate its performance. The compound can be produced naturally.
"The real merit of all these biochemical approaches to schizophrenia is that one hopes the kind of chemistry one does, even in disproving a theory, may well be of benefit in terms of clinical treatment of patients." said Adams.
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Adams said the two researchers who originally proposed the theory have detected unusual enzyme changes in brain specimens of human schizophrenics after autopsy, but the difficulty of obtaining such specimens has left the findings inclusive.
He said about six different theories on schizophrenia have now been discarded, but the one that has survived is the one.
One of the important results of the research, he said, has been an increased knowledge of schizophrenia and ways of dealing with it.
The development of 6-OHDA as has a suspected cause of the disease has also given pharmacologists a new drug to use in order that, where the effects it produces are desired.
their understanding of the disease and their treatment of patients.
The research is receiving general funding from the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Agriculture.
Adams said a recent article in Science magazine had cast doubts on the ability of researchers to understand what they were trying to find.
The article documented an experiment by a psychiatrist in which eight sane individuals were given shiizophrenics and sent to different, supposedly leading mental health institutions. The eight were admitted after being shiizophrenics by the staffs of the institutions.
Adams said the other mental patients around the phonies were the only people who realized that the eight were not mentally ill.
Once admitted, the eight phonies begin to behave just as they had in normal life, even to the point of taking notes on their surroundings.
"I may well be," he said, "that all this laboratory work we're doing is all for naught simply because people don't really know what a mentally ill patient is."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
83rd Year, No. 93
Regents Approve Med Center Grant
Monday, February 19, 1973
See Story Page 3
Groups Miss Contract Date; Funds Frozen
Forty-two organizations funded by the Student Activity Fee that failed to sign Capital Disposition Contracts by a Friday deadline have had their allocations frozen.
The organizations will not be able to spend any more money until they have filed a contract with the senate treasurer's office.
Roger Martin, Lawrence third-year law student and treasurer, said Friday that the contract, which required groups to obtain approval from the treasurer before spending any of their allocations, would help the groups as well as the Senate.
Martin said the contract would help groups to know that sufficient funds were available before they made purchases, and that he could provide assistance for which they would be liable.
(1)
Kansan Photo by ALICE COSTELLO
The groups that had not signed by the deadline were: American Studies Undergraduate Association, Student Bar Association, Black-Tects, Business School Council, Chemistry Graduate Students, Committee On Indian Affairs, Community School (Yellow Brick Road), Concert Course, College of Arts and Sciences, Student Employment Referral Service, Student Court for Exceptional Children, Fine Arts School Council, Kansas Free University, French Department Play, Graduate School Council.
Pride
attended the Indian powwow at the Lawrence community Center Saturday night. Attendees were joined by Lawrence Indian Center, brought together different tribes of the area. Many of those who attended were traditional or ceremonial dancers and danced traditional Indian dances.
Funds were also frozen for Headquarters, Hillop Child Care, Graduate Association of History Students, Hockey Club, Intramural Games, Journalism School Council, Kansas Engineer, Karate Club, KU-Y, Law School Council, Law Students School Association Group, Music School Council, Arts School Council, Media Club, Music Educators National Conference, National Environmental Law Society, Pharmacy School Council, American Pharmaceutical Association, Amateur Radio Club, Rugby Team, Sailing Club, Scuba Diving Club, Club, Slavic Club, Student Voice Association and Supportive Education Services.
Four year old Eugene Big Goose, Wichita, sitting next to his grandfather Hollis Stabler, Sr., paused to refresh himself and look over some of the 500 persons who
Docking Tactics Evaluated
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Konson Staff Writer
Gov. Robert Docking has been attacking the Republican legislative leadership during the past several days, but how the attacks relate to Docking's attempt to get legislative support for his programs is open to question.
In Pittsburgh Saturday, Docking accused the Republican leadership of using strong arm tactics to dictate legislative policy. Docking said Thursday in Lawrence that the legislature was considering cutting funds from the higher education budget.
Republican leaders and a spokeswoman for the governor gave varying explanations of the event.
Senate President Robert Bennett, RPriature Village, said, "I suppose if he doesn't trust that a program has logical validity behind it, the program he can do is to resort to personalities."
Speaker of the House Diane S. (Pete) McGill, R-Winfield, said he thought Docking's comments were a "divide and conquer approach," an attempt create a
division between the House and the Senate. Docking and his staff members have been trying to divide the legislature for some time, he said.
Following a statewide tour by Docking during the last legislative session, Shaffer will participate in a conference.
News Analysis
He said Docking was trying to do the same thing this year to enlist support for his circuit breaker properly tax and his school fee. The company has been on notice in the leisurature. Shaffer said,
on their legislators to pass the governor's tax lid program. The overwhelming popular support was that got the tax lid through an adamant legislature, he said.
Docking's latest attack on the Republicans came Saturday in Pittsburg.
He accused the Republican leadership of being outcidicat and dictating the fate of his campaign.
"In essence, the Republican legislative leadership has served notice on the rest of the Republican legislators that the leaders will use strong-arm tactics on the legislators to vote against the circuit breaker. Docking said. These autocratic misconducts better work when the consultation of the other Republican legislators."
"If a Republican legislator steps out of line," Docking said, "they simply put that maverick legislator's pet bills so far down on the calendar that they will never be voted upon—that is, until the legislator decides he will step into the tightly regimented procedure dictated by the Republican leadership."
He said the speaker of the House and the president of the Senate controlled committee activities and the calendar of each house.
In Lawrence Thursday, Docking told the SEE COCKING Page 7
U.S. Files Charge Against Viet Cong
SAIGON (AP)-The United States formally charged the Viet Cong on Sunday with shootting down an American helicopter on a peacekeeping mission and asked the International Commission of Control and to undertake an immediate investigation.
The craft was downed Friday north of Saigon and its five crewmen were wounded. The investigation is the first the United States has sought from the commission on its own
Maj. Gen, Gilbert H. Woodward, chief of the U.S. delegation to the military commission, first sought an investigation by the military commission itself. but he said HeL. Gen. Tran Van Tra, the senior Viet Cong representative, refused.
Woodward's note to the international peace body went to Chairman Michel Gauvin of Canada. Copies also went to delegation chiefs of Canada, Indonesia, Hungary, which make up the International Commission of Control and Supervision.
The unarmed helicopter crashed in flames
Growing Pains Plague University Libraries
By DIANE YEAMANS
Kansan Staff Writer
Use of the University of Kansas libraries increased in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1972, but the number of books purchased decreased by more than 14,000.
The annual library report, released last week, states that the increase in the use of services reflects increased academic activity among students. Fall enrollment at KU increased only 3.2 per cent, but the use of the library increased 15 per cent.
The report says many students and faculty members doing research cannot find the materials they need in the KU libraries. That problem is reflected in a 26 per cent increase in loans from other libraries.
Lending to other libraries is up only 2.7 per cent, compared to a jump of 27 per cent for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1971, the report states. According to the report, the Kansas Interlibrary Loan network offers other libraries in Kansas through the Kansas Interlibrary Loan Network.
David Heron, director of the libraries, said the libraries had the same amount of money as in the previous year but that increase was due to the cost of books has increased 13 per cent, he said, and the cost of periodicals has increased 10 to 15 per cent, a disproportionate decrease.
The increase in postal rates may have been a contributing factor. Heron said.
Space is another problem facing the libraries, and the report says that KU libraries have only 85 per cent of the space available. The report says that the Bareithe-Bschiller formula.
This formula, introduced a few years ago by E. Laurence Chalmers Jr., former chancellor at KU is based on the size of the institution, enrollment, faculty, academic programs and the various types of laboratories.
The KU libraries together have a total of 255,000 square feet. Using the formula, a linear projection in the report shows that the libraries will need 165,000 additional square feet, for a total of 420,000 square feet in 1980.
Depending on several variables, the increase may be limited to about 40 or 60 per cent.
The report says that the projected in-
crease in home price decreases, which would require less sapping
space in the library; if the prices of books continue to increase at their present rate so that they cannot be purchased; or if more space which require less space, are purchased.
According to the Western Interstate Commission on Higher Education manual concerning the allocation of library space in institutions of higher education, cited by the教育部, the library is below half the standard reading station for every four students.
More stack space also will be needed in two or three years to meet the manual's requirements.
Heron said the Spencer Research library, a gift to the University, had presented a new database for research library. Although it has added about 9,000 square feet to the capacity statistics, he said, it hasn't absorbed much burden from the other libraries on campus.
shortly after it had dropped off a jeep and office equipment for a field headquarters of the Joint Military Commission at An Loc, the U.S. Command said. Spokesman it was hit with small arms and automatic weapons fire.
One crewman suffered critical burns and has been transferred from the U.S. Army Hospital in Saigon to a hospital in Okinawa for treatment for treating burns, the command reported.
The spokesmen said that although the CH47 Chinko helicopter was supporting the Joint'Military Commission, it did not carry the neutral orange markings of helicopters assigned to the commission. The CH47 had been requested by a civilian contracting agency setting up Joint Hillary Commission field sites, a command spokesman said.
The Saigon command alleged 167 violations of the cease-fire during the 24-hour period ended at 8 a.m. Sunday and an additional 55 alleged violations by the Communist side between dawn and noon Sunday.
An appeal to stop the fighting was issued at noon Saturday and broadcast over Saigon radio, the American forces Vietnam network. The vite Conn Radio and Hanoi Radio.
L. Col. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon command, said the number of violations nevertheless was the same as the past week. He said the violations included rocket and mortar attacks, ground assaults and the penetration of hamlets and villages.
"It seems to us," Hien said, "the Communist units did not try at all to respect the appeal made by the four-party Joint Military Commission."
North Vietnam charged that Saigon itself had violated the cease-fire from one end of South Vietnam to the other and was causing obstacles and difficulties for North Narramese and Viet Cong delegates to the Joint Military Commission.
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (AP)—Twenty happy, ecstatic service flewmen from the Philippines.
2nd Group of POWs Looks Happy, Healthy
Senate Filings Due Feb.21
Candidates for Senate must pay a $5 fee when they file. Class officer candidates must present a petition with the signatures of 50 students supporting their candidacy and the $5 filing fee.
prisons on Sunday. They were the healthiest looking prisoners to return so far.
The filing deadline for Student Senate positions and class officers is 1 p.m. Wednesday. Candidates may file with Sterling Hall, Sublette someone and the elections committee, or in the Student Senate office.
About 1,500 greeters lined the flight line and cheered as the jubilant men walked on to a red carpet from a C141 Starflier that brought them from Hanoi.
Their early return was the second POW release since the Vietnam cease-fire. It came ahead of schedule as a goodwill gesture by the North Vietnamese.
"We're mighty glad to be here. It's been a long time," said Cmdr. James Glenn Pirre, 39, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., and Lemoore, Calif.
His description here defends his description in my emotion.
Pirie, who was captured in 1967, was the ranking officer among the returned prisoners and made a brief arrival statement on their behalf.
"We're proud to be American, we're proud of our commander-in-chief, President Nixon, and we're proud of the American Forces." See GUIDE Next Page.
See 2nd GROUP Next Page
State Director Chastised for Lax Pollution Standards
By PHIL McLAUGHLIN Kenson Staff Writer
Kansan Staff Writer
A recent state of environmental protection bills in the Kansas Legislature, designed to put some teeth into the state's anti-pollution standards, has been in support as criticism of Melville Gray, director of the state's environmental health services.
Gray has been accused by several state senators, private citizens and a University of Kansas law professor of "dragging his foot in the mud" for violating environmental protection standards.
The charges against Gray range from allegations of general negligence to assault.
"We've fought him tooth and nail. Sen
Norman Gaul, R-Westwood, said. We think
he has served the polluters rather than we
public."
Gaar is one of the sponsors of the package of environmental bills in the senate. He said that both he and the other sponsors, Sen. Mike Munger, D-Kansas City, and Sen. Edward Leavandworth, thought that Gray was shuffling his feet rather than taking positive action.
politician, a bureaucrat who is doing a job half-heartedly.
In his own defense, Gray said that his job involved complex technical problems and economic realities that eliminated the need for equipment to pollute or to pollution problems. There are limitations on the ability of industry to comply, he said, because of a need for equipment never made before, economically unfeasible and technical problems of installation and time.
*HE FIGHTS all our bills.* "Gaar said. 'Don't think he's an environmentalist.' He is a
Gaar said Gray had opposed any attempts in the legislature to give his agency more teeth to deal with polluters. For this reason, he would vote against oppose the package legislation this session.
National pollution standards and compliance dates are set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), whose power derives from several federal laws, including the Water Pollution Control Act, the 1963 Clean Air Act and the 1972 Noise Control Act.
THE EPA gives each state the opportunity to submit plans for complying with federal standards. The plans of each state, their compliance deadlines and the standards they set, must all be approved by the EPA.
If a state fails to meet national regulations, the EPA simply steps in to take over whatever part of state responsibility is尼救ed.
In Kansas, the lion's share of the responsibility for setting state standards is held by the health department's division of Environmental Health Services. State law gives the Board of Health the power to set standards that require the authority to implement them.
For example, if the air pollution standards set by a state are not as stringent as the federal standards, then the federal standards will pre-empthem. The EPA has the authority to promulgate any regulations to fill a gap in the state protection.
THE WICHITA, Topeka and Kansas City, areas have been given the authority to regulate their own environments as long as they set and enforce standards comparable to state standards. Any local failure would result in the state pre-empiring the local authority.
In the case of air pollution, Gray said, the process for air control involves an individual consideration of each emission source in the state.
Each industry is given an individualized
schedule for compliance with the state standards by 1975. He said that if any industry violated a direct order by his agency, he was responsible. Kansas attorney general to try the case.
Gray said there were 5,000 sources of air emissions in the state, and with his limited staff and funds, there was no possible way to monitor each one.
"We have no way under the sun now to go around on an individual case basis," he said. "But we are concerned with rapid improvement. We want the maximum amount of good in the least amount of time."
"I think that we are doing a whole hell of a lot more than a lot of states," Grav said.
HE SAID that people who were hounding him for not doing a better job just didn't understand all the limitations with which he had to work.
Coggins said that the only significant positive action for environmental protection
George Coggins, professor of law at KU and chairman of the Lawrence Sierra Club, acknowledged that the Health Department's environmental division was driven by money and staff, but said that Gray was liable a poor job with his available resources.
"He's doing a terrible job," he said, "and one of the problems is attitudinal."
As an example of Gray's alleged lax attitude, Coggins said that as last summer, municipalities had permits to discharge waste into the waters of the state. He said this was in violation of a Kansas law which had been on the books since the beginning of the 1980s.
Both Coggins and Gaar were skeptical of
in Kansas had been the result of federal intervention or prodding.
Gray interpreted the law to mean that anything that he might release could make him liable for prosecution. An opinion from the Supreme Court held with that interpretation, according to Gray.
I retease any data on air quality that identified the source directly or indirectly. I would be guilty of a class C misdemeanor," Grav said.
GRAY HAS also been attacked for not releasing the data that his office collects on statewide emission sources. There is, in part, a reluctance to demand misdemenor to release any information about any industry that would reveal trade secrets in their competitive business dealings.
Gray's contention that he couldn't find any objective criteria for judging whether some data would be relessible under Kansas law and that he did not formation to protect himself. But an EPA spokesman said that Gray was probably justified by being cautious about any
"The state law is deficient in that area," said John Morse, EPA Regional Counsel. "They don't have the legal authority to give the name of the industry to the public."
MORSE SAID that this was in violation of the EPA's policy of releasing all emission
A bill sponsored by Sen. Wesley Sowers, R-Wichita, that has already passed the senate is supposed to remedy this situation. But Coggins said that both Sowers' bills and the present law were mackeries because they allowed the withholding of emissions data in certain circumstances. This would also mean that both Sowers' bills which states that such data cannot be withheld for any reason, according to Morse.
The Kansas plan for enforcing air stances was also altered to Morrill. He said the new plan, according to Morrill, He said the
See POLLUTION Page 5
2
Monday, February 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3 Department Chairmen at WSU A Beginning for Curriculum Plans
A recent appointment of three department chairmen to the Wichita State University branch of the University of Kansas Medical Center is part of advance curriculum planning for the branch. Dr. D. Reed, dean of the UMSU center and
Reed said that reports that the WSU branch would begin receiving students from the Medical Center next summer were incorrect. The first students from the Medical Center are scheduled to begin training at WSU in January 1974, he said.
Reed said that the early appointment of department chairmen was common at medical schools to allow adequate time for curriculum planning.
According to Reed, four department chairman already have been named to the WSU branch, and at least three more will be named before January 1974. Two of these probably will be announced within the next couple of weeks, he said.
Appointed to the WSU branch last week were: Dr. Daniel K. Roberts, former director of obstetrical and gynecological education at the Wesley Medical Center in
Wichita, who will be professor and chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at WSU; Dr. George J. Farha, former director of surgical education at St. Francis Hospital in Chicago; Dr. Richard A. Guthrie, chairman of the department of surgery, and Dr. Richard A. Guthrie, an associate professor at the University of Missouri Medical Center in Columbia, who was "awarded professor and chairman of the department of pediatrics at the University of Missouri during July 1." Roberts and Farha will announce their positions immediately.
The WSU branch of the Medical Center was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents in 1971 and by the Kansas Legislature in 1972. According to Reed, it was established to help increase the number of medical students at the Medical Center and to offer medical students practical experience in a community hospital setting.
Students remaining in Kansas City, Kan. for the entire three years of medical school receive clinical training at the Medical Center or Bethany Hospital, he said.
The department of family practice, established at WSU in August 1972, is the only branch department in operation. Twelve students from the Medical Center commute to Wichita as part of an elective clinical clerkship. Reed said.
When Medical Center students begin full-time participation in the WSU program, they will spend the last 18 months of their medical training in Wichita, he said.
Reed said the medical school curriculum was divided into six-week modules, with the 18 months devoted to basic science courses and the last 18 months to clinical
Beginning in January 1974, some Medical Center students will be transferred to the WSU branch after completion of their basic science courses. Clinical practice for these students will be completed in three conference hospitals or the Veterans Hospital in Wichita.
According to Reed, 16 full-time medical students will come to WSU in January of 1974, and 24 additional students will enter training in Wichita the following January. It will be that the WSU branch will have 112 full-time medical students by the fall of 1976.
people who have supported us over the years," he said.
2nd Group of POWs .
(Continued from page 1)
There was a last-minute switch on the roster, so that one prisoner was added because of family illness and another taken off the previously announced list.
Navy LJ. James Bailey of Kosciuszko; Miss, was put on the flight in place of Navy LJ. Robert E. Wideman of Bay Village, Ohio; Lakewood Fla.; and Moorcook, Calif.
None of the 20 freed POWs was a stretcher patient. They all walked off the droop-winged transport jet after it landed at 6:33 p.m. Lawrence time.
Children who lined the front rows of spectators cheered and chanted "Welcome home" as the men got off the plane and walked down the red carpet.
One man, overcome with emotion, buries his head in the shoulder of Vice Adm. Darnon W. Cooper, the commander of Task Force 10, who was on hand to greet them officially.
An officer who accompanied the men on use a 2-hour flight to Clark Air Base because of bad weather.
"they seemed in a lot better shape than the ones that we brought the first time," said L.I. Col. Richard Abel, an information officer who accompanied the flight
The plane carried what Abel called a "Halloween bag" of candy, chewing gum
The Student Senate Transportation Committee will conduct a survey this week to determine student reaction to a proposed system for operation of the campus bus system.
Tom Powell, Kansas City, Kan., senior and transportation committee chairman, announced Wednesday that the system Sunday. Powell said that the new system was only a proposal and that the committee would be looking carefully at student response and putting it into a next semester.
Senate to Conduct Survey On Proposed Bus System
The principal feature of the new plan is a semester bus pass that would sell for $16
and would allow the buyer to ride any bus at any time during the semester. The cost of one round trip ride per day during the 60-week semester is present fare of 10 cents each way is $15.
Correction
Slawomir Mrozek, author of the play, "Tango," is a Polish playwright, not Czech. The University Kansas reported Friday, the University of Chicago Theatre has presented "Tango" this year.
Under the new plan, single fares would be raised to 25 cents.
Powell said the purpose of the new plan was to make the bus system self-supporting. The sale of 3000 passes would be sufficient to pay the contract with Lawrence Bus Company for operating expenses, he said. Receipts from the sale of more passes and single fare income could be used to pay advertising expenses and other costs.
Under the new plan, the student charge in the Campus Privilege Fee of $1 for bus service would be dropped. Powell said that the $1 charge would be retained during the first semester in which the plan was used. It is also assumed that a student with Lawrence Bus Company could be paid should an insufficient number of passes be sold.
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
"They theyed were being spooled. It happens all the time up there," a source said. "The POWs just refused to go, not believing the North Vietnamese claim that their release was a goodllid gesture for the visit of Henry Kissinger." he said.
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and cigarettes. Fruit juices were served along with coffee.
official sources said Monday.
A senior U.S. officer from the four-power Joint Military Commission visited the camp and convinced the men they were really going to be freed, the source said.
added ingredients extra
Salad ... 15°
EAT IN OR CARRY OUT
All the POWs freed Sunday were Navy and Air Force飞俘 captured in 1968 and 1967. They bring to 163 the number of Americans freed in North and South Vietnam since the cease-fire agreement was signed in Paris Jan. 27.
Tickets can be purchased at SUA office, Student Union Starting Wed., Feb.14.
KU SLAVIC CLUB
This concert is free to all students with ID, Faculty and Staff $1.00. General admission $1.50.
Mon., February 19 8:20 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
If you liked the DUKLA you'll like this one.
KU Concert Series presents The Ljubljana Dancers and Singers
THREE and BOBBY McGEE
---
(Live-6 Nights a week)
The prisoners of war initially balked at having the camp because they thought the soldiers were weak.
-FREE-
Live Music
3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Friday and Saturday
Admission with K.U. I.D.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
YUK IT UP AT THE YUK DOWN
9th & Iowa
NEW MANAGEMENT
Ele and Milt (Uncle Milty) Cullis are now operating Brooks Tavern & Lunch.
"Happy Nine. 1 p.m.-3 p.m."
"Pool Tournament every Tues. Eve."
"Every Monday Night-Philips $1.00"
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842-9299
Get to the heart of education or overseas, Corps/VPISI Volunteer can show you how. Education is crucial to your career (Monay). Sign up for interview
Lunch Special
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Hamburger and 12 oz. BUD — 50c
TEACHERS
Scope:
To provide an independent office to counsel, investigate, and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
The Ombudsman Office Can Help
Purpose:
All areas are open to the Ombudsman office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation.
Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Office Phone 864-3607 Location B-108 Kansas Union
SPRING RECORD SALE February 19 - February 23
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LIST OF ARTISTS: Thelonius Monk • Cream • B. J. Thomas • Otis Rush* • Mamas & Papas • John Mayall • Amydukes • Laurino Almeida • Sabicas • Eric Clapton • The Doors • Joan Baez • Aretha Franklin • Odetta • John Coltrane • Louis Armstrong • Fithn Dimension • Bee Geees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick • Ramsey Lewis • M C 5 • London Symphony • Julian Beam • Wes Montgomery • Moby Grape • New York Pro Musica • Tim Buckley • Vanilla Fudge • The Rascals • William Steinberg • Josef Krips • Otis Spann • Eddie Harris • Tom Paxton • Al Hirt • and many others.
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THE ANTICIPATION
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and the Making of Maps
A Critical Survey
WILLIAM SPENBERG
The Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra
BRUCKER - SYMPHONY NO. 7
2 Record Set
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298
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
A MUSICIAN'S LIFE
IN THE EASTERN CULTURE
WHERE THE HERMITAGE OF
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BLACK AFRICA
AN ANTHOLOGY OF FOLK MUSIC
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An Anthology of Pulse Music
Vivian Miller
Bob Dylan
Billie Eilish
Gary Clarke
Jazz Standard
John Lennon
Diane Arbus
Steve Reich
William H. Smith
Ice Breaker
Mike Connolly
David Byrd
Roger Waters
Robert Plant
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Sam Rockefeller
William Schuster
John Coltrane
Nathaniel Ratcliffe
Michael Berry
Sidney Behrens
Steve Miller
Jason Mraz
Josh Groban
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John Cale
Jerry Garcia
Michael Jackson
Gary Johnson
Steve Pollock
Peter Fraser
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Alison Young
Michael Bolton
Suzanne Larsen
Joe Bonamassa
Gary Goldsmith
Steve Pinder
Eddie Van Halen
Patti Lupx
Jazz Man
Curtis Mayfield
John Cale
Jerry Garcia
Michael Jackson
Gary Johnson
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Michael Bolton
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Joe Bonamatta
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Milky Way
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The Baller
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kansas BOOKSTORE union
Monday, February 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
2
Med Center Building Funds OKd
Be KANSAN NEWS SERVICES
TOPEKA - A formal request asking the Kansas Legislature to authorize up to $22 million in revenue bonds and a general fund appropriation of over $31 million for construction at the University of Kansas at Kearney was approved Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents.
The request supports Gov. Robert Docking's recommendation that general fund money be used to finance a major part of the budget. The Medical Center for the 1974 fiscal year.
In the program report, construction of a planned basic science building was estimated to cost $6 million. Eighty per cent of the total cost will be supplied by a federal grant. Estimated construction cost of a planned clinical facility is $4.5 million. Costs of remodeling existing facilities are due to total approximately $3.5 million.
In other business, the state Board of Regents called for a study of enrollment restrictions and approved the implementation of some recommendations contained in the Council of Chief Academic Report on report on higher education in Kansas.
THE COUNCIL of Presidents was asked by the Regents to make a study of the state
News Briefs By the Associated Press Derailment
DOCENA, Ala.—It took nine hours to control an inflame of flames around derailed railroad tank cars Sunday, and authorities evacuated some 500 residents because of the chance of toxic gas fumes or explosions. The crewman who was injured, by R. L. Akins, superintendent of Frisco's Birmingham office, said later that no one was hurt.
Kissinger
TOKYO--After five days of talks in Peking, Henry A. Kissinger arrived in Tokyo Monday afternoon for a meeting with Japanese officials before going on to participate in the peace talks. Kissinger's talks with Prime Minister Kakui Tanaka and other Japanese leaders were expected to center on Japan's role in the reconstruction of Vietnam and Japan's trade surplus with the United States. Nixon's adviser on matters in Vietnam in a chilly rain and was met by Ambassador Robert Ingersoll and other officials.
U.N. Opposed
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-China and North Vietnam were reported Sunday to be strongly opposed to making U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim permanent chairman of the Vietnam peace conference opening in Paris on Feb. 26.
Well-informed sources said word of their opposition recently had been given to a western ambassador in Peking and to Henry A Kissinger, U.S. presidential assistant last week on his visit to Hanol. The news dashed hopes that the United Nations might be given a part in keeping peace in Vietnam.
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this action came in the wake of a request made Thursday by Sem. Wint. Winter, R-Utah State University, for means subcommittee on higher education. Winter suggested that a proviso be added to the law permitting the Regents to restrict admittance of high school graduates when entering college.
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Thursday that he was opposed to any enrollment restrictions. He said that the open admissions policy had worked for KU in providing qualified and motivated students.
The Council to Presidents has studied the problem of restrictions said John Visser, president of Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia. Several methods have been discussed, but each will require putting together a set of documents, which would be undesirable, he said.
THE REGENTS implemented recommendations dealing with graduate students in education, culture and journalism from the report on higher education. These recommendations included discontinuing 20 programs at KU and putting 24 others on campus.
The report said that a masters program must produce at least two degrees a year and a doctoral program one degree a year to be continued.
Masters programs which produce two to five degrees a year and doctoral programs which produce one or two degrees a year were put on probation.
Nichols said last December when the report was released that the loss of the recommended programs would not hurt KU many of them of whom were already inactive.
The approval of these recommendations by the board was a continuation of a process started in December. Then the Regents approved a plan to improve higher education in Kansas.
PROGRAMS WHICH the report 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 foundation, Ed. S. in research and leasures, Ed. S. in higher education, Ed. S. in education psychology, Ed. S. in music education, Ed. S. in physical education, Ed. S. in physical education, and M.S. in astronomy.
Programs that were put on probation include M.S. in aerospace engineering, Ed. S. in elementary and secondary education, and M.A. in foreign language administration, M.A. in oriental languages
and literature, M.A. in classics and classical archaeology, M.S. in physiology (KUMC), Ma. in pharmacy, M.S. in speech and drama, Ma. in East Asian studies, Ma. in social sciences, Ma. in Latin American Studies, M.A. in pathology, M.A. in musicology, M.A. in Slavic languages and literature, M.A. in linguistics, Ma. in religion, M.S. in music theory, Ma. in psychology, Ph.D. in music theory, Ph.D. in musicology, Ph.D. in philosophy, D.M. in music.
Committee to Gather Views on Clinton Uses
by CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
A steering committee to gather opinions about proposed uses of Clinton Reservoir was formed Saturday at a meeting of Citizens Coalition for Clinton Lake.
Members of the steering committee are representatives from the League of Women Voters, the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council, the Sierra Club, the Girl Scouts, the Lawrence Educational Association, Wheelport Motorcycle Club, the Audubon Society, the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, the Lawrence Board of Education, the KK Basic Water Association, Lawrence High School environmentalists and consultants from the Kansas Biological Survey and the Geological Survey.
Dan Palmquist, chairman of the coalition and a member of the Douglas County Environmental Improvement Council, said the steering committee would meet again at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Centron Corporation, 1621 West 9th to discuss finances and staffing. The corporation will distribute material about Clinton Reservoir and citizens' reactions to the reservoir.
the steering committee will submit majority and minority reports to the Corps of Engineers; the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission; the city and government agencies; and legalists and Game Association, and legislators from this area." Palmuot said.
Palmquist said the debate concerning Clinton Reservoir concerner restricted
versus multiple recreational use of the reservoir.
"Many persons want motorboats, specifically those with high-speed motors for skiers, to be outlawed at Clinton Reservoir," Palmquist said. "Then there are others who want the lake to be specifically for skiers."
The convention was sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls at Iowa State University.
"The steering committee of the citizen's coalition will have a draft of the differing views of the group by March 1," Palmquintz wrote, and drafting plans and maps done by then."
Thomas said that KU's Hashinger Hall was an experimental hall that was geared to meet the needs of fine arts students. The delegates toured Hashinger and then listened to other schools give presentations on their experimental programs.
The citizen's coalition was formed last Tuesday in a meeting attended by about 60 persons. The meeting was sponsored by the League of Women Voters, and it was similar to other meetings sponsored by the Chamber Commerce and the Corps of Engineers.
Most of the schools were from Kansas, but several schools from Missouri, Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma were represented, including New York University, Ethiopia, Ethiopian, senior and president of AUHR.
On Saturday, John Blackburn, vice chancellor for student affairs at the University of Denver, spoke about the experimental system of residence halls at his university. There, each residence hall is specialized for the residents who live there.
100
WESTMARK
BUS
About 320 delegates from 22 colleges and universities in the Midwest attended the sixth annual Kansas Residence Hall State Conference here last weekend.
KU Conference Draws 320
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Friday and Saturday the delegates meet in work groups to discuss ideas and problems.
Bill Woods, chairman of the Chamber of Commerce committee on Clinton Reservoir, said the Chamber was interested in seeing Clinton Reservoir become an ideal reservoir, not like Perry or Pomona Lake or Tuttle Creek Dam."
DON GRAMMER Owner
Saturday night the delegates attended the Kansas-Oklahoma State basketball game.
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George Coggins, a representative of the Sierra Club, said the citizen's coalition would lobby the lobbying group to avoid several "dissatisfaction" that the Corps of Engineers is planning."
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We Cannot Tell a Lie! We're Having a Giant Album Sale! Mon. Feb. 19 & Tues. Feb. 20
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4
Monday, February 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Honor at Home
North Vietnam is a chewed up country. The Nixon administration has suggested that we give economic aid to the North Vietnamese to help them rebuild, to keep them busy and ostensibly to lessen their desire to move south. Secretary of State Rogers recently referred to such aid as "a means of enforcing the peace." His metaphor, I'm afraid, should have been Scotch Tape, but that is not my main point of contention.
Our effort to welcome the Communists back into the fold may be fine and good (although I thought we were having trouble financing our own domestic rehabilitation), but if the government can forgive our recent enemies with such speed and relish, it's a shame that Nixon cannot find it in his heart to grant amnesty to those Americans who could not find it in their hearts to fight.
The administration's quickness to offer aid to North Vietnam seems to be an effort to hide and forget something. Therein lies an inherent
admission that America made a mistake in Vietnam, a mistake that merits immediate attention. But covering the gashes in Vietnam will not bind him or her to decisions he made. An ocean of aid will not wipe the blood from our hands.
If the administration is admitting, to itself if no one else, that the war was a mistake, why must draft dodgers and deserters be punished for having reached the same conclusion years in advance? American civilians in Vietnam will kill civilians by forgiving those who morally opposed the war, then that sacrifice was worthless to begin with.
Dissent is the American Way. This country's greatness lies in its citizens' freedom, not in its military prowess. Patriotism entails more than waving a flag or playing follow the leader.
We didn't win the war in Vietnam. We don't have peace. Whether or not we redeem our honor is still up to President Nixon.
Linda Schild
JAMES R. HOFFA
WILLIAM L. CALLEY
"WHAT? GIVE DRAFT DODGERS A BREAK?"
Hippies' Impact Outlasts '60s
By BARBARA SPURLOCK
Kongen Editorial Writer
Four years ago as a freshman, I used to have to cross through what was known as hippie haven to reach the campus. I would cautiously and curiously make my way through downtown houses. Now that the University has bought many lots on Oread Street, hippie haven will soon be just a memory. The street brings back another memory.
It was summer, 1966. I was only 14, standing straight in my new pale blue cullets. It was a time when I thought being cool was having legs that were tan like my feet. My parents were tall, was a time when a family vacation to San Francisco meant going to look at the Golden Gate Bridge and ride on cable cars. It was a time when I heard a song I listened to while I brushed my hair, and imagined an old lady's hat with an artificial petunia sticking out of it.
My family and I were walking, up and down the hills on sidewalks that lined wide streets. We walked around traffic amid famous landmarks. It was a foggy Sunday morning, but certainly not a still day in daily clothes, our San Francisco clothes,
We turned a corner on to a more narrow street. My ears picked up paint strains of guitar music and rhythmic rumbling of drums. (My ears were tuned to AM radio music after three full years)
It all was there that summer, there with my family in San Francisco. Cable cars were, as people had always told me, climbing up and down the roller-coaster tracks to watch the cars an hour after anthill. After the cable cars was fun, but that, in summer of 1966, didn't seem to fit the entire mood of San Francisco. There was another spirit, besides the gaiety and beauty of the artistic city—a spirit that seemed to be an inspiration for the grain it seemed to go against the grain of San Francisco and what it stood for.
of listening day and night to the beat coming from the box of music in my room at home). My eyes caught sight of a large group of people about a block down the street, in the middle of an inn. A crowd appeared as one giant creature to join with an unfaltering sense of rhythm to an unending sound of sounds.
As we came inside the curtain of sounds I could see people as separate creatures, apart from the large one they formed. They were hairy, almost like beasts, and they moved their arms and legs to the music as I'd never seen anyone do before. There were strange flowers in their hair. And the thing I just understood was the bizarre expression of joy on each creature's face.
I looked up. High on a platform in the middle of the crowd were four of them playing guitars and drums. I could not recognize the song. It did not matter.
Frightened, but sucked in by the crowd's magnetic force, I let myself be moved.
"Do you wanna dance?" I heard a
vice ask. It belonged to a tall boarded
motorcycle racer in New York.
"No, thank you," I said and decided it was time to get out of there. As I made my way out of the crowd, I noticed the intersection - Height and Ashbury.
Hight-Ashbury, explained Walter Cronkite. The scene of the newest thing with the youth, the '60s answer to the beatnuts. Cronkite and just about everyone else were calling them "hippies." He had stumbed (with my rather astonishing laugh) in with a team that had wanted to overturn the world with flowers, peace and love.
America was more affluent than ever before, and with this affluence came an even greater pressure for more affluence, a pressure on every individual to succeed. Status was often measured by being a person lived in the car he drove.
They didn't overturn the world, but they did shake it up a little. The world of the '80s in America could be described as an era of technical mastery. Science had stepped in for man in more places than ever. Life was moving fast.
On the surface, it was this "materialistic" climate that the hippies sought to change. The hippies explained their cult as a move toward simple and pure living with respect for their fellow members in the culture, signs read, in making love, not war. The war they partially referred to was, of course, the seemingly endless one in Vietnam, the embodiment, to the hippies, of unjustified hate and killing. In the large sense, war to them meant the war against losing their individuality and humanness to the all-encompassing arms of technology.
The hippies proclaimed their freedom by disengaging themselves from the bonds of society—steady jobs, paycheckes, family life, cars, fashion and drug addiction. Their dental of the American work shocked and frustrated many people. They don't want to work, but they expect people to give them money, some outraged Americans said. But it was perhaps their doing away with things, ignoring the hatred, that caused the fear and hatred that many people developed for them.
The hippies seemed to begin as a small group of young men and women who lived around Haight and Ashbury. In an attempt to free themselves from the rigors of society, they made symbolic gestures such as refusing to cut their hair or shave. Like many groups, they were bell-bottomed blue jeans. They were bell-bottomed blue jeans. They were all intellectuals, nor were they uneducated slobs. They did not all become rebellious because of overly affluent backgrounds, nor were they all poverty-stricken
children still seeking handouts. They had one desire in common, the desire to protest. This group complaint about the violence was a hot topic that was to be adapted all over America.
Whatever the hippies originally stood for, their way of life became a great instruction for many young Americans who were often failed in what they'd attempted. The message of the hippies was sweet and sincere—they openly worshiped two kinds of people. They gave way to paganism when new gods such as free sex and drugs entered the scene. The influence of these two types of experiences certainly attracted many hippies, but not many answered any hope of serious consideration for the hippies by the American public.
"Hipple" no longer was a person living free from society. It was a person who had long dirty hair, practiced free sex and was taken drugs. Unfortunately, the person could include in this kind of existence. The original well-meaning hippies, who wanted an honest peace and love, no longer had any meaning. Their theme of peace and non-violence disintegrated with time. A woman who loved came to mean only uninhibited sex.
The hippies, although not a cult today, are still with America. After the hippies came the Yippies and zippies, whose main impact has been to confuse newsmen who tried to discern between them. There are factions today that maintain the right-to-culture—the worship of love and peace, free sex, drugs, or rebellion against society. Bell-bottoms are still here. Some women don't wear bras.
Even so, the conscience of America that was pricked in the 1960s still is sensitive in the 1970s. As a permanent group, the hippies may have failed. But they must also make some people in this country think about, if not change, their ways of life.
Jack Anderson
Readers Respond
Nixon Seeks Neutral North
WASHINGTON — Despite warnings that the leopard-spot truce in South Vietnam is imminent, the United States military takeover by the Communists is inevitable, President
Nixon is determined to preserve
the fragile peace he has fashioned.
He hopes to persuade Hanoi to
Abortion Debated; Expense Rued
Abortion
To The Editor:
The essential bankruptcy of the anti-abortion argument is clearly demonstrated by facile arguments presented by John, Senior, a member of the Right to Life group. Just because people are born with certain rights in a populal problem as they were doesn't mean that it is any less serious. And although the current Supreme Court rulings is certainly welcomed by those who are concerned about population problems in the United States, above all, they have been adaptioned as the preferred means of eliminating unwanted pregnancy.
Rather, abortion is used as a last resort when all methods of contraception has failed. If Senator would really like to reduce abortions in the United States, he and his organization could more profitably spend their time with women affected by pregnancy formation and materials, thus helping to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies.
It is curious that while right-to-tallers are very concerned about the risk of penetration to a parasitic on the woman (with the attendant rights to her health), no mention is made of the woman's ability to identify and determine her own future.
It is interesting to note that the original purpose of laws restricting abortions was to stop the time when abortions were hazardous to women's health. The original purpose of these laws has since been perverted by modern scientific fundamentalist relations' efforts
The result of this perversion has been much unnecessary and dependent, walking, talking human beings. The recent Supreme Court decision against lawrs relied on the same facts and consistent with the facts.
Whose Health?
Jon William Robinson
Los Altos graduate student
peared in the Kansan on Feb. 8: "An abortion needed to protect the mental or physical health of the mother or child."
To The Editor:
Typical of popular nonthought on abortion, the following ap-
To The Editor:
Question, please. When has an abortion ever benefited the child? Some have, child Some. Some, no doubt, will spew for some nonsemen about a person being better off dead than alive and retarded in mind or mind
C. Bradley Wilson Wichita senior
These persons, however, suffer some of the worst afflictions of adolescence. In my knowledge none have done us the courtesy of offering to do away with themselves for the benefit of themselves and kids.
Dubious
John Credico Albany senior
To The Editor:
Reading the editorial, "Dubious Kudos," by R.E. Duncan, my friends and I were surprised to learn that a commission on the Status of Women of $83 for a model of a male pelvis. If they had contacted one of us, surely the real man he could have been had for less.
"Republic" and I had not only read all of the "Republic" but several other pieces as well. Or, there was the time that only one chapter (not even one book) from this book was read. Or had read the "Bible"—all of it. This problem arose almost weekly. Evidently I was under the false assumption that we had a good professors. Instead of reading thoroughly many of the great books of our western civilization heritage, it was deemed preferable to pick only a few and discuss it intelligently as if that part were actually a whole.
However, in PHIP I was allowed to read entire books. The discussions on each book were not restricted to any one idea but rather to the experiences wandered to others of his works, or to writers with similar or divergent ideas, or simply to any connections we made to other students of Civilization over PHIP because "no integrated view of it is presented for their (the student's) easy consumption. The book which he emerges are his own and not those of the instructor."
I find it appalling that Southard does not give the student more credit. A student's concepts will be those he decides to keep. As for those of the instructor, first principles and truths shall always remain so whether in geometry of the in history of western civilization. The course we teach these truths have always made it clear that these ideas have run throughout the course of western civilization and are most definitely not their originals.
Rhonda Nutting Mason City, Iowa, senior
More Pearson
We owe a debt of thanks to the recent "impatial observer," Jeff Southard, who cleared the air of the impassioned debits on the subject of the PIPH. By giving us the cold facts of the case, Mr. Southard elucidate the arguments. But one tends to be suspect of anyone who claims to be an "impatial observer" when he also claims to
To the Editor:
Pearson
have seen both sides of the situation.
What Southard wrongly disregards is the vibrant interchange of ideas in PHP. One rarely can find elsewhere the intellectual enthusiasm exhibited in all phases of PHP, from the intense silence in the sections to the lively small discussion groups. The vast majority of PHP students would find the "impartial" opinions of this particular critic rather inconsistent chatter.
Southard rises above petty name calling by characterizing the "dogmatic method of teaching" of PHIP as at best "a cult of personality" view is presented for "easy consumption." He believes the students should be "presented with many viewpoints" as long as the viewpoints are not those of a tarian stand, Southard claims students should "reach their own conclusions with regard to issues involved." Yet apparently the only way to achieve this is by having professors but the philosophy of the Western Civilization program.
Dan Allmayer
Shawnee Mission freshman
In Western Civilization we had the weekly assignments of a chapter or two or a few pages to read, and the assigned writer. The assignments were carefully selected so as to cohesively tell the story well as well as to burden the student with too large an assignment. Of course an obvious conflict arose weekly when I was restricted to the chapters or pages presented in the designated assigned chapter of Plato's
Footnote: The President was also pleased with Vice President Jeffrey G. Grimes' conversations with Southeast Asian leaders. Agnew came home convinced that won't be any repetition of the phrase Wai in other Asian countries.
Jeff Southard, in his editorial Feb. 14, claims to be an impartial observer for he has participated in both the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program (PIHP) and Western Civilization. Southard says he has seen "both sides of the situation" and, in a discussion with some courses, I would like to make a brief comment on the subject
The President has told associates privately that he expects Vietnam to become reunited in a few years. With this in mind, his administration will keep the reunion process political and, therefore, peaceful; (2) to gain Hanoi's trust by offering generous relief and rehabilitation aid; and (3) to encourage North Vietnam to remain independent of China, and the United States alike.
To the Editor:
accept political means to achieve the goal of reunification. In return, he is prepared to help the Vietnamese rebuild their country
Yugoslavia like North Vietnam that will become less hostile as it grows more independent. He is now leading in this theory by providing ample aid, so Hanoi won't have to be dependent upon China and
- Contrary to press speculation, the President never became disenchanted with Henry Kissinger during the agonizing last days of the peace negotiations. Kissinger handed the negotiator a message without authorization, said the President.
"The President is pleased with Bill Rogers' performance as secretary of state and won't replace him with Connally or anyone else as long as Rogers want the job. Rogers has acted as secretary of state for the White House, leaving the President and Henry Kissinger free to formulate foreign policy with a minimum of congressional interference. This is precisely smiled the President, what he asked Rogers to do. Our sources say that even if he disagrees, however, that Rogers could have the next Supreme Court appointment if he would like it.
Nixon's Private Views President Nixon has set friends straight about his views on politics and personalities. In private conversations, he has made these points;
It will be worth the cost, the President contends, if peace can be preserved in Indochina. For a renewal of the conflict and a military takeover by the Communists, he fears, would cause bitter intimidations and deep divisions among the American people.
The cornerstone of Congress, the committee system, is in need of overhaul. No problem is too large or too small to be shunted to some committee. There's even a committee on the beauty shop, a committee on restaurants and a committee on restaurants and, of course, a committee on committees. . . Four freshman congressmen took an experimental, four-week cram course at Harvard last December to prepare for Congress. They were Voycue Cohen, R-Maine; Barbara Jordan, D-Tex.; and Alan Steelman, R-Tex. . .
He doesn't favor former Treasury Secretary John Connally over Vice President Spiro Agnew as his successor but he has encouraged both men to seek the nomination. The President indicated that he would wait until the primaries before he will make his choice. Those privy to his views suspect that the President will eventually be the last possible minute in order to maintain political leverage.
Under the Dome
The eager Burke, on her way to her first call, lost her way in the Capitol's basement and had to ask a TV crew how to get to the house floor. The boyish-looking Capitol Hill, has been mistaken as an elevator operator and a Housepage, south Dakota Sen. Jim Aboreux frequently goes to public gatherings wearing a badge identifying him as Otto Schinkn. Explains his talk to many people, told talk more frankly with Otto Schinkn, average citizen, than with Jim Aboreux, U.S. senator. "Missouri's Rep. Jerry Litton, nurses after firing a new case worker, changed his job and ordered Capitol guards to watch his office at night.
Copyright, 1973,
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . . Susanne Shaw
Editor ___ Joyee Nerman
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--UN-4-4810
Business Office--UN-4-4258
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser .. Mel Adams
Business Manager ___ Carol Dirks
Griff and the Unicorn
SIGHE I WISH I
WAS A STICK!
WHAT PROBLEMS
DOES A STICK
HAVE? NONE !!
NO CONFUSION, NO PAIN,
NO JOY THAT WILTS
INTO DISILLUSIONMENT...
ALL A STICK HAS TO DO
IS LIE ON THE GROUND...
SUGARYOAK
A STICK HAS THE EASIEST LIFE OF ALL
NOW I FEEL GUILTY...
By Sokoloff
A STICK HAS THE EASIEST LIFE OF ALL
NOW I FEEL
GUILTY...
© Universal Press Syndicate 1973
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 19, 1973
5
Kansan Staff Photo by CHRES CANNELLA
21st ANNUAL
KANSAS
DESIGNER
CRAFTSMAN
EXHIBITION
FEBUARY 18
MARCH 13
Kansas Designer Craftsman Exhibition Opens
Lewis Ridmore, Lawrence graduate student, is one of three winners.
Grad Student Winner In Design Exhibition
Ridenour won a Designer-Craftsmaker Exhibition Award for his jewelry piece, "Eye to Heaven." Other winners were Marilyn Grisham, Eldorado, for her textile design, and Katy Linings*, and Roger Jamison, Bloomington, Ind., for his ceramic "Tablii Blue."
A University of Kansas student, Lewis L. Ridenour, Lawrence graduate student, was one of the three top prize winners in the 19th Annual Kansas Designer-Craftman Exhibition which opened Sunday in the Kansas Union Gallery.
Thirteen artworks were awarded $1,400 in prizes at the exhibition. The top prize was
Glen Kaufman, professor of textiles at the University of Georgia, judged the works and selected 116 out of 460 entries to appear in the show. The art in the show, including furniture, wood, and leather, textile design, furniture, wood and leather, is the work of 73 artists.
The exhibition had been open less than an hour when a ceramic work was knocked over and broken. The work, "Recollections of Colima," was done by Tim Ballingham.
The exhibition which was open to all past and present residents of Kansas, was under the direction of Gary Niemchok, instructor of art at the University of Chicago School of Fine Arts, presented the awards.
Three $100 Designer-Craftsman
Exhibition Awards were presented. Win-
5 Frats Aid March of Dimes
Almost one-third of the money that boosted the Lawrence March of Dimen over its campaign goal of $2,500 was collected by members of five University of Kansas fraternities, according to Frank Marzolf, drive chairman.
Marzolf said Friday that $1,000 of the $3,100 that has been collected in the drive so far was collected by KU fraternity members.
Those who participated in the drive were members of Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Chi, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternities. Approximately 75 KU fraternity members were active in the campaign, Marzolf said.
were Amy Buckingham, Philadelphia;
her was Caryn City; and Russel Schum-
lard, Mary J.
The Hallmark Cards Award for $100 was given to Karen Gavey of Groves, New Jersey. "Seaweed Shark,"
Other award winners were: Vernon Brejcha, Greenville, Tenn., $50 Kansas Artist-Craftsmans Association Award; Elinor Evasion, Houston, $25 Lilly Mills Award; Rudolph Kovacs, Lawrence graduate student, $50 Craft Varsa Award; Ernest Benson, Louisville, $10 student, $50 Endacott Award; George Whitten, Wichita, $50 Roeland Park State Bank Award; and Bob M. Wills, Lawrence graduate student, $35 Camila Cave Award.
Pollution Standards ..
Kansas plan didn't guarantee compliance for a few particular types of origination.
Kansas is in violation of particulate standards in all seven regions of the state, including coal mining, hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide standards violations in the Kansas City and Wichita areas, the state was within the federal and state regulations for emissions.
(Continued from page 1)
GRAID SAYD that much of the particulate problem was the result of blowing dust in the western parts of the state, something that couldn't be controlled except by nature.
Coggins said that although he wasn't a scientist, he thought the dust particle argument was only a cover for Gray's negligence.
"It is very doubtful that we will meet the particulate air standards by 1975 (the date of our agreement) or even 1980."
Steineger and Gaar said that the legislature was also much at fault for not being responsive to environmental questions. Gaar said that a combination of reasons, including special interests in industry, government, and science, is responsible for the lack of action in Topeka.
One of the bills would require that all records of emissions be open to the public, thus repealing the present clause and complying with the EPA, according to Gaar.
In response to what they thought was the lethargy of the legislature, Gair, Reilly and Steineger created their package of about 10 environmental bills.
Gaar said another bill would require all industries in the state to send a list of all their emissions in a categorical form to the health department.
Gould, a 23-year-old former University of Kansas student, is charged in connection with a 1970 bombing of the home of Daniel Kahnemann at his home in Jersey City. His trial is scheduled for March 14.
Douglas County District Court Judge James W. Paddock heard arguments on defense motions Friday for the upcoming trial of Randy Gould.
Paddock took under advisement motions to suppress as evidence a prior misdemeanor conviction for destruction of property and to dismiss one of the charges in the case. On the grounds that probable cause was not shown at Gould's preliminary hearing.
Paddock denied a motion for change of
use and the defense withdrew a motion to
have charges dismissed on grounds that
the statute of limitations had been exceeded.
Gould is charged with possession of an explosive device, aiding and abetting a bombing, and endangering the life of another.
Mountaineering Club Jest Takes More Serious Step
Defense Motions In Gould Trial Heard in Court
A University of Kansas mountainaineer club was formed by Gus Dl Zerega, Wichita graduate student, at half-spot, half-hoop, half-circular DI Zerega. Since become serious about the new club.
DlZerega said Sunday that a petition was circulated last week to find how many people were interested in a mountainering club. Many people who signed the petition considered it merely a gesture against an activity fee to fund special interest clubs.
DilZeera said that after the petition was circulated, he became serious about organizing a mountaineering club at KU. He plans to organize a meeting for Wednesday afternoon but has not yet announced the meeting place.
DZegega that tentative plans were being made for three trips during the summer vacation, and the club also built a training facility to maintain techniques during the spring months.
"After the idea came up we had a lot of people sign the petition," DIZerega said, but most were not at all serious, since at the meeting only about six people showed up."
"The club will be for people who are interested in mountain climbing and backpacking in the mountains," D'Zerega said. "We're all involved, we experienced climbers, but also for those
"In my opinion," DlZerega said, "when special interest groups start getting funded by the senate, there is nowhere to draw the line.
who want to learn mountain climbing techniques."
IN AN EFFORT that Gaaar said he hoped would force Gray into action, he also introduced a bill to cut off Gray's salary if the air quality for air quality compliance wasn't met.
DitZegza said he was not sure whether he needed to request money from the Student Service.
At a Student Senate meeting last week, the club said it originally planned to request funds to build a mountain in Lawrence but refused. The club said it would money and money for obtaining Jayhawk models to place at the top of the mountains the club climbed.
There also are bills which would raise the daily fine for individuals, companies or municipalities that were in violation of Board of Health regulations.
"The way to make this obvious is to draw it to the extrem."
The three senators are also sponsoring a bi-written by Bob Littrell, Lawrence law school.
Littrell said that his bill would aid public participation in environmental policy by policing and enforcing the law in industries. It also would allow citizens to sue polluters without help from the attorney general and permit them to go to court to enforce environmental standards were not sufficient.
A further provision of the bill stipulates that all state requirements not allow any further change to the provisions.
A bill introduced into the house by several representatives would create a Department of Environmental Services. Jerry Harper, the department's chief, said people who researched the bill, said it would put all the environmental law administration under one roof. He said this would increase efficiency, prove more effective and provide for better law enforcement.
"The tendency of this bill is to draw the line here, and from here we are going to try to tighten it."
GOT THE BAGGIE BLUES?
Lose Those Blues!
Come to
for the biggest selection of
baggies in town.
Mall, Shopping Center
Malls Shopping Center
711 W. 23rd in the Malls
10-9 M-F
10-6 S
We are looking for seniors and grad students with backgrounds in agriculture, business, home e.g., architecture, liberal arts, teaching, and the sciences for college.
PEACE CORPS-VISTA
FEB.19 THRU 23
RECRUITERS IN THE UNION FRASER & STRONG HALL
also in :
Business Placement Office—Feb. 19
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 20
Law Practice Office—Feb. 30
Liberal Arts Placement Office—Feb. 20
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 21
Wednesday Night Is GIRL NIGHT
at the Flamingo
Paul Gray's Dixieland Gaslight Gang plays Good Music While You Watch
TOPLESS DANCERS
Dancers from
843-9800
Dancers from
7 til 1 a.m.
Dixieland Music
10:00 - 1 a.m.
Flamingo
501 N.9th
Remember,
Like Aunt Martha
Says,
'Campus Hideaway
always delivers.'
Campus
Hideaway
DAVID
843-9111
Use Kansan Classified
INTERVIEWS
The Consumer Protection Association (CPA) Board of Directors are responsible for initiating the association's consumer oriented projects, gathering resources for those projects and seeing that they are completed. In addition, board members have ultimate authority over all of the organization's activities.
FOR CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Any student, faculty or University staff member interested in becoming a CPA board member should submit a short written statement to the CPA Office, Attn: John W. McCormack, 12345 Main Street, New York, NY 10001.
Applications must be submitted by 4 p.m. Wednesday. February 21. In advance, please send Thursday, February 22 beginning at 7:00 a.m. at a place to be announced on the provided web site.
CPA 299 KANSAS UNION 864-3963
Sp
SENIOR SKI TRIP TO ASPEN
Any 5 days and nights of lodging with breakfast, during Spring Break (Mar. 17- Mar. 25), for $55 at the Dormez-vous Lodge. Dormitory arrangements—2 to 6 people per room.
Pick any 5 days over Spring Break.
Not limited to Seniors Only
Unfortunately no transportation is provided.
Sponsored by Class of '73
Clip and mail coupon-Absolute DEADLINE March 5
Mail to: Tobin Inc.
1025 Garner St. 11A
Colorado Springs, Colorado 80905
Yes, I am interested. Here's my check for $55 (Check or money order only).
Name...Age...
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6
Monday, February 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
42
Kansas Photo by BARBARA KELLY
Nino Samuel Blocks O-State Pass
Kansas escapes with a 75-66 victory.
Arthur C. "Dutch" Lonborg, acting athletic director at the University of Kansas, was named Sunday to the National Ball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass.
'Dutch' Lonborg Selected For Hall of Fame Honors
The new members of the Kansas Relays Committee were selected Saturday. The announcement was made by committee co-ordinator Paul McDonald and Bob Pedicordi, Warnoego senior.
Lonborg, 74, was one of five men selected to the Hall of Fame. The announcement was
Committee Members Selected for Relays
Those selected for membership were:
Galen Van Blairicum, Meade freshman;
Steve Brown, White City freshman; Dave
Wilson, Minneapolis freshman;
Great Bend freshman; Dae Flood,
Leawed freshman; Bill Gels, Circlevle
freshman; JHageman Stockton freshman;
Chris Hirt, Prarie Village freshman;
David Pitcher, Stockton freshman;
Jay Thomas, Mulvane freshman.
The Relays Committee is responsible for much of the preliminary organization pertaining to invitations of teams, processing of entries and the distributing of information to coaches and individual participants. In addition, the members assist various officials while the Relays are in progress.
The 1973 Kansas Relays will be held April 18-21. This year the RELays will feature two new events, the 440-dash and the 440-yard relay for men's organized living groups. The invitational 440-dash will feature participants from the country. The 440-yard relay for men's organized living groups will feature participants from KU living groups.
'Bombers' Spur KU Comeback; Jayhawks Battle Colorado Tonight
By STAN WILSON Kansan Sports Writer
For a long time Saturday night it seemed as though Kansas would never get going. It took nearly four minutes for the Jayhawks to get their first two points and on route, KU committed four goals and Oklahoma State committed three. The Hawks woke up for a 75-66 win.
The Cowboys continued to press their good fortunes, hitting seven of their first nine shots and shooting 62.1 per cent from the goal line. The Jayshawks suffered through their cold spell.
"I thought we were trying reasonably hard," Coach Ted Owens said after the game. "We just couldn't get a shot down, They shot the eyes out early."
The result was that with 6:13 left before intermission, the Cowboys had a 31-14 lead. Then Owens decided to substitute—for all five players in the game.
"It's obvious that the other guys couldn't get it going," Owens said. "This group (the Bombers) has been playing together in the past and this is what I'd trap. I planned to use them as a unit."
So, out came Tom Kivisto, Dave Taynor, Nino Samuel, Rick Suttle and Davenight and, much to the delight of the 10,700 strong crowd, in came Dale Greenlee, Tommy Smith, Mike Fildekel, Wilson Barrow and Paase. Or, as they prey, the Bombers.
The surge, aided by a game total of 26 turnovers (KU and only six), continued for another quarter. The edition of non-Bomber Rick Suttle, the Jayhawks backed to up an away at the Mets.
We needed some scoring punch, Orrena said. "The other group was hustling, but the game was going."
What happened was that KU got some momentum—even if they did not gain many yards, they still had to play top 43-1, leading by five less points than before the Bombers came in, but the 'Hawks, in a 1-3 I-trap defense, showed they were too good, themselves not to have another Nebraska.
With Suttle recovering from his first half
KANKAS (12)
FG PT R F R Pts.
Smith 5 17 4 1 4 21
Sutle 0-25 3-4 6 6 2 21
Suttle 0-25 3-4 6 6 2 21
Rogera 0-3 4-4 1 1 1 21
Riviste 0-3 4-4 1 1 1 21
Riviste 0-3 4-4 1 1 1 21
Sansevieu 2-6 1-5 0 1 0 4
Sansevieu 2-6 1-5 0 1 0 4
Sansevieu 6-9 0-2 6 0 1 14
Pfieldke 6-9 0-2 6 0 1 14
Pfieldke 6-9 0-2 6 0 1 14
Hawke 4-8 0-2 2 6 4 14
Hawke 4-8 0-2 2 6 4 14
Marine 13-41 13-17 34 22 75
| | PG | FT | R | F | Pt. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Duckett | 5 | 12 | 1 | 3 | 28 |
| Fitzgerald | 10-14 | 1.8 | 7 | 3 | 27 |
| Kincade | 6-8 | 1.0 | 4 | 4 | 25 |
| Kincade | 6-8 | 1.0 | 4 | 4 | 25 |
| Turner | 0-4 | 1.0 | 4 | 4 | 25 |
| Turner | 0-4 | 1.0 | 4 | 4 | 25 |
| | 10-14 | 16-23 | 12 | 17 | 16 |
50. 0 61.5 12 team 2 tech. foul
ORLANDA STATE 43 23-66
Oklahoma State 43 23-66
Official, Kent Kurtz, Dr. Drew and Henry
Henry 43
Topeka Team Sport Upsets KU Jayvees
Topeka Team Sport held the University of Kansas junior varsity to just one field goal in the last 4:46 minutes of the game and defeated the Jayhawks 72-70. Saturday.
For all practical purposes the game was lost for KU with 106 remaining when the Jayhawks, trailing 70-68, narrowly missed two tie tips and a jump shot.
blues to hit 19 points and Dale Greenlee adding nine markers, the 'Hawks pulled even with 4:39 remaining, took over the lead a minute and a half later and then seeped up the context in the last 1:26 for their fourth quarter, giving them four defeats. Overall, Kansas is 8-12.
Topeka then stalled until 0:34 and KU had to foul to get the ball. Two free throws made it 72.68. KU had time for another bucket by Derrick Glanton at the 0:24 mark.
It probably wouldn't have taken the Jiayhaws so long to catch up, but their zone defense, which worked so well on every one else, fell victim to the long range bombing weapon they were trying to tuggered. The curly-headed forward ripped backs for 27 points, mostly from the corners.
With the Cowboy wintuck securely in their belts, Boyhawks travel to Colorado.
Big Eight action and are fresh off a big win over Missouri.
As for the starting lineup, Owens has a voice to make. Will it be the Bombers or an Eagles? How about a third?
The Jayhawks beat the Buffs earlier in
the season, but since that loss,
College is lurged.
"Obviously, they'll be charged very high for their assault." They're still very much in the race.
"They're not even the same team," Owens said. "They're playing with confidence."
The game will be broadcast over WREN, WIBW and KAKA radio stations. Tip-off time is 10:30 a.m.
Swimmers Capture Dual
The University of Kansas swimming team completed a perfect dual season Saturday when it defeated the Universities of Missouri and Alabama at Columbia. The team ended the dual season with a 6-4 record.
Dick Reason, coach of the Jayhawks,
said Sunday that the team was now
preparing for the Big Eight Conference
tour, to be at KU on March 1, 2
and 3.
"The team seems to be in very good spirits and very solid," Reasonan said. "We have our depth set up for good qualifying teams, but the summerers should peak at the championship."
made by Lee Williams, executive director of the Hall, and Adolph Rupon, honors Lomborg were Dolep Schayes, the late John Lomborg, Bruce Drake and Elmer Ripley.
At the Missouri dual, Kansas defeated Missouri 76-37, and edged Alabama 61-52. The Kansas-Alaabama score was not decided until the last heat of the afternoon, when the KU 400 freestyle relay team beat the Alabama swimmers.
The relay team was composed of Allan McDonald, whose time of 47.4 also was a national qualifying time, Tom Hodgson, Rick Heidinger and Phil Kidd.
Steve King also qualified for the nationals in both the one and three-meter diving competitions. King scored 278.40 in the one-meter dive and 297.15 in the three-meter score. Scott Davies of KU captured second in both of the diving competitions.
Reamon said that the 400 relay was the highlight of the meet. The relay time of 3:45.1 qualified the relay team for the NCAA at 3:25.1, and the relay team at 3:12.5 to qualify for the finals, he said.
"I'm very thrilled at being selected," Lonberg said Sunday. "I'm looking forward to going back and being inducted along with the other nominees."
Lonborg said that he was informed of the selection at the first of the week but that the announcement by the committee was not made until Sunday.
The finals times were:
*ou-yard medley relay: Uilfers,
Leaventon, Menzie and McDonald. 3:45.1.
1000-year freestyle: Gary Kempf, 1:04.8.
Tom Kempf, 10:0.9
200-yard freestyle: Hodgson; 1:48.0,
Heidinger; 1:48.3, Ingham; 1:48.8.
Lonborg was a collegiate coach for 29 years. He spent two years at McPherson College and four years at Washburn. His brother won the national AAU Championship.
50-yard freestyle: Kidd, 22.2, Kancel, 22.3,
Sabates, 22.9.
200-yard individual medley: Carver,
2.07:1. Wacomer, 2.07:7.
Lambert then spent 23 years at Northwestern as head basketball coach before
200-yard backstroke: Richey. 2:00,6
Kenmf. 2:00,7. Menzie. 2:03,8.
nautical geography,
one-meter diving: King, 276.40, Davies,
271.60.
100-yard freestyle: McDonald, 48.3,
Heidinger, 48.8, Carver, 49.5, Sabatons, 48.9,
500-yard freestyle: Gary Kempt, 4:57.6,
Irohaw, 4:08, Torn Kempt, 5:00.8
"I think my record at Northwestern was 237-194," Lonborg said. "During the first years we played in a gymnasium, but after the building was torn down we had to play in a downtown high school, which made it difficult to recruit."
Lonberg will be inducted into the Hall of Pence on April 26. The new selections bring in a range of distinguished guests.
三 meter-diving : King, 297.15, Davies,
263.60.
Other KU greats who have been inducted into the Hall of Fame were Dr. Forrest "Phog" Allen, Bunn Adolph Rupp, E. C. Quigley and Paul Endacott.
100-yard free relay: McDonald, Hodgson,
Heidinger and Kidd, 3:11 (B team) and
3:16 (B).
Ripley was a player for the Original Celtics and later coached at Notre Dame and for the Harlem Globetrotters. Schayes was a 12-time member of the National Basketball Association's All-Star team and later coached in the NBA.
Bckman gained his fame as "The Babe
buff of football" when playing with the on-
town Red Sox.
OPEN TO ANYONE
Drake coached the Oldahoma Sooners for 17 years, winning or tying for six conference titles. In 1947 his team lost the NCAA championship game to Holy Cross.
Organizational Meeting on Wednesday February 21 at 8:00 p.m. in Room 303 Strong.
Kansan Correction
The University of Kansas Karate Tournament will be held on Saturday, Feb. 24, at the Lawrence Community Building, 1100 Crestwood Blvd., Feb. 17, as reported in the Friday Kansan.
SUA LIFE DRAWING CLASS
Assistant Resident Director,
There will be a $2.00 participation fee for the entire semester.
Sign Up Immediately in the SUA Office
JOHN HADDOCK FORD
Phone:
843-3500
Ford RENT-A-CAR
Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates
Pinto $8.00 plus 8 mile $45.00 plus 8 mile $5.33 plus 8 mile
Pinto Wagon $9.00 plus 9 mile $50.00 plus 9 mile $6.00 plus 9 mile
Maverick— Torino $9.00 plus 9 mile $50.00 plus 9 mile $6.00 plus 9 mile
Galaxie $10.00 plus 10 mile $60.00 plus 10 mile $8.00 plus 10 mile
P. O. Box 647 — Lawrence, Kansas 64044
OLYMPIA. Parts 1 & 2
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Directed by
Leni Riefenstahl
Woodruff Feb. 21 75c
3
UMBRELLAS
CASINAL 7:30
film Series 9:15
WED
Resident Assistant,
For 1973-74
School Year.
CHERBOURG
Directed by Jacque Demy (1964)
Film Society
Woodruff 3:30,7:30,9:30
Tuesday Feb.20 75c
Spotlight on Modern Dance
Summer of '42 A novel by
Herman Raucher
Applications Available For Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Dr.
A.
SORGENTLY ADMIRER DIE
DANCING PROPRIET
ACROBATOS OF GOD
SERAPHIC DIALOGUE
Special Films
-plus
Part Six of Captain Marvel
Popular Films
Woodruff 7:30
Mon. Feb. 19 75c
FILMS SUA FILMS C
Woodruff 7 & 9:30
Feb. 23 & 24 60c
THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE
Science Fiction
Episode four of Phantom Empire
FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Science Fiction
Ballroom 7:30
Tues. Feb. 20 75c
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
7:30 p.m.: "How to Get a Job"
(speakers: Panel of personnel from various K.U.
placement offices.)
CAREERS SEMINAR
Feb. 20-22
Thursday, February 22:
€
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
222 Strong 864-3552
KU Commission on the Status of Women
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
7:30 p.m.: "Expanding Career Opportunities"
(speakers: Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, Tom Moore,
Kansas Civil Rights Commission)
The Sen. of the and chain Com
D
Wednesday, February 21:
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
"W was crea state inten
Fot sendi they budge use.
Tuesday, February 20:
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 19, 1973
7
Docking
(Continued from page 1)
KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors that the Republican leaders were threatening to use money budgeted for higher education to fund their school finance plan. He likened the legislature's possible cut to akin to an infant born about $3 million脐带 cut from the governor's recommendation for higher education.
Four Republican leaders responded by sending a letter to the AAUP denying that they had any intention of diverting funds budgeted for higher educations to any other
"Insofar as any of us are aware, there is not only an absence of any intent to cut the budget for higher education," the four legislators wrote, "but there is a current intention to make some improvements in that budget to the extent that funds are
"We are indeed sorry that your chapter was used as a partition sounding board to create needless fear by inaccurate statements in the text to the intentions of the 1973 license."
The letter was signed by Bennett, McGill, Sen. Ross O. Doyen, R-Concordia, chairman of the Senate Way and Means Committee, and Rep. Clyde Hill, R-Yates Center, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
He said his main concern was Docking's "gross misrepresentation." He said he hoped the speeches were simply a matter of information and not anything intentional.
MGill said that Docking's attacks had not been successful in causing a division between the House and the Senate and that the president would have on the 1973 legislature would have on the 1973 legislature.
Shaffer said Docking believed the people supported his property tax lid and tax circuit breaker by a wide margin. The governor will be talking more about the legislature and his programs in the next few days and weeks, he said.
Job Seminar To Be Held
The Commission on the Status of Women
visits the seminar Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday.
Brochures and information on career opportunities will be available at a table in the library.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Tom Moore, a member of the Lawrence Civil Rights Commission, will speak on career opportunities at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Regional Room of the Kansas Union, Smith said.
Representatives from the University of Kansas Job Placement Service will speak at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
Campus Briefs
Bahai Fellowship
Music Therapy Club
The Music Therapy Club will meet at 8 tonight in 334 Haworth. A representative from the Olathe School for the Deaf will speak.
New KU IDs
The Bhai Fellowship will meet at 7:30 tonight in the International Room, Kansas Union. Barbara Bikman, Albany, Ore., co-host of *Prejudice in a Collapsing Society*, a topic "Prejudice in a Collapsing Society."
Three Days
Affirmative Action
Students who had new KU identification cards made for Spring Semester may pick them up at Window 1 of the registrar's office in Strong Hall. Students who had cards made last semester, but have not yet picked them up, may also obtain their cards at Window 1. The windows will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
The Kansas Association of Public Employer will meet at 7:30 tonight at South Pacific University.
Public Emploves
Copies of the Affirmative Action Report for the University of Kansas are available in the Reading Room of Watson Library, Vicki's Office of Affirmative Action said Friday.
Faculty Recital
Howard Boyajian, violinist, and Robert Ward, pianist, will present a sonata recital for the Faculty Recital Series at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Mortar Board
Questionnaires for membership in Mortar Board, the senior women's honorary society, must be returned to the Office of the Dean of Women by Tuesday.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
each additional word: $.01
THREE DAYS
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kranan and Kranan International to be offered on national tertiary, please BEING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE STOCKTON shop-3 blacks. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Hwy 59-40. Antiquities, including antique oakwork, dating down, bicycles incl 18 speedes, hot pot belly waffles, 12 baskets and 2½ buckets and 1½ bucket baskets & wooden crates. Fireplace cord price. Ballet afaile with brome & wheat straw. Furniture incl table & chairs. Offer 9 to 6, day 7: 843-319. Here Allerdt尔德. Offer 9 to 6, day 7: 843-319.
CARS BUIGHT AND SOLD. For the best deal
in town on used cars, G.L. Joe's Used Cars
is a great place to buy.
RAY AUDIO TUNER WAKEHOUSE The Street
Band, Lawrens, Kane, 60441 Phone 842-8037 - UU
Lawrens, Lawrens, Kane, 60441 Phone 842-8037 - UU
ARC St. Bernardus, Champion blood lines.
ARC St. Bernardus, Buffalo blood lines.
Mont Bleu St. Bernardus, 844-283-2.
2-19
There are two ways of look.
1. If you use them,
make up an advantage.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you see them
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—
"nothing
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*. Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
AKC. St. Bernard puppy, 5 mos. Female, very
reasonable. Call 842-849-6898. 2-19
1968 GTO 2-DR HT, yellow with black vinyl ton.
1968 GTO 2-DR HT, by original owner.
1968 GTO 2-DR HT, by original owner.
BOKONO ORIGINAL ANTIQUE CLOTHES
now on sale, fire coats ($15-$20) flannel and wool shirts $1.90) 15% discount on all dresses
mount. $493.80 Reckless Cycled Clothes
mount. $493.80 2-19
BMOC. C, 1968 Alfa-Romeo conv. 5, speeded
from 320 to 275 km/h. 1968 Alfa-Romeo
+ brakes + 1506-1184, Basemont kit,
1968 Alfa-Romeo
Record Collection for Sale. Over 300 albums,
most rock, rock Call; Jm14; 8287. 2, 5-19
1972-Z/8 Camaro, Ex. condition = 14,000 miles
(316) 343-454 (Emporia, Kan.) AFTER P-20
P-20
1960 Rambler Station Wagon, $20 or best offer,
843-1232. 2-20
For sale. Upright Panasonic Tape Recorder with
Unpacked 10ft. Ampere. Impresses 100s. each. $425.
Onsite WIFI, Bluetooth, and more.
component package, AM/FM Streeros 12 mikes, BRB chang headphones, and 10 blank mikes, BRB chang headphones.
A good stock of used vacuum cleaners, all over Hoover, Eureka, Electrolite, etc. 9-21
BRM Man
4-Channel stereo component system, AM/FM
player, H5B 6000 charge 18 ADB speakers, at-
tendant, wired microphone
*
Fisher 202 Receiver Amp 15, 28 watts HMS per
channel. Amps range 1, 3", 5" spaced
$400.00; Calm 842-7258.
Alexander's
72 Toyota Corolla. Deluxe, clean, snow tires,
must sell, call 841-5270.
2-19
—Wide selection of gifts
—Wide selection of girls
—Cash & carry flowers every day.
824 Iowa 842-1320
PEUGECT
64 7R-14, New head, recent valve job, good
draft, $450, 834-3678. 2-20
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
DOWN PARKA with hood, two inch loft, blue
lightly used, SPC 842-5932 2-21
Pougeot uo-8 $117.50
Let me do all you will a Konix Auto-refer, with
let us tell you about the Konix Auto-refer,
which also available. All konics & Pentax camera &
monitors are Konix Auto-refer.
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
FOR RENT
For sale. 1986 BSA Victor, 4,300 miles. $400. Call
841-5298.
1-29
ORIGINAL — SHOCKING! Complete Movie
available for you on tapes "TREFFER MADNESS"
for all of your movie needs. Available for
marriages lawn Wed from the Dwarf Garris,
to the Jett, to the Rocky Mountain, to
Ward Caulette or Red to Reel, complete just
Sale. Cash or Check to SPECTRUM SOUNDS,
Sensitivity Park, Park 6222,
6212 Hurry. SUPPLY LIMITED. 2-322
For sale. 65 Ford Custom, very dependable, $250.
Ford Cavalier, very dependable, $349.
Ford Baja, very dependable, $489-491 before 10 p.m., $429-430 after 10 p.m.
New Austrian "Dachstein" to boot with free,
dressings and clogs. Women's 8-10,
complete - 841-327-8500, 2-20
www.austria-boot.com
DODGE 70 Challenge; special edition, purple
full power, many extra, $445.95,
full power, many extra, $445.95.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall courses 1 bedroom w/study; Quit tuberbath location; Pool and gas-light; landed courtyard; Excellent management. 2000 Weekly rates $2-32
For the latest up to the minute listing in rental
centers, Rental Rentals - Rental Rentals,
2001. 91 Kentucky, 5-8
**FREE RENTAL, SERVICE**
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP CLIMBING *CAMPING* in the woods, directly across Carlin. direct eleven across Carlin. from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus. Campuses located near swimming pool; security service. Rentable rates, furniture available. ideal roommates or compa. In Sainte Apter. 1125 Ind. Apt. 9 - 11.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
ADAPTMENTS
RIDE ON BICYCLES
1401 Mass. 843-8484
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet courtyard. The large patio has 16 steps to Fraser Hall is only 10 blocks away the gym and library. The kitchen has a breakfast bar.
Come by and see their room apartments. Rent them a private bedroom, a desk, water bills are paid. Leases of various lengths are available.
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana 842-5522
c.c.
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR WASH
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR
WASH
Plenty of
Pressure
Soap and Heat
2 BLKS NORTH
of KAW BRIDGE
Sleeping rooms, stage and double furnished for kids
13, 14 and 15. 1% and 2 blocks from Union Phone 843-767-367
Serious Student: Nice front room in quiet home.
Fully furnished room with high housing in 2028 Brook Island. 2-20
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. New leading i and ii bedrooms, furnished and unfurnished with en suite baths, heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities close. Close to campus. Call 845-6228 or see at 1741 904-3747.
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean furnished, walk-to-wait
station. Gas station. 800-259-4573.
Union, no pets. Phone #835731-2-23
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over block away from the new Nesmith Park, in an extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms (kids' beds are 28"x32") of a custom electric kitchen with utility hook-up, stove and refrigerator, carpet, centred by storm windows and flanking the large windows. February 17. @ 825 Alameda Avenue. Call
Fender
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
• Guitars
• Acoustics
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass.
843-3007
Open Evenings
NOTICE
For Ren! 2 br. apt, AC, w/ w/carpet. $130, 1214
Tenn. 854-548. 2-22
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
For rent. Clean, quiet apts, with carpeting, dishwasher, and post control near campus. Earley is located 10 minutes from downtown.
For Rent- rent warm room-two blocks from
camus- Kitchen shared-824-6475
2-20
ATTENTION RENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
can get so too difficult to home. Home is
certain; 311 miles of road.
will pay $35 to have you Naimanth Contract for
172 takes on死男 Male or female Call 2-406
587
515 Michigan State B-B-Q. Bar B-B-Q in an
easy meal. $30 for a large plate. A slab to have
harge $2.50. Large rib plate with soup.
B beef sand. $cc. Sounds of beef $1. $chicken plate
with soup. $cc. Tenderloin $2. $chicken plate.
Tandu. Phone # 2-910-5365. Mille Mich. St.
$c.
No charge, lift your house, apartments, duplexes,
condos, townhouses and waiting. More info call Home Locator
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
furniture and mattresses for compartmentalized info call 820-726-1000.
www.lawrenceauctionhouse.com
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some
Country Shop, 767 North Walk. Open 9-17, 7 da-
m
To need sublease to apt. immediately, Clean,
Clean, Clean, Clean with AC and off a park-
ing. Call 646-6468.
LAWRENCE KAISER
PRESENTS
Delicious Food and
Superb Service with
Complete Menu,
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been
good food for our quality
and good food.
1) Miles North of the
CITY
You buy a landlord's property for him with your own money. You have to pay 5% of the rent along with your diploma to 36 to 88 remnants can you give it back again. Why not check into a way to save money if you don't learn to fix your home, nor learn to nix the电器. Don't forget Skin and Skin 2.0, 2.25 and Skin 4.0.
THE HLE in the WALL
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & 11th
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
WHY RENT?
MCHA
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
SPECIAL
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
THE sirloin
55
Friday Nite
is Date Nite
You and Your Date
3 games each
£2.00
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon
KU
KANSAS UNION
till 6:00 p.m.
DATSUN IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S
500 E. 23rd
80 80 80
Jay Bowl
Jay Bowl
IMPORTS DATSUN 842-0444
1. Rise North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone 863-1431
Open 4:30 Closed Mon~
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Most Sublease - Spoetinsen, alir, furnished one
of the following: Excellent term, Phone 842-6533. Available in
two locations.
Organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pick a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
GAY LIBERATION IS GOOD FOR YOU: Monday—business, 7:00 p.m. on Friday—SUNDAY, 12:00 p.m. for dinner, 4:30 p.m. for COUNSELING; HAP-864-303-8045; OFFICE-B-112, 864-864-3045; BOOK LARRY-864-3045; BOOK LAURA-864-3045.
"Predators in a collaging society" is the topic of this chapter. The R.U. KU students, Everyone included 7%
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
antiques. 842-7098 tf
Wanted: Used Buffet clarinet in excellent condition.
Call 843-7209 after 5 p.m. 2:21
Saxophone lessons wanted for serious student.
Call Dave, 841-4684. 2-19
ROGMATE WANTED! To share a video lesson, please contact ROGMATE monthly including all calls. Call 463-569 or email rogmate@rogmate.com
Wanted: Desperately need rides from KC (1-3/15)
Nurse needed for hospitalizations. Call KKL overnight at 342-282-3191.
Wanted: Female roommate to share apartment, 1 block from campus; Bachelors 441-189-7600.
Wanted: Female. Roommate to live in house:
large private room, near campus; $90.60 a
month.
Need ride huts - live close to road center in Need. Call 813-4306 for pickup. After call 813-4306 and leave no touch.
LOST
Least much loved kite on 1 week ago. Fluffy white,
light grey wings. Fully assembled. Claro or
Clarva or Charlville. B48-0304 or 841-2896.
B48-0304 or 841-2896.
LOST—Black leather key case. Lost Tous on 2nd floor. Strong If found please call 6431-325. . . . .
Brown and black part-ahead sheep pup
Brown and black part-ahead sheep pup
1018 at 1108. Answers to PRKLY
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**298
HELP WANTED
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
SALKS HELP. WANTED -Morrings, apply in
person, Mr. Guy. 920 Mass. 2-20
tune-ups start ing service
2434 Iowa V1 2-1008
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Lawrence Auction House
642 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
7 p.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
843-709 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses.
Saturday, 9:30 a.m., weeknight and weekend hours. Phone: 843-650-1021
Open 24 hrs.
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent intermed in part-time commercial work for TV-radio. Age range 18-40 Interview Thursday and Saturday at City Hall City Kidz 432-588 (please bring pictures) 2-22
PERSONAL
DRIVE-IN
AND COOIP OR
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
Independent Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
The Needle Point. Men's and women's needle
points are identical, but men's needles
international February 25. Come attach with $18
needle point kit.
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
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CUPBOARD
15 East 8th 841-2456
10-5 Monday-Saturday
TYPING
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Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
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2 draws EVERYAY= 6-8 p.m. at the
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Employment Opportunities
For fast, dependable Volkwagen Repairs: Dan
Steinberg 811-463-3750 811 Erm Street, Lawrence, Kanis
phone 811-463-3750
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W, 6th
842-9450
days per week
If you know farming, talk to the Peace Corp.
Feb. 19-23 in the Union, Fraser, and Stong Hall.
Make Your Spring Break Reservations Early
Maupintour travel service
PHONE 843-1211
RIDE WITH ME
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
DISCOUNT
928 Mass
DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
MUDIOTRONICS
---
043
0500
8
Monday, February 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Students Like LA&S
By ANN GARDNER
Kansan Staff Writer
Since the introduction of Liberal Arts and Sciences 48 courses to the University of Kansas many have drawn their share of controversy from both faculty and students, but they continue to be among the most popular courses on campus.
About 1,800 students were enrolled in 30 LA&S courses that were offered last semester. Jerry Lewis, director of Centennial College and associate dean of the Liberal Arts, attribuited popularity to the nature of the courses themselves.
"They're popular because most of them are taught as small seminar classes," said Lewis. "They cover topics in which the students are interested."
Many students enroll in LA&S courses that cover topics not available in any established department, according to Lewis.
In most LAS& courses, students and faculty work together to set up what they think would be a useful addition to LAS& department, be afraid, Almost all LAS& 48 courses are taught by graduate students or under the supervision of a faculty member.
The faculty member is responsible for supervising the teacher as well as the subject matter of the course. The faculty member's name appears with the course in the timetable and his signature appears on the grade sheet at the end of the semester.
The LA&S department is funded by the student Senate, and only students with teacher certification are admitted.
Health Center Receives $244
A contribution earmarked for the gynecological clinic of the new student health center has been presented to Dr. B. Toughey and Dr. M. Watters in health service. The contribution is for $244.
The contribution was presented to Schweiger Friday by the University of Kansas Panhellenic Association. The gift was surplus money collected from cold drink machines of the association's member sororities.
Fellowship Granted
Kenneth Lister, teaching assistant in geology, has received the Phillips Petroleumship for the spring semester, 793, in recognition of outstanding work in the geological sciences.
Commonwealth Theatres
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The Hillcrest
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LADY SINGS THE BLUES
Eve. 7:15, 9:45
Mat. Mon. 1:50, 4:25
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Robert Redford as "JEREMIAH JOHNSON"
Eve. 7:20, 9:20
Mat. Mon. 2:15, 4:10
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LADY SINGS THE BLUES
BEST ACTRESS DIANA ROSS
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Eve, 7.15, 9:45
MAR 20, 1:40, 6:45
Eve. 7:15, 9:45
faculty sponsors or professors who teach receive any compensation for their work
If a student wishes to set up an LA&S course, he must first secure a faculty member who is willing to sponsor the course. After they have obtained approval it must be approved by the LA&S governing board which is composed of two professors from each of the departments of social sciences, natural sciences and mathematics undergraduate student.
If the governing board approves the course, the course must then be approved by the Educational Policies and Procedures committee. In addition to the initial screening process, every course is reviewed each semester before it is offered again.
When a student wants to pursue a subject not offered in LA&S or any other department, he may create his own independent study program with the aid of a professor. The student may enroll in as many as four hours of an independent course of study that has been approved by a professor and Lewis.
This semester LA&S offered courses on such subjects as the problems of the american indian drugs and the import export indian medicines. In these courses, that were first offered in LA&S have grown
Although some students have called LA&S courses worthless, Lewis contends that LA&S courses are not that different offered in other University departments.
into departments of their own. The
members of the institution studies what now
exists at 14 campus, oriented to the needs.
"We know the majority of them are good, solid courses. The grading would approach ours."
Graduate students teaching LA&S courses this semester expressed their support for the department. According to Vield Hamer, Lawrence graduate student, an interest in women's studies prompted an interview with a woman of women in the Contemporary World."
Rasberry first became interested in LA&S through his work at Centennial College. He said he believed the courses were good because they approached vital issues that were often not covered in the traditional curriculum.
Robert Rasberry, Oklahoma City graduate student and assistant director of Centennial College, is teaching a course on human relations of Human Relations in University Life."
"A$& gives students an opportunity to
know where they wouldn't otherwise,
Harner."
SUA Special Films Presents
Spotlight on Modern Dance
The Dancing Prophet: A film made to honor Ruth St. Denis, the flamboyant "mother of all modern dance." Gold Medal Award winner, New York International and TV festival. Also, two films of modern dance by Martha Graham.
Acrobats of God: A lyrical, light-hearted work
Seraphic Dialogue: A dance drama about Joan
WOODRUFF
of Arc.
Monday, Feb. 19
7:30
A complaint filed in Lawrence against Public Circulation Service, Inc. is now being investigated by the consumer office of the Office of the State Attorney General.
75c
Salesmen from the company had been using high-pressure tactics to solicit magazine subscriptions in Lawrence without a pederil permit, according to Linda Biles, codirector of the KU Consumer Protection Agency.
Bill Ward of the consumer protection office said Friday that the office had issued subpoenas but that further action depended on the response of company personnel.
Magazine Co. Under Scrutiny For No Permit
Ward said he was not sure how the company would respond. His office had received complaints about the same company before, he said.
"They've been rather uncooperative," he said.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
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Summer School offers July 2-August
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fotokine, geography, history,政
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Write: International Programs, University of Arizona, Buses 87521.
Ever think of training a team for Pan-African competition? Peacekeeping assignments, exciting assignments. See them at www.nato.org or on Storm Fire, Feb. 19, 2023.
PHYSICAL ED. GRADS
BLACK THEATRE ENSEMBLE IN BLACK K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982 Feb. 25-Mar. 6
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
KIEF'S
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DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
The Malls Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
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Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
FREE WITH TWA. WE'LL GIVE YOU 24 HRS TO COLLECT.
This spring recess, when you land in any of these cities, if you show your TWA Youth Passport and present your boarding pass to any TWA ticket office within 24 hours of your arrival, you'll get a fat, fat book coupon full of discounts, two-for-ones, and free things. (If, by the way, you don't own a TWA Youth Passport, we'll be happy to accept your other
airline youth card for an even trade, at the ticket office or airport before you depart. Then you too can cash in on the coupon book.
So, if you're off across the country this spring recess, take a look at what you'll get if you fly TWA.
Youth Passport is a service mark owned exclusively by TWA.
FREE IN SAN FRANCISCO
Buy one "Son-of-a-bitch" stew, get one free at Mother Lode.
Buy four hours, get 20 free hours of motorbike rental at the Cycle Pit.
Buy one dinner, get one free at Crunchies homemade cooking restaurant.
FREE IN LOS ANGELES
Free boat ride around Marina del Rey.
Free hour of surfboard rental in Santa Monica.
Buy one meal, get one free at the Bratskellar restaurant.
Free hour of bike rental in Marina del Rey.
FREE IN DENVER
Free tour of Denver by Gray Line.
Free beer at Tulagi's in Boulder.
Buy one admission, get one free to Wheeler Opera House.
Apartment 1085.
Fourth day of lift tickets free at Vail.
Free ski guide tour from Vail Ski School.
Fourth day of lift tickets free at Aspen.
Free hour of backpacking riding at Aspen Stables.
Free admission tickets on drinks)
at Denver Folklore Center.
Buy one admission to The Jazz Workshop, get one free
spare fathipie dinner at the Spaghetti Emporium, Inc.
Free breakfast in the Pewter Pot Muffin House.
Free admission to the Prudential Skywalk.
Free combination health food platter
from Corners of the Mouth restaurant.
FREE IN BOSTON
Free quiche lorraine and cup of coffee at La Crêpe.
Free Indian soup and vegetable curry at
the India Sweet House restaurant in Cambridge.
Free pair of earrings or pendant (and watch if being made)
Free admission or beverage and dessert at Passim Coffeehouse
FREE IN WASHINGTON
Buy one admission to Biograph Cinema, get one free.
Free pizza at Anna Maria restaurant.
Free sandwich at Piccadilly restaurant.
Buy one sandwich, get one free at Blimpie Sandwich Shop.
Free package of incense at Earth Works Boutique.
Buy one meal, get one for a Mykonos Greek restaurant.
Free tacos for two at Tippy's Taco House.
Free roast beef sandwich at Dr. Watson's Pub.
Free cheese & tomato pizza for two.
Free quiche lorraine and coffee at La Crepe.
you get one free of Pat's King of Steak.
buy one sundae, get one free at Just Ice Cream.
FREE IN PHILADELPHIA
Free membership for two at Walnut Street Theatre.
Buy one ticket for Blazers Hockey game, get one free.
Three hours of bike rental free on Simba Bike Shop.
Free package of cone incense from Coln Candle Co.
Free admission to flea market.
Buy one admission to Perelman Antique Car Museum.
For more information see your Campus Rep or call TWA
WITH TWA IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG.
*Starting March 15.
STILL WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 94
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 20, 1973
Black Identity Reflected In Theatre
See Story Page 5
Tax Breaker Loses Fight In Committee
TOPEKA (AP)—A committee of the Kansas House of Representatives killed a bill that would have enacted Gov. Robert Docking's "circuit breaker" plan for easing the property tax burden on taxpayers who who have less than $20,000 a year income.
Docking blamed Republican leaders in the legislature for obstructing passage of the bill. A similar proposal is still pending in a Senate committee.
"A few Republican legislators who appear to have been coerced by the Republican legislative leadership have voted to kill the property tax circuit breaker." Docking said in a prepared statement.
"While this is disappointing to me and to
Kansas, Mr. Kansai, he said, it is not
pursuitable."
Kansan Photo by CARL G. DAVAZ JR
Docking said the Republican legislative leadership had assumed a posture of dictator to Republican legislators, dictating the law on major legislation during this session.
PARKS
BAY
STREET
40TH AVE.
NEW YORK, NY 10026
The vote of the House Assessment and Taxation Committee, on a show of hands, was 13 to 5 to kill the bill. The vote appeared to follow party lines.
Rep. Shelly Smith, R-Wichita, chairman of the House Assessment and Taxation Committee, postponed a vote on another measure that has been criticized by Republicans.
Old Sidewalks Make Walking Hazardous . . . City Commission seeks to improve . . .
Originally, Smith's committee had been scheduled to vote Monday on a bill to carry out Docking's recommendation for extension of a law disallowing federal income taxes to be paid as a deduction against state taxes or by corporations and financial institutions.
The 1972 legislature enacted the law at Docking's insistence; against his wishes it became an ordinance.
Old Sidewalks Die Slowly
Sidewalks may have a hard time being born, as the recent controversy over a skeletal sidewalk plan for West Lawrence indicates, but they also appear to have a
Emick said last week that several commission members and city staff members had taken a preliminary survey of the areas directly north and east of the campus and that they intended to make a formal survey of the area.
When John Emick, Lawrence mayor,
announced his bid for re-election to the city
commission two weeks ago, he said that
among the projects the commission had
planned with the University of Kansas was
the creation of sidewalks in the
campus area.
"Some have deteriorated enough that the police said, speaking of sidewalks in the area.
"I have partial sight and love to walk, but
I cannot walk here because of the broken
bone."
MARGARET THOMAS of 1215 Tennessee St. concurrs. When asked whether anyone had complained about the sidewalk in front of her apartment, she said, "I do every time I go out to walk."
"The sidewalk all along here (Tennessee Street) is bad. Also, the one on 12th Street."
Thomas explained that she walked mainly downtown and that she used 12th Street sidewalks to get there. She said she had been done to her landlord but nothing had been done.
All one has to do is walk down the sidewalk to see that her complaints are well-founded. Parts of brick sidewalks have settled or sunk so that stretches resemble a wall, or are broken into patches of concrete sidewalks have cracked, buckled and, in some places, disappeared.
NORTHWEST OF THE intersection of
Tennessee and Tennessee,
shallow two feet in diameter in
shallow two feet.
the pavement where the two sidewalks cross.
On the south side of 130l Street between Ohio and Tennessee streets, the sidewalk drops off at one point and there is no sidewalk for about seven feet.
Mrs. Adam Kay of 1258 Tennessee St., who said that she walked occasionally but not frequently, said that some people had complained of the sidewalk in front of her home.
"We'd pay for having it fixed if the rest in the block would." she said.
The resident at 1305 Tennessee St., who would not identify herself, said of the sidewalk, "It's not very good, that's for sure."
She said that no one had ever complained and that its repair would "depend a lot on it."
THE BRICK SIDEWALK in front of the Boresteam has sunk and is covered with dirt at the base.
"People complain all the time, especially when it is muddy," the manager said.
He said he was planning to put in a new one this spring. He said it would be brick made of acrylic.
Paul Hamilton, "1414 Tennessee St.," said of his sidewalk, "We know it's in bad shape. I'd be glad to fix it when the city removes that tree."
He was referring to a tree in the parking lot that was so close to the sidewalk that as it grew it pushed to the sidewalk out of the ground.
Jim Eagan, Lawrence junior and house manager for Sigma Ch fraternity, said no one had complained about their sidewalks. He said that if repairs were necessary, they would have to be made in the future because the fraternity was presently short of money.
NEXT DOOR AT Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, the main sidewalk is cracked, buckled and partially covered with dirt. About 18 feet of it is missing.
A senior member said that, to his
The codes specify that no part of a sidewalk should be missing, that earth or other substances should not be allowed to accumulate on a sidewalk, that no segment of a sidewalk should rise above the normal level in a manner that might trip someone down or depressions that could cause injury to a pedestrian should occur in a sidewalk.
The filing deadline for Student Senate and class officer positions is 5 p.m. Wednesday. Students may file with Sterling Hall, Sublette Avenue and Senate Elections Committee, or in the Student Senate office.
knowledge, one no had complained and no plans to repair it had been made. He pointed out that the house did have a perfectly good curbside sidewalk, which extended south across several properties almost to 17th Street.
According to the city codes of Lawrence, the maintenance of sidewalks is the responsibility of the property owners adjacent to them.
Candidates for senate must pay a $5 fee when they file. Class officer candidates must pay a $5 fee and present a petition with the signatures of 50 students who support their candidacy.
If a property owner does not repair a sidewalk by the time required on a notice given him by the city, the code said, then he repairs the repairs and charge them to the owner.
Student Posts Still Open
One candidate has filed for each of four positions of junior class officers. No candidates have filed for any of the positions of senior or sophomore class officers.
Mert Buckley, Wichita sophorone,
and Nancy Archer, Anamosa, Iowa,
junior, the only candidates for student
president and vice president, have
announced they will not run with a
slate of candidates for the senate.
KU Budget Oversight Adds to Faculty Cuts
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
four; School of Law, two; School of
Engineering, one; and School of
Education, two.
In October, Chancellor Raymond Nichols said that 23.5 unclassified, or faculty, positions and 7.8 classified, or public employee. positions would have to be cut.
A total of 44.7 faculty positions, instead of an earlier estimate of 23.5 positions, must be cut from next year's budget for the University of Kansas, Ambre Saricks, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Monday.
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
But several weeks ago, Saricks said, he discovered that 21.2 faculty positions which had to be included in the budget hadn't been provided for when the budget was originally generated.
Saricks said that in addition to the 23.5 faculty cuts, an additional 21.2, total of 44.7 positions, would now have to be cut to 30 for the persons who have to be embolished."
The 21.2 positions for which plans weren't made were for persons on leave, employed on a part-time basis with the understanding they would be given a full-time position with the University in fiscal 1974 or on a federal grant that had expired. Saricks said.
He said another possibility for reducing the number of faculty positions would be to totally phase out a program, such as the economics department or the School of Economics.
At 5 p.m. Monday, 11 candidates had filed for senate: North College, one; School of Journalism, one;
THE DISCOVERY of the omission of the 21.2 faculty positions means that an additional $25,000 must be made up somewhere in the budget, Saricks said. The reduction of personnel in various departments and schools within the University.
Saricks said another possible way to cut faculty positions would be to release those persons who are tenured, though he definitely does not favor this plan.
"Many teaching assistants could be cut from departments to make up some of the costs," Saricks said. "The College of Business will ensure the greatest number of faculty reductions."
"If we decided to cut the original figure of 23.5 faculty positions from teaching assistants, we would have to cut 47 teaching assistors," Saricks said.
CHANCELOR RAYMOND Nicholas has said it is difficult to fire a person with tenure because the case must be taken before a judge. Nicholas and the Related Problems Committee.
Saricks said he was in favor of cutting the number of teaching assistants but that they only counted as half-positions for budgetary considerations.
In explaining the 21.2 additional faculty position cuts, Nichols told the Council of Deans Monday that the positions not included in the "invisible budget of the University."
Number of 'Incompletes' Indicates Class Loads
internal problems have necessitated the increase in the total number of unclassified personnel to be cut," Nichols said in an interview before the meeting.
Courses requiring extensive out-of-class work are difficult for many University of Kansas students to complete within a month. Courses "from the registrar's office indicate"
Professional schools that have courses based on field experience or laboratories, such as the School of Social Welfare and the School of Journalism, find they must give more incomplete grades than schools which depend on the classroom.
INDIIDUAL DEPARTMENTS and schools will be notified this week as to how
The Schools of Business and Engineering and other professional schools give fewer incomplete than any other classification the registrar uses.
Last week, the registrar's office com-
mitted that the course grade given to students last semester.
When the statistics were broken down among the various schools and academic departments,
Rank Classification Inc. Enrollmt.Avg.
1. Social Welfare 188 349 329
2. Intensive English 158 108 277
3. Journalism 114 160 194
4. Professional College 118 912 197
5. Centennial College 197 102 197
6. Architecture 197 104 193
7. Architecture 197 104 193
8. Architecture 197 104 193
9. Health Care 197 104 193
10. Education 400 379 106
11. Education 400 379 106
12. L.A. & Co. 316 1,440 106
13. Medical College 316 1,440 106
14. Medical College 316 1,440 106
15. Medical College 316 1,440 106
16. Medical College 316 1,440 106
17. Medical College 316 1,440 106
18. Medical College 316 1,440 106
19. Engineering 65 1,113 658
20. Engineering 65 1,113 658
21. Engineering 65 1,113 658
22. Law 2 481 004
23. Law 2 481 004
24. Law 2 481 004
Except where designated, the graduate students were included in each school.
Bradford W. Sheafor, associate dean
the school of Social Welfare, said the school had many two-hour courses in the senior semester and taught five students to find a student with seven courses in one semester, he said, and therefore, the pressure around the end of the semester projects, papers and exams can become intense.
The undergraduate in the School of Social Welfare spend one day a week in field experience, Sheafor said, and the graduate student spends three. These can be in Kakata or Leavenworth, Topeka or Lawrence, he said, which costs the student traveling time.
The field experiences are supposed to be coordinated with certain classes, he said, although it is difficult to have the case studies end when papers on them are due.
Donald E. Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering, said that although laboratory reports had to be written outside of class, a good deal of the work is completed during the time allotted to the laboratory.
Other statistical phenomena were found in the Schools of Social Welfare and Jour-
Approximately 75 seniors were eligible to graduate from the School of Journalism last fall, Sammee Messick, secretary in charge of the program, said no do so because they took incomplete.
Four of the 17 or 18 seniors to graduate in social welfare last semester
See 'INCOMPLETES' Page 3
many faculty positions will have to be cut,
Sariks said. He said there would have to be
negotiations with the departments until
about mid-March, when the faculty position
cuts must be submitted to the chancellor for
approval.
After the chancellor approves the budget, the requests will be sent to the Board of Regents.
The original 23.5 unclassified and 7.8
classified personnel cuts were necessitated by a decrease in the projected fall enrollment figure. There was a difference of 584 students between the projected fall enrollment figure and the actual enrollment figure of 18.546.
Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said in October that the University had originally planned to add 26 new faculty members for fiscal 1974.
Cease-Fire Guarantees Stunted by Bickering
SAIGON (AP)--The chairman of the international peace-keeping commission for Vietnam said Monday the warring parties have failed to make their cease-fire work in the 23 days since they signed it. But he said the country would move ahead anyway to begin policing it.
Canadian Ambassador Michel Gauvin, chairman of the International Commission of Control and Supervision, said the cease-fire would prevent a repeat Joint Military Commission in becoming fully operative, had presented the commission with serious problems in meeting its obligation.
The commission is made up of representatives of Poland, Hungary, Indonesia and Canada. A temporary Joint Commission is appointed by the peacekeeping body in policing the ceasefire, is composed of delegations from the United States, North and South Vietnam and the Viet Cong. It is supposed to operate under unanimity but has been slowed by bickering.
The peace agreement provides for 825 personnel on each delegation of the Joint Military Commission. The United States and North and South Vietnam are up to full deployment, with Viet Cong have only 200 men assigned, thus slowing deployment of its field teams.
South Vietnam and the United States have their observers already in place at 23 of the 28 subregional states. The North Vietnamese are placed at five of them, the Viet Cong at nine.
The Viet Cong blame a lack of security, inadequate accommodations and South Vietnamese attacks on Communist militants. The Communist side is seeking frivolous privileges such as officers' and non-commissioned officers' clubs and television sets at the sites, while the United States and other countries agree to accept austere conditions.
The U.S. sources say the Communist requests are unreasonable because of four-party Joint Military Commission will be disbanded March 28, the deadline for the return of all U.S. prisoners and withdrawal of all American troops from Vietnam. At a hearing on Thursday in Washington Control and Supervision will take over full responsibility for the cease-fire.
"In spite of the unassatisfactory conditions which it exasults as a result of the parties' to the agreement, Mr. Galvin abide by the agreement," Gauvin said, "the commission has decided to proceed to the teams of its leagues at the subregional level of entry and to the demilitarized zone."
The image provided is entirely black and white, with no discernible text or elements to describe. It appears to be a large, abstract artwork featuring geometric shapes and lines that create a dynamic and intricate pattern. The layout consists of multiple panels arranged in a grid-like fashion, each filled with complex, intersecting designs. There are also several leaf-like shapes and patterns within the design, adding depth and texture to the overall composition. The floor below the artwork is smooth and unadorned, except for a circular object placed on it. This object has a smooth surface and is centrally located in the image.
---
Solemn
The burning bush window of the School of Religion echoes the sound of the University Church.
Kanean Photo by BARBARA KELLY
that would not be consumed has been a symbol of the eternity of knowledge, wisdom and God. University tradition maintains that Mount Oread is hallow ground where sacred fire burns in the Trail campuses which once dotted the Hill still burns within the University.
2
Tuesday, February 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
ICE CORPS ACTION PEACE CORPS
Volunteer
Kansan Photo by ALICE COSTELLO
Cindy Shayye, Salma sophomore, examines information at the PeaceCVISTA information table in Fraser Hall. Chuck
Shields and Rick Garbell, ACTION Peace Corps-VISTA recruiters,
are on hand to answer any of her questions. The Peace Corps and
VISTA recruiters will be on campus from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through
Thursday and from 9 a.m. to noon Friday. See story page 7.
Eleven of 14 candidates for the Lawrence City Commission and members of Local 1596 of the International Association of Fire Fighters for met for more than four hours Sunday in what local 1596 President Alvin Samuelts termed an informal meeting.
Candidates Address Firefighters' Meeting
"We invited them to our meeting to tell us their platforms and what they intend to do if we succeed."
One question that arose at the session involved two sections of the city employees manual, one which restricts city employees from taking part in politics.
"You could say that we're definitely thinking of holding a public meeting after the primary," Samuels said. "It will be the day we get back to work and this time, but with the public invited."
Each candidate limited his talk to about five minutes to allow time for questions from firemen, Samuels said The meeting was in the Douglas County State Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets, and was not open to the public.
Robert Haralick, associate professor of electrical engineering and city commission candidate, told firemen that he would be able to re-commission meeting the section be changed.
"There are a couple of things in the manual that should be changed," Haralick
"One section has to do with city employees not being allowed to talk to city commissioners unless they have the expressed permission to be bigger." That's bad management of the city.
"The other section has to do with city employees' not being able to take part in
Campus Briefs
Pearson Study
The College Assembly will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Members of the assembly will continue discussion on a motion that would integrate Internation Integrated Humanities Program to fulfill freshman and sophomore requirements.
Christian Group
Voice Recital
The KU Christian Science Organization will meet at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. The public is invited.
Rebecca Hayes, Overland Park senior, will present her senior voice recital at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. She will speak at the annual Women and others. There will be no admission.
City Commission
The Lawrence City Commission will discuss possible reorganization of the commission at 7:30 tonight in its second experimental evening session. Reorganizational debate will center on the city commission's report on results of five interim summaries of the commission revamping was suggested. Discussions also will focus on the possibility of forming a Citizen's Advisory Board, a heterogeneous group of persons and interest groups that would be a reference bank and a smoser of public sentiment. The commission addressed the problem of a lack of accommodations for handicapped people in public facilities.
School Study Plan Set Up
At Monday night's Lawrence Board of Education meeting, Williams outlined the program that the Lawrence school district and the Kansas University of Kansas School of Education.
A form of behavior modification called contingency management is being applied on an experimental basis at East Heights and on the campus to Ira Williams, East Heights principal.
Williams presented a slide show to the board that explained the program.
The program operates under the assumption that a student will be more likely to study if he is allowed to do things he prefers to do only after he finishes studying.
Rick Garland, Lawrence graduate student, proposed the program to the district. Garland said that this program was successful at the University of Southern California.
KU became interested in the program along with other universities across the Western United States and is participating with some of these universities, through an organization known as Western Interlock, in experimenting with the program.
Interview Dates For Engineers Are Scheduled
Engineering students desiring postgraduation employment should sign up in 111 Marvin Hall one week before the date of any of these scheduled interviews: Naval Electronics Lab Center, Feb. 28; Kansas Air Force Base, February 28; Corp, Feb. 27; Ell Lilay and Company, Feb. 27; American Cast Iron Pipe, Feb. 28; Beech Aircraft Corp., Feb. 28; Mason & Hanger Sillas Mason Co., Inc.; Feb. 28; Missouri State Highway Commission, Feb. 28; Black & Veatch, March 1; U.S. Dept. of Transportation, Federal Highway Admin., Feb. 28; National Bank, March 1; National Cash Register, March 2; Iowa State Highway Commission, March 2.
that the system required more teacher participation with individual students. She said that it was sometimes difficult to help all the students who needed help.
Despite this problem, Richardson remained committed to the program. She said she would find a solution to this problem so the program could be continued.
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SU7
In other business at Monday's meeting, the board heard a report from the cochairman of the district curriculum committee. The chairman listed the responsibilities of the committee as being preparation of curriculum guidelines, short range planning, evaluation of textbooks, and on curriculum and long range planning.
Glenda Richardson, an elementary instructor in whose class the program is being told, told the board about the effects the program was having on her students.
directed by Leni Riefenstahl
OLYMPIA. PARTS 1 & 2
Carl Knox, Lawrence superintendent of schools, said that curriculum planning was in the best condition it had been since he came to the district 11 years ago.
The system does not frustrate the students, she said, because they are used to it.
Classical Films
Woodruff
Wed. Feb. 21
of CHERBOURE
Richardson said that her classroom was divided by a partition into a "task" area and a "recreation and entertainment" area. Her students are given a set amount of work to complete based on their ability. When they complete their assigned tasks, they are allowed to move to the recreation area until all other students are through.
THE ADVENTURES OF
Richardson said the program promoted cooperation between the students and the teachers. She said that more individual attention could be given to the students.
UMBRELLAS
A problem she noted in the system was
CHERBOURG
by Jacque Demy (1964)
FILM SOCIETY
Woodruff
7:30, & 9:30
Tuesday Feb. 20
75c
Directed by Carl Koch Animation by Carl Koch and Lotte Reiniger.
SPECIAL FILMS
Summer of '42 A novel by Herman Raucher
PRINCE ACHMED
Part Six of Captain Marvel
Popular Films
Woodruff Mon.Mar.5
7:30
75c
Woodruff 7 & 9:30
Feb.23 & 24 60c
-plus
COLUMBIA
THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE
C. S. M. BALDINI
—PLUS—
Episode four of Phantom
Empire
SCIENCE FICTION FILMS
Ballroom 7:30
SUA SUA SMILE A
In 1972 roughly one-third of the Senate Public Works Committee meetings were held in secret. The figure for the Senate Agriculture Committee was 59 percent of the total committee meetings over 90 percent. The House Ways and Means Committee, which drafts the laws governing every federal tax dollar you and I pay, is notoriously secret. Security is so light that even the staff assistant of a Conference on Energy must not attend the closed meetings. What are they hiding?
SCIENCE FICTION FILMS
75c
Tues. Feb. 20
One of the weird and nonsensical facts about our government — at all levels — is that much of the public doesn't know what they are doing. Citizens assume that only questions of national security and some aspects of criminal justice are dealt with in secret. Little do they know Most of the time citizens ask questions to them they conduct our business is none of our business.
75c
THE SCANDAL OF SECRECY
All sessions of congressional committees — and records of all votes taken at such sessions — should normally be open to the public. Committees should be allowed to close a meeting only for considerations of security, confidentiality of personal privacy, and the procedure for closing it should be carefully protected against abuse.
John W. Gardner, Chairman Common Cause Former Secretary of Health, Education and Wellness
In the Executive Branch, virtually everyone associated with national security acknowledges that the system of classifying documents to preserve secrecy has been badly abused — all too often for the purpose of concealing bureaucratic error. And the zeal for secrecy extends to every government agency uninterested in what happens. Many agencies often meet behind closed doors, omit public hearings, and suppress reports the public should see.
Of course, the secretry involved is only secret-from-front of the desk. You can't well what goes on in those hush-hush meetings. Quite often they're right in there with the decision makers. The only one who has splashed in his Iowa from bumped into a fight at the university.
Now there is a resolution before the Senate — sponsored by Senators Humphrey (D., Minn.) and Roth (R., Del.) (plus 11 other sponsors) which would open all Senate committee meetings. A bill (S 260) recently introduced in the Senate by Lawton Chiles of Oklahoma, would open all Legislative and Executive Branch meetings except those dealing with national security or involving personal privacy.
Information is power, and secrecy is the most convenient means of keeping that power out of the hands of the people. What the people don't know, they can't object to.
It's time to cha age all that. And you can help. Write your two Senate, s and your Congressman. Tell them you want them to open up the system. Or join Com-Transact. Or do any of these (20037) and ally yourself with 200,000 other members in getting these changes made. We're going to give you the membership rate is $7.00. Don't use stand there!
politics on their own time, like campaigning for someone.
Samuels said that local firefighters were considering a move that would bring a city to the center of the country.
This space is contributed as a People Service by The Van Heusen Company
ENGINEERS
"We could very possibly go to a referendum vote on it and very possibly we could win," he said. "We had 2,000 signatures on our petition(requesting payment with city policemen), and they've accepted it, but they haven't done anything with it.
The Peace Corps can show you how to use your knowledge where it will do the most good. Recruiters at Engineering Placement Office (Marvin Hall). Feb. 21 (Wed.) Sign up for interview.
Use Kansan Classified
CAREERS SEMINAR
C
Feb. 20-22 Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
7:30 p.m.: "Expanding Career Opportunities"
(speakers: Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, Tom Moore,
Kansas Civil Rights Commission)
Tuesday, February 20:
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
7:30 p.m.: "How to Get a Job"
(speakers: Panel of personnel from various K.U.
placement offices.)
Thursday, February 22:
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
KU Commission on the Status of Women
Wednesday, February 21:
222 Strong 864-3552
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Tuesday. February 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
Safe Bedding Costs More
Compliance with a federal standard for mattress safety, which becomes effective June 7, may prove to be costly. Kansas City bedding manufacturers said Monday. The cost increases, they said, may be passed on to the consumer.
the standard, drafted by the Commerce Department June 7, 1972, and to be enforced by the Federal Trade Commission, requires that bedding manufacturers administer a mattress and fabric to all mattresses styles and fabrics to determine whether the mattress is fire resistant.
Two Kansas City manufacturers, Englander Co., Inc., and the Simmons Co., agreed that compliance with the new test would be very effective in preventing mattress fires but said that a mattress testing procedure could be very expensive.
WARREN KIBBIE, general manager of the Englander Co., Inc., in Kansas City, Mo., said that according to the Commerce Department, the average production cost increase for each mattress might be about $10.
“Of course we’ll pass the cost onto the consumer,” Kibble said, “but this is not an unreasonable charge for protection from mattress fires.”
In its estimate, the Commerce Department included the cost of building new offices.
testing, Kibbie said. The cost increase also would include the expense of developing new fire retardant materials, the cost of the destroyed mattresses and the cost of the destroyed cigarettes and percale sheets, he said.
IN THE FIRST part of the test, according to the Wall Street Journal, nine lighted cigarettes are placed six inches apart on the upper half of a bare mattress. The mattress passes this part of the test only if all the cigarettes are leaving less than two inches long.
In the second part of the test, nine more lighted cigarettes are placed on a white, 100 per cent combed cotton percale sheet. The cigarettes are covered by a second sheet. If they are lit from the sheet the burn out without leaving a long char, the mattress passes the test.
The number of mattresses destroyed in the testing is a major expense, Kibbie said. Three prototype mattresses must be tested and at least one mattress out of each lot, or one every three months, whichever comes first, he said.
THE MATTRESSES are not marketable after testing, he said. The Englander plant in Kansas City produces 40,000 mattresses a year. The company said the mattresses would have to be tested each year.
Al Gentile, manager of the Simmons Co.
in Kansas City, Kan., said other factors than boost production costs were the possibility of mattress recall and an increased need for new mattresses. The company definitely be passed on to the consumer.
Gentle said that the Kansas City plant produced 13,000 pieces of either box springs or mattresses each day. Nationwide, Simmons has bedding sales of $120 million.
Gentle said that if a randomly tested mattress failed the test, the entire lot would probably have to be recalled and the inventory was that that would require more bookkeeping.
Kissinger is scheduled to return to
washington at 2:30 p.m., Lawrence time,
lunch.
"IF THE TESTER doesn't smoke cigarettes we might even have to buy a cigarette machine to light the cigarettes," Gentile laughed.
The manufacturers must also anticipate possible recall costs for transportation and materials loss and include this in the cost increase, he said.
Kissinger Ends Tour After Talks in Japan
Japanese Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohira, who joined Prime Minister Kakui Tanaka for an hour and 40 minutes of talks with Kissinger, said the U.S. adviser had given Tanaka this talk with Mao. But Ohira he had been asked not to make any disclosure.
Both Englander and Simmons said they had made major alterations in some of their mattress styles in order to comply with the standard.
TOKYO (AP)—Henry Kissinger reported to Japan's leaders Monday on his talks in Hanoi and Peking, dined at a gaisha house and met in Rome, dined at report back to President Nikon.
Ohira told newsmen only that the talks
Much interest centered on the talks President Nixon's national security adviser Richard Tse-tung. Nothing was made public here on the subject, but Herbert Klein, White House director of communications, indicated an email that Nixon returned to the United States.
address close to the "American destination" advance in Chinese-American relations.
covered a wide spectrum of subjects, including Vietnam reconstruction, the international monetary situation and China's relations with the United States and Japan.
Speculation concerns the possibility that President Nixon might withdraw the 8,000 American troops now on台湾, the Chinese island which is headquarters for the Nationalist Chinese government recognized by the United States. These are among the top priorities of U.S. rule in Vietnam and, since the cease-fire, are no longer essential.
Kibbie said that Englander had completed prototype testing and would probably be in complete compliance with the standard by March 1.
There also is talk of the United States being allowed to open a trade office in Chicago.
Gentile said that Simmons had some styles that already complied with the standard. These styles were available to the consumer, be said.
"It was a very useful meeting," Ohira said, "as it gave us valuable insights" into how Japan might proceed with its Asian diplomacy.
THE NATIONAL Association of Bedding Manufacturers, of which three Kansas City firms are members, is petitioning the National Association of Standards to delay the date for compliance to re-evaluate the test, Gentile said. Many manufacturers have complained that the standard was too costly and would drive bedding manufacturers out of business.
Two local bedding distributors approved of the new Commerce Department standard. Leland Glammer, a Miller Furniture salesman, said the regulation was a good thing, especially timely because of recent local bedding fires.
He said that distributors had no other choice than to raise retail prices, however. He expected that the increase would only be moderate, and the lower priced models would be affected.
Miller Furniture has already received some fire resistant mattresses, he said.
Ron Chambers, manager of Montgomery Wards furniture and carpet department, said that Wards would try to absorb the price increase instead of passing it to the consumer unless the increase was too steep. A shipment of mattresses in compliance with the standard is expected in April or May, he said.
AURH to Ask Refund Of Hall Book Money
The Association of University Residence Hall (AURH) will request a refund from the Office of the Dean of Women for money lost in an accidental fire or other library, library two AURH officers said Monday.
The AURH refund request will be made in the form of a resolution at the Resident's Assembly meeting at 8:15 p.m. Thursday at McColm Hall.
The request was made by Alex Thomas, AURH president and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia minister of education.
The resolution request a refund from the dean of women's office for all funds not used to purchase books, magazines and library materials directly for hall libraries.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, in a reply to an inquiry by AURH about expenditures from a library fund said last week that a central library had been created in 220 Strong and that many of the expenditures questioned by AURH had been made to provide books and periodicals for the library.
'Incompletes'...
(Continued from page 1)
didn't, Sheafer said, although he did not know whether that was due to incomplete or withdrawals from courses.
Other schools reported from one to five students not graduating because they took an incomplete. The School of Pharmacy was the only one with a perfect record.
The University Senate's Code is generally followed, most of the schools said, although the professors teaching the courses usually give the final approval to incomplete.
The code states that incomplete must be made up in the next semester the student is enrolled and the course is offered. An execl course must be completed by the student with the professor's approval.
Generally, the schools receive the list of incompletes from the registrar's office and use it to update student records. At this time, a grade is changed to the grade the professor awards upon completion of the course. A grade required by the University Senate's Code.
However, Rhetta Noever, secretary in charge of student records, said the School of Business changed the grade of a course a student doesn't complete to a withdrawal unless the professor turns in an "F" for the grade.
Don L. Schle, associate professor of the School of Fine Arts, said the school usually allows two months leeway for the student to complete a course.
PragUE—A three-jet Soviet airliner burst into flames and broke apart while attempting to land at Prague International Airport Monday. Sources from the West at the airport reproted 77 of the 99 persons in the plane, according to passengers and 8 of 12 crew members, informants said. About half the survivors needed only first-aid treatment.
Labor Talks
MIAMI BEACH—President Nixon met with 35 members of the AFL-CIO Executive Council and about 30 union presidents in a 40-minute closed meeting Thursday, where he sat in on the meeting, that Nixon emphasized his plans to reverse the U.S. foreign trade deficit. AFL-CIO President George Meany said that although he still supported raising taxes, there was room for possible compromises with White House legislation.
Judge Guilty
ST. LOUIS—Preparations were made Monday for reopening 166 public schools after an end to a 28-day strike, the first by schoolteachers in this city's history. Instructed to report for classes today were 103,000 pupils, most of them idle since Jan. 1994. School officials and teachers of the St. Louis Teachers Association affiliate, and Local 420 of the American Federation of Teachers voted Sunday to return to the classrooms.
CHICAGO-Federal Judge Otter Kerner was convicted Monday of accepting a bribe from racemack interests while he was governor of Illinois. He is the first judge of a U.S. Court of Appeals to be indicted and convicted of a criminal charge. He and his wife, Jane Fulton, the lawyer, were convicted of conspiracy, fraud, bribery and income tax evasion. Kerner also was convicted or perjury and making false statements to a federal agent.
Schools Open
TOPEKA-Attorney General Vern Miller said Monday one of three airlines has agreed to his request that they not serve liquor or on planes while they are on the ground or in the skies over Kansas, rather did not disclose which airline had owned the planes. International, Continental Airlines and Trans World Airlines. Miller said he had received a telegram of agreement from the one airline Monday morning.
Airline Not High
News Briefs By the Associated Press Plane Burns
On March 14 and 15,new Student Senators,Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student will be elected.
1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
Candidates for CLASS OF-ICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Thomas said Monday that Taylor had used student fundings designated for use in improving residence hall libraries to conduct research and was known as the Women's Resource center.
The money for the funds in question comes from an account administered by the office of the Dean of Women from a five per cent rebate of vending machine funds in the five residence halls under the jurisdiction of Emily Taylor, dean of women.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
Lunch Special
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Hamburger and 12 oz. BUD — 50c
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
NEW MANAGEMENT
Eile and Mint (Uncle Milly) Celine are new
operating Brooks tavern & lunch.
To become a candidate:
Architecture .2
Business .3
Education .12
Engineering .5
Fine Arts .5
Graduate .18
Journalism .3
Law .2
Pharmacy .2
Social Welfare .2
LAS .18
Centennial ... 4
North ... 4
Nunemaker ... 4
Oliver ... 5
Pearson ... 4
Seats to be elected to the student senate:
**Happy Morn 1: 5, -7 m.**
*Pool Tournament every Twes, Eve.*
*Every Monday Night—Pitchers $1.00*
Quiet Hour 8:30 m.
Brooks Tavern and Lunch
1307 W. 7th 842-9429
Use Kansan Classified
NICARAGUAN BENEFIT DANCE
Fri., Feb. 23
7:30-11:30 p.m.
FEATURING
CHET NICHOLS and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils
Donation $1.50 per person
Sponsored by the Ananda Marga Yoga Society
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4
Tuesday, February 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Apathy and Informality
In the last four years KU has seen student government mature from the pacifier of the activists to the play pen of the Hill Topper set. And now student government seems to be in a sorrier state than ever.
It is possible that some potential candidates for student body president decided that they could not beat Mert Buckley and decided not to run. But since there is only one candidate when half a dozen have usually shown up, it would not be unfair to say that there is considerable apathy towards student government.
I suppose that I should join every other high school and college editorial writer across the country and tell you that you should care about student government. But in a way, I suppose that I should this is one duty that editorial writers in their infinite wisdom should let you forego.
The senate was launched four years ago with great hopes, but little real power. The only power that backed it up was the seemingly endless capacity of the KU students to raise hell when they were
unhappy. When this power failed, the segate's fate was sealed.
I do not think, however, that this is reason enough to go back to an era when you paid your tuition and let maturity tell you what was good for you.
Students have more to say about the policies of their University than they have ever had before. Part of this gain has been made through the formal structure of the school committees, but most of it has come through informal communication with faculty and administrators.
Of course, there are still a few of the old timers who could care less about the students' attitudes toward their courses. There are certainly a few deans left who don't care what the students think about their schools. But time is even eating away at them.
Faculty members and administrators are willing to listen to students because they realize the common interest of all in better courses and better programs. It is hoped that this relationship will be more enduring than the interest in student government.
—Eric Kramer
Marriage Defended
"Infidelity and divorce are here to stay," it is proclaimed daily. Who decided that? It's like asking who started the most recent war. And as a war, discussion of this aberration appears as ceaseless as it does fruitfulness.
If figures by themselves told the whole story, post-graduation plans for marriage would seem almost funereal. Statistical predictions last year suggested that in 1972 alone, 800,000 couples would become divorced and of the over 70 per cent married. Of the remaining 30 marry, 50 per cent of the “remarried” would again seek a separation.
One is reminded of the tonnage of bombs dropped over North Vietnam, or perhaps the number of sorties flown provides a more accurate analogy—does one consider first the potential innocent victims of destructive action, or the threats posed to the perpetrators?
At risk of a thorough bludgeoning by the cultural authorities of the day, I protest. I do not find infidelity, separation, divorce or their variations acceptable, legitimate or, most importantly, realistic.
I particularly refuse to accept the type of acclaimed analysis put forth by the likes of Alvin Toffler (of "Future Shock" fame).
Toffer's book devotes a neat argument to "The Odds Against Love." The author would have us believe that the odds are so tremendously poor that, when they are coupled with other factors of transience, the only choices left to us as individuals will be variegated juxtapositions of the sexes or serial monogramous marriages.
I don't buy it, Mr. Toffler and Company.
"Future Shock" asserts that the orthodox marriage presupposes that two young people will find one another and marry, with love as the primary justification for the family's very existence.
"Love, however, is defined in terms of shared growth," Toffer writes. "If love is a product of shared growth and we are to measure success in marriage by the degree to which matched development actually occurs, it becomes possible to make a strong
and ominous prediction about the future."
Toffler proceeds expansively to throw out a few tidbits to those who sit with bated breath wondering "Whatever is to be done?"
According to the soothsayer, one character's variation" in relationships and lifespan.
"Of course there will be some who, through luck, interpersonal skill and high intelligence, will find it possible to marry someone whose marriages work." Toffler concedes.
I object to your portrayal of the concepts of love and troth, Mr. Toffler. Surely in that big bibliography of yours, you could have found space to at least read "Love in the Western World," or could you simply not bear the archaic 1940-ish language?
In substance, de Rougemont's position is as follows:
"I propose to speak only of a truth that is observed by virtue of the absurd—that is to say, simply because it has been pledged—and by being an absolute which will uphold husband and wife as persons.
"For fidelity is not in the least a conservatism, but rather a construction.
(Kindly note the word "construction" vs. "growth," Mr. Toftier et al.)
"An absurdity quite as much as passion, it is to be distinguished from passion by its persistent refusal to submit to its own dream, by its persistent need of acting in behalf of the beloved, by its being persistently in contact with a reality it seeks to control. not to flee.
"The fidelity of which I am speaking is foolish, and yet our folly is then of the most sober and everyday kind. A sober folly that rather closely simulates behaving sensibly; that is neither heroic nor challenging, but a patient and fond application."
So, Mr. Toffler and friends, a sufficient point is this: Would you prefer to sell a daughter or son on de Rougemont's 'absurd' control of the estate? I would appeal to a "rich" life of sustained fantasy and redundant self-destruction?
Nepenthe is not easily found.
—C. C. Caldwell
Huey Newton Is Unusual Radical
OAKLAND, CALIF.-The Lakehouse Apartments, a high, white-towered product of urban renewal, has a sign out front advertising that it affords its tenants a "putting green" and
Nicholas von Hoffman
"full security." Thus, before the doorman would let the party of visitors in, a closed-circuit TV camera might be installed. Zen master with his shaved head, the Zen master's wife, who carried bouquet of zinnies in an old coffee can, and the poet who wore a coat that looked like a dress.
On the 25th floor they were admitted into the apartment by Big Man, whom they embraced in friendship, and a moment later they were saying hello to the baddest, awhested and shaken Huey P. Newton. Huey invited them to sit around the long table in the dining room of his living room, which is furnished with not much more than a set of high-powered binoculars on a tripod permanently focused on the steelhead in the Alameda County Courthouse where Huey spent so many days.
Although the Black Panther party has put him in the apartment for protection, Huey himself isn't particularly security-conscious. "life is going on," he said when he was "when," he has written in one of the Zen poems he shows the master, who reads them while Huey does the duty of a host, making coffee, pouring out Courvoisier, and the abolition opposite of the stereotype black militant. A smiling, voluble man of compelling likability, his
speech is devoid of four-letter words and his sentences have the deficient syntax of the hyper-excreted intellectual who has so much to say about Hegel and cannot get the ideas out fast enough.
Huey denies he's an intellectual, insisting, "I'm an artist. I don't believe in the party has always been planning strategy. Before I went to prison only made one speech. I'm an orator. I'm not eloquent."
Huey has just registered at the University of California at Santa Cruz to take his Ph.D. You wonder why he needs one since he's as completely self-taught as Abraham Lincoln.
"I couldn't read words like 'car' and 'house' when I got out of
high school," he says. "I wasn't function illiterate. I was an illiterate. Vincent Price taught me how to read."
One of Huey's brothers was an actor who had some records of Price's theatrical readings, which Huey would listen to while following the words in the printed text.
The idea of being regarded as a "thug and a gangster and a Ph. D" amuses Huey, but he insists that his reason for getting a doctorate is political strategy in a period when the Panthers are trying to change their reputation in the Oakland black community because they have safely non-violent political force: "With credentials I will be able to move freely through the universities of this country. It
But what seems to have brought Huey and the Zen master together is the similarity of their experience in meditation. Just as the Zen master sits by himself in contemplation, so did Huey learn to embrace the confinement in prison. "I was terrified the first time I was in solitary. I started to vomit but I swallowed my vomit because I didn't want to admit to myself that I had to throw up," says Huey of learning to survive in the dark floor, black walls in the floor except a hole in the floor for a toilet. "They'd only flush it every two weeks. I ate little so didn't have to defacate often."
doesn't matter to me personally if they call me doctor or skunk flower."
The strength to keep from going "dingy" Huey thinks he gets from his father.
"He was always such a responsible Negro," says Huey, speaking not in derision. "He was the one who even then was all he could handle. When he was in the hospital and we thought he was going to die, he said, 'Here's my watch and ring. The third drawer of the bureau there's money for the bills. I got the bill from him, you say screw the bills new'."
Couldn't Huey forget the Black Panthers now? He's done his work, he's got his book coming out, he could be a professor. But he wasn't able to manage ability. Huey is like his father. He's going to get his bills paid.
GM has taken extraordinary precautions to keep these documents from getting out. The company Gerstenberg last october reminded employees that "strict security is essential to the success of our business." He warned of "appropriate disciplinary action" against employes violating corporate security.
POW
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
These defects are described in an array of documents that range from Dealer Service Problem Reports to GM's hush-hush form 1241 reports on preliminary investigations. Some of the reports bear notations such as "GM ACTUATED:" Not To Be Disclosed, or "Company Corporation." We also have confidential minutes of internal meetings and photographs intended for GM eyes only.
Jack Anderson
GM Auto Flaws Remain Hidden
WASHINGTON — Conscientious and concerned employees have turned over to us thousands of incriminating documents from the files of General Motors as the world's largest corporate citadel.
These internal papers show that the great motor moguls, despite their past embarrassments at the hands of Ralph Nader, are continuing to cover up serious safety defects in the vehicles they turn loose on the highways.
GM has been forced to recall millions of defective cars to repair faulty engine mounts and steering systems. But the documents in our possession show that at least a dozen other critical hazards plague millions of vehicles that have not been recalled.
Another report on trouble in Ardmore, Pa, notes: "Left front wheel sheared off. Rolled toward a group of children. Didn't hit them. They jumped." Never heard any more. Yester-day right wheel sheared off."
A month later, GM Vice President John Z. DeLorean told a secret management conference: "Every defect, each recall only diminishes the profit of our advertising we do. The plain and simple truth is that poor quality threatens to destroy us."
GM seems more interested, nevertheless, on covering up their defects than improving the quality. The attitude betrayed in the secret papers is that GM still puts profits ahead of people.
The company has failed to notify car owners of chronic air pollution from its automotive components as steering, brakes, visibility, electrical systems. This failure to inform motorists and pedestrians alike.
A typical report, describing the brake problems of a 1968 BMW sedan in New Jersey, states: "Car involved in minor accident. Owner claimed brakes went to floor. Dealer did work on brakes after the accident. (A few days later) owner claims brakes went to streetkeren. He caused him to strike streetkeren."
The evidence in the documents has been supplemented by discussions with the concerned employers and with the serious defect, an employee close
to the problem said sadly: "GM will conceal things. They have a wanton disregard for the public's feelings." You've something like this to go unresolved. They haven't recalled the cars; they haven't notified anybody. It probably answers their problems that ever existed."
He said GM's attitude was guided by money. I wanted them to take positive action in a definite way in the interest of the public,
Humane Hunt
because the public is responsible for their multibillion profit annually."
The U.S. Homeland Society lost its court case to ban use of bowels-and-arrows and antique weapons for hunting on federal wildlife lands, but it may be on the way to an unexpected outside view across the courts. The society claims these weapons main or cripple deer and other animals instead of killing them outright. Despite the
unsuccessful court proceedings,
the Department of Interior has begun a quiet survey to see whether hunters should be given more protection, and they hunt in the federal refuges.
The Department, in an internal memo, says it is also considering statistics on how many animals live on the lands and how many are crippled by hunters.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
Pearson Criticism Refuted; Awards Termed Distasteful
Pearson
To the Editor:
This is not a letter of indignation. This is a letter whose sole purpose is to make public aware of what any fair-minded reader of Kim S. Winder's letter on Marvin (Keb. 2), already knows.
As the Kansan's readers will recall, Swinder proclaimed in his letter his dismay for the College Assessor to disclose the curriculum offered by the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program as a substitute for requirements in the College. Swindler then proceeded to take a few swings at the program, most
of which seemed to be aimed somewhere below the belt.
He claimed that the director of the program was a sophist, that the program's faculty were instructors, perhaps even in their understanding of the Western tradition," that the program's faculty practice indetermination that the program was elitist.
And what evidence did he offer to substantiate his charges? Apparently nothing but his own word. He claimed that he could have done something defrauding, but he did not provide evidence for this charge.
If, in fact, "the future of the entire University is at stake," it seems reasonable to replace his verbiage with substance, his exhortation with reasonable argument and his spirit of goodwill and the spirit of truth.
By Sokoloff
Griff and the Unicorn
TIP TOE TIP TOE
STOMP
HEH HEH HEH HEH
MAYBE IF I'M LUCKY, I'LL GET PNEUMONIA
TIP TOE
TIP TOE
Z
STOMP
HEH HEH
HEH HEH
accomplished something worthwhile. Somehow I never seem to hear much of them, indeed it is small wonder that any of them should not be discouraged; but I know they are around, and I, for one, don’t mind. But those who aren’t (so Mr. Duncan says) doing much of anything. Give me a break, will ya?
MAYBE IF I'M LUCKY, I'LL GET PNEUMONIA
John Neibling Lawrence graduate student
David Radd
Idaho Falls, Idaho,
Graduate student
Kudos
To Editor.
I confess that I did not get much of a charge out of Mr. Duncan's editorial listing his nominations for the student government "awards," especially or value them as something distasteful about adding editorial fuel to the fire as it encourages students, faculty and other members of the University to maintain an cooperative attitude toward Student Senate operations. The committee could be the candidate for his own nomination for student body president.
1
How about, instead, giving some sincere thanks to those who against difficult odds (including Mr. Duncan's attitude) actually
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Tuesday, February 20, 1973
5
Black Theatre Reflects New Identity'
The University of Kansas Black Theatre is one manifestation of an emergence of a new black identity in white society, ask Bill R. Crawford, associate director of the Black Theatre, drama and director of the Black Theatre.
Keeler is currently directing two Black Theatre productions, "A Soul Gone Home!" by Langton Hugh, and "We Own the Night!" by Jimmy Garrett. The two productions will be presented at KU on 10 consecutive nights beginning Sunday.
Black Theatre deals with black life and society as interpreted by black writers and portrayed by black men and women. Its involvement with the civil rights movement, Kesler said.
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"Black selfhood" is one way to describe this movement, he said. In the past, the black community has been forced to adopt white roles because of their reliance on whites for economic well-being in a white society, according to Keeler, whi is white.
THE THEATRE is part of a tremendous upsurge in black art which includes the development of all forms of black literature and elements of black society. It can be seen in the development of distinguishable dress in the black community, Keeler said.
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Black independence from this system is the theme of "We Own the Night," Keeler said. In the play, a black woman relies on a white employer for survival. Her husband is not employed, so the wife fills the usual masculine role of provider. In this way, the black man is emasculated, Keeler explained.
---
Shaw
Carson Simpson
Simpson Dunbar,
Dunbar, Ritter,
Zaillard, Zaillard
Olander
Morgan Lind
Morgan Winters
Winters Micke
Micke Y Wilson,
Y Wilson, Brandsted
Brandsted Camellie
Camellie Scholef
Scholef in Bailley,
Bailley, Schaleid
Spurlock
ACCORDING TO KEELER, Black Theatre started in urban centers that had large black populations and was part of a "black Renaissance" in all black art. Although it was first noted in Harlem in New York, he said, it has been most influential in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago.
6 Kansans Nominated To Fill Alumni Posts
THE HERO IN the play is rebelling against this system, Keeler said. The play is set against the background of street life. Keeler explained the play's conflict as a kind of racial Armageddon or final conflict between good and evil.
Keeler had his first experience working with Black Theatre on the West Coast. In the San Francisco area, he said, he worked with a stage manager in black productions.
Keeler said that the conflict was not that of white against black, but that of an individual struggle within members of the black community. He said that each individual had to choose to reject the system to achieve "selfhood" much as such an individual had to choose from certain elements of Catholicism before he could be free of the Church.
Black Theatre deals with a wide range of perspectives from militant plays like "We Own the Night" to a more satirical play like "A Soul Gone Home." In that play, Keeler said, a young black dies and returns to haunt his mother.
Adams
rol Dirks
Goodsell
Sue Wood
Sue Wood
Saunders
Hildreth
Ha Dysart
Black Theatre first came to KU three
years ago and has been a director of black productions at KU.
Six University of Kansas alumni have been nominated to fill three positions on the KU Alumnae Association Board of Directors. Board members have five-year terms.
Robert L Brock, Topeka; Dr George E Burket Jr., Kingman; Bette Jo Jones Roberts, Garden City; Leon E. Roulier, Colby; Gee S. Slim Jr., Learned; and Brendan O'Connor, Great Prairie, were nominated by an Alumni Association committee.
Other nominations may be made to the Alumni Association by submitting a petition bearing at least 100 signatures of paid members. No more than 50 members who sign a petition may be residents of the same county. A person must serve before March 9, and must include a photograph of the nominee and biographical information.
Brad graduated from KU in 1960 and from the KU School of Law in 1951. He is a Topeka businessman and attorney, and with a partner has developed 75 Holding Inns in the United States. He is president of Inn Management Inc.
BROCK was president of the International Association of Holiday Irons. He is an alumnus of WVU and the University of Wisconsin.
Burket graduated from KU in 1937, and is a family physician in Kingman. He is an assistant professor of family medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center. He was president of the Kansas Medical Association and the American Academy of Family Physicians.
Burket was president of the Kangman County alumni chapter, and has written 12 books on race and racism.
artists and papers for medical journals. Roberts is a 1950 KU graduate and secretary of the Finney County alumni chapter. She was named one of the 10 outstanding women in Finney County by the Women's Chamber of Commerce there last year, and was named 1972 Woman of the Year in Garden City.
She was an alternate delegate to the 1968 Republican National Convention. Roberts is a member of the KU Development Committee and the Greater University Fund
ROUILER GRADUATED from KU in 1959, and from the Law School in 1964. He is presently serving his third term as Thomas R. Doyle, president of the founders of the first endowment association for junior colleges in Kansas at Colby Community Junior College. He was named the associate dean of the mercere, and in 1967 was voted one of three outstanding men in Kansas by the Joycees.
Health Board and the Northwest Kansas Mental Health Center and director in 15 corporations.
smith graduated from KU in 1943 and from the KU School of Law in 1947. He has been a member of the Kansas Senate for 16 years. For eight years he was President Pro Tempore of the KU Board, chairman of the Appropriations Committee for State Colleges and Universities.
Smith helped to organize the KU Greater
Development Committee.
Roulier is a member of the Kansas Mental
Voran is a 1948 KU graduate, and is vicepresident of the State Bank of Pretty Prairie. He has been a member of the Pretty Prairie school board for 14 years. He graduated from the Lima Club, Hutchinson Knife and fork Club and the Reno Bankers Association.
Keeler said he had had little difficulty working in Black Theatre. A certain rapport has been established between the cast and a primarily white technical crew, he said.
KEELEER SAID students had been very responsive and creative in theatre work. Some difficulties have arisen in interpreting the black plays, Keelar said. He has found that some members for interpretation when the play dealt with things outside his frame of reference.
Shakeus
$1.39
because there is a growing need for artists to interpret the needs of the black community, according to Keeler. With Black Theatre, the staff can train black performers, directors and technical personnel here, he said.
Bankrupt a Shakey's for lunch.
Come into Shakey's for lunch. Eat as much as you want. And pay the ridiculously low price of $1.39. Even if you have 10 slices of cheese, order 2 orders of salad and 3 of potatoes, all you'll pay is $1.39.
Black art should become a permanent part of America because it is a truly indigenous American art form, he said. The black art movement is moving and powerful, Keeler said.
544 W. 23rd
Black Theatre, part of KU Experimental Theatre, will present the two productions at 8 p.m. from Feb. 25 to March 6 in the Experimental Theatre.
842-2266
OPEN TO ANYONE
SUA LIFE DRAWING CLASS
Organizational Meeting on Wednesday February 21 at 8:00 p.m. in Room 303 Strong.
There will be a $2.00 participation fee for the entire semester.
The Black Theatre is important at $ K^{11} $
Sign Up Immediately in the SUA Office
SUA
PASSPORT PHOTO:
for details inquire at SUA office.
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Tuesday, February 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
15
Kansan Slaff Photo by DAN LAUING
The Spare Tires meet T-Town Bombers
... 232 teams compete in intramural battles ...
2-Day Sports Festival Lead by Peter Revson
ROTONDA WEST (AP)—Race driver Peter Revson stoked to tennis and swimming victories Monday in the semifinals of the Rio Olympics. Frater suffered another quick knockout.
The handsome bachelor outgunned sleepy-eyed hockey star Rod Gilbert 6-1 in the tennis finals and overtook pole vault record-holder Bob Seagran with a stretch drive to win the 100-meter swimming showdown.
Revson was clocked in 1:18.2 for 100 meters followed by Seagreen in 1:19.1, skier Jean Claude Killy in 1:27.4 and tennis ace Rod Lavier in 2:04.5. Gilbert was fifth after being disqualified for touching the pool's bottom.
Frazier, who lost his world heavyweight championship last month in a second-round knockout, didn't last as long in the pool as he did in the ring against George Foreman.
Smokin' Joe hit the pool like an eruged hawl, but was 10 meters behind after the first 20 meters of the race. He stopped all way up to the shore and threw up his hands and saying: "I quit."
"I knew I was in trouble when I put my trunks on," Frazier said. "I just wasn't made for water. I almost drowned out there."
Pro bowler Jim Stefanich of Joliet, IL,
edged baseball shugger Johnny Bench by
one stroke with a 41 in the nine-hole golf
event for a $3,000 check.
Others entered in Superstars are pro football quarterback Johnny Unitas and a rookie Trey Burke.
The ten noted athletes are participating in a two-day sports festival at this real estate development on Florida's west coast. The event entering events for which they are famous, is
Each man participates in seven events of his choosing. The winner of each gets $3,000 with $2,100 for second, $1,200 for third, $600 for fourth and $300 for fifth.
Bench, playing hard despite recent surgery, ran up a 3-1 lead against Gilbert in the tennis semifinal before ruling. By the end of the game, Gilbert was with perspiration and the Cincinnati Reds!
catcher was obviously physically beaten.
catcher was obviously physically beaten. Frazier, who admitted to nearly drowning in swimming competition, was upset by the lanky 175-pound Seagreen in weightlifting. Frazier, who weighs 215, was eliminated with 170 pounds on the bar.
Today's five scheduled events are baseball hitting, table tennis, the 100-yard dash, the half-mile run and a one mile bicycle race.
Assistant Resident Director,
Resident Assistant,
For 1973-74 School Year.
Applications Available For Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Dr.
The Ombudsman Office Can Help
Purpose:
To provide an independent office to counsel, investigate, and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
All areas are open to the Ombudsman office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation.
Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Office Phone 864-3607 Location B-108 Kansas Union
Scope:
By BILL WILLETS Kansan Sports Writer
Fouls Cost Javhawks in 72-66 Loss
Victimized by excessive fouling, the University of Kansas dropped a 72-66 decision to the University of Colorado Monday night, enabling the Buffalootes to tighten their grip on second place in the Big Eight Conference.
Colorado is now 7-2 in conference play, one game behind Kansas State. Picked by writers to finish last in the Big Eight in a preseason poll, the Buffs raised their overall mark to 11-10, the second time this season its record has been above .500.
Kansas dropped to 4-5 in conference play and 8-13 overall.
The Jayhawks, after ties at 2-3, 4-4, and 6-6, trailed the entire first half. Three personal fouls called against KU in the last 1:30 of the half accounted for a total of six goals. KU was assessed three technical fouls by Sanders for seemingly mild comments from the bench.
RANSAS (65)
PO 49 FT R F Pts.
6-8 4-9 4-8 4 1
Sutle 9-13 4-5 12 7 22
Knight 1-15 4-3 12 3 10
Rogers 4-4 4-3 12 3 10
Rogers 1-6 4-3 12 3 10
Fideldee 1-6 0-0 1 1 4
Fideldee 1-0 0-0 1 1 4
Samuel 2-0 1-0 1 1 4
Samuel 2-0 0-0 1 1 4
Borrow 2-6 0-0 4 1 25
Borrow 2-6 0-0 4 1 25
88-73 10-18 15 55 88
All three calls cost KU possession of the ball.
COLORADO (72) FG FT H F Pts.
Kotz 4.0 4.1 8 3 3
Regt 4.4 4.1 5 3 3
Wedman 3.6 7.3 4 3 3
Asker 3.7 6.3 3 4 1
Anker 6.13 12 3 17 4
Asker 1.23 12 3 17 4
Mitchell 1.2 0.9 6 4 1
Mitchell 1.2 0.9 6 4 1
Wrigley 1.2 0.9 6 4 1
Wrigley 1.2 0.9 6 4 1
BACK COURTS (82) FG FT H F Pts.
Brock 14.28 16.26 34 18 17
Official: Buffalo Goddard, Dick Siders, George Lloyd,
Halffare, 34.2, Colorado. Technician: Foisa Ku, bench.
34.1, Colorado.
Sanders also called a technical on Colorado' Scott Wedman for protesting a
Ever think of training a team for Pan-African competition? Peace Corps recruiters can offer you exciting assignments. See them in the Union, Fraser or Strong Hall, Feb. 19-23.
PHYSICAL ED. GRADS
KU ruled by as many as eleven points in the second half but rallied to gain its last lead of the game, 51-50, on a Mike Fiddelke field goal.
Kansas ganased its last tie on a jumper by Marshall Rogers which knotted the score at 7-6.
Personal fouls then caught up with the Jayhawks. In the last 4:36 of the game, KU
was whistled with five personals.
Only four personalists were called on Colorado in the last 12-4-3 of the game and they all played at least once.
Both teams hit 28 field goals. Colorado's victory margin came at the charity stripe
Jayhawk coach Ted Owens again made use of KU's newest weapon, the "Bombers." With 10:15 left in the first half and Colorado leading 13-8, Owens substituted for his entire startling lineup with Dave Taynor, Hassan Hasele, Wilson Barrow and Nino Samuel.
The substitution pulled KU to a 14-13 lead
Owens first used this tactic in KU's victory over Oklahoma State last Saturday.
with 8 minutes left in the half.
CU's Wedman was the game's leading score with 23 points. Rick Suttle paced CU
Three players'—Suttle, Barrow and Haase fouled out of the game.
KU's next outing will be this Saturday against Nebraska at Lincoln. The Jayhawks will return to Allen Field House the following Saturday to entertain Missouri.
In another Big Eight action Monday night, Nebraska beat Oklahoma State 76-41.
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Final markdown on all of our Super goodies left from winter. This is the first annual Washington's Birthday Sale for us and we really put on a great sale.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 20, 1973
7
VISTA Programs Will Be Impaired By OEO Cutback, Recruiter Says
President Nixon's announced withdrawal of funds from the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) budget will hurt VISTA programs, according to Nancy Cook, Peace Corps-VISTA recruiter on campus this week.
The Peace Corps will not be affected by the cutback, she said.
According to Cook, 40 per cent of agencies that sponsor VISTA programs are funded through the OEO. Other VISTA programs are sponsored by "grass roots" organizations which do not depend on federal funding, she said.
The Peace Corps is financed completely by other federal funds, she said.
Cook said that despite current funding problems, interest this year in both the Peace Corps and VISTA had been "overwhelming" throughout the nation.
"Maybe people are beginning to temper their idealism with realism," she said. "They aren't going out blindly to change the world." But she noted the nitty-gritty of setting things done."
PEACE CORPS and VISTA recruiters will be in the lobby of the Kansas Union from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through Thursday and from 9 a.m. to noon Friday, she said. The recruiters will also be in Fraser Hall and Strong Hall.
Cook said that recruiters were primarily interested in interviewing graduating seniors to fill vacancies in ACTION (Peace CORSI-VESTA) summer programs.
Persons skilled in agriculture or who have had farming experience are most needed in the Peace Corps, she said. According to Cook, there are 4,000 Peace Corps openings for persons with knowledge of agriculture in the June, July and August programs.
Cook said that persons with backgrounds in education, business, law and health were needed to work with them.
programs. Persons who have experience in work and education are especially needed.
RECRUTTERS ARE most interested in a person's skills, she said. A college degree is considered a skill, and any additional experience is helpful, she said.
Cook said that applications should be sent to the Peace Corps-VISTA headquarters in Washington, D.C., six months before a person is available for service to allow them time to work according to Cook, processing of an application normally requires three or four months.
VISTA volunteers remain in the United States.
According to Cook, Peace Corps volunteers participate in a three-month training program which is usually held in the country to which they are assigned. The training program involves participation in the language and culture of the country as well as job training, she said.
PEACE CORPS volunteers receive only a living allowance, Cook said, and the amount varied according to the country in which they are placed.
Cook said that Peace Corps volunteers could request positions in Central America, South America, Africa, East Asia or on certain islands in the Pacific. Skills of the applicant and the requests of countries are matched as closely as possible, she said.
VISTA volunteers receive $75 a month in addition to a food and lodging allowance,
"We do not apologize for the low
awareness said, "but our offer a unique
experience."
VISTA VOLUNTEERS agree to work in the program for one year, she said, and is expected to be at work for three years. There is no formal contract, and a volunteer is free to leave at any time, she said.
Passage of a bill calling for mandatory treatment of drug addicts, now under study by a committee of the Kansas House of Repeat Offender Treatment and Drug treatment centers such as Watkins Methodone Clinic at the University of Kansas or Headquarters Inc., in Lawrence.
Treatment for Addicts Mandatory in New Bill
a resolution to study the bill was proposed
Friday by Rev. Rozer Turner, R-Witchia.
Clark Owens, Sedgwick County probate judge, said recently that he had requested Turner present the measure in the form of a bill and not as a suggestion for further study.
The bill would give the probate court power to require drug addicts to accept treatment. Owens said that the bill would not prevent addicts from adding drugs who would not be treated voluntarily.
Voluntary treatment centers, such as Headquarters or Watkins Methadone Clinic, would continue to operate in their present manner, he said, but possibly would work more closely with law enforcement agencies.
Addictis would be referred to any center licensed to treat them, Owens said. The center provides psychiatric wards of municipal hospitals or to state psychiatric hospitals. Owens said a system might be devised whereby the adictis are treated at an outpatient clinic and then would enter a hospital.
Despite his own disagreement with the bill, Turner said, he introduced it to the legislature to "open the can of worms," asking him the question of drug abuse into discussion.
He said discussion of the bill would clarify for future legislatures the role of the probate court under the judicial article amendment adopted by Kansas voters in November. There is a question of whether the probate court would be of equal status
TOPEKA (AP)—A bill to restore the Memorial and Veterans Day holidays in Kansas to their traditional dates, effective in 1976, has passed recently by the Kansas House and sent to the Senate. The vote was 98-23.
Cook said that she and her husband, who were VISTA volunteers in Ames, Iowa, from August 17th to June 19th, spent most of their time working with low income students. Cook had the highest degree in business administration, was involved in organizing a low income credit union and low income businesses. Cook said she spent much of her time working with children and cared for children.
"Our volunteers set up programs and hope to step out and let the community take over," she said. "We do not do 'Band-Aid' work." she said
About 100 persons came by the Peace Corps-VISA information table in the lobby of the Union Monday, according to Chris Krause. "Twenty of them" look applications, be said.
Anyone interested in either the Peace Corps or VISTA may come by for information and-or to sign up for a personal interview, he said.
with the state district court or whether it would have diminished powers, be it
The definition of "addict" also needs eludition. Turner said.
Owens said that he was disappointed the bible counselor for study rather than for immediate aid.
HIKING BOOTS
For the finest in lightweight trail boots, see the Alps from Fabiano, a durable yet stylish boot that features a sturdy midsole for long wear and padded lining for comfort and warmth. Designed with gray for men and women. Also red and green for women. $26.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
craftmen of fine leather goods
812 Massachusetts
TUESDAY NIGHT
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
is
SMORGASBORD NIGHT
843-1886
809 W. 23rd
5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
All the Pizza $144 You Can Eat
— Plus 1 FREE Coke
PEACE CORPS-VISTA
We are looking for seniors and grad students with backgrounds in agriculture, business home ec., law architecture, liberal arts, teaching, and the sciences for
FEB.19 THRU 23
RECRUITERS IN THE UNION FRASER & STRONG HALL
Business Placement Office—Feb. 19.
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 20.
Law Placement Office—Feb. 30.
Liberal Arts Placement Office—Feb. 21.
Engineering Placement Office—Feb. 23.
also in:
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
The Malls Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC
SUNSHINE
SLADE—Slaved?
Reg. $5.98
$299
polydoi
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to students at national origin. PLEASE HALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
NORTH SIDE COUNTRY Shop-3 bushes. No. Of kawaii containers, decorative cups, gas heating and furniture collections, gas heating & wood stove bicycles include 10 speedes, edels, old pot belly cans, wood stoves, wood fireplace, and 2 baskets baskets & wooden cakes. Fireplace baskets & wooden cakes are hardwood price. Baled alfalfa, bronze & wheat straw. home grow plants. Alas fruits & vegetables grown in greenhouse.
FOR SALE
CARS BOUGH AND SOLD. For the best deal
cars. G.I. Joe's Used Car, Vernor
Vermont. H-808-698-7200
RADIO AUDIOR STEREO WAKEHOUSE - The forest
area of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel
Lawrence, West 60th Street, 864-354-8100
or www.waldorfastoria.com
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"What's it going to be like?"
2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage.
*New Analysis of Campus Civilization*
Available now at Campus Madison, Town Grie,
510-824-3769.
Western Civilization Notes----Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
(1912-78) Cairo, Ex. condition - 14,000 miles
(3162-345-134) Emporia, Kan. AFTER 6 POSSIBLE
DEPARTURES
B M.C. Car, AIFA Altoza convex, 5 segment,
BM O.C. Car, AIFA Altoza convex, 5 segment,
BM R. Car, AIFA Altoza convex, 5 segment,
brakes $1506 - $1340, Ichio Basement, Japan
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
1960 Rambler Station Wagon, $50 or best offer,
843-1232 2-20
Stereo support package. AM/FM Stereo re-
ceiver. FM tuner. FM receiver. FM
miles. BIR changer headphones. and 10 black
headphones. USB cable.
Outside. Upright Panasonic Tape Recorder with
a 12" Ribbon. 6" x 8" (15 cm x 20 cm).
Unimproved 601 l. Amplifier tapes $1.00 each, $4.95
for a bundle of six.
A good selection of udd vacuum cleaners, allergy hose, Hoover, Eureka, Electrolux, etc. 2:41 BD Mass
4-Channel stereo component system, AM FM
player, 806 kHz channel changes, AS speaker kit,
amplifier, FM radio.
Fisher 202. Receiver Amp. 12, 28 watt RMS per
channel. Avg. Ampl. 3-2*2*2 3-2*2*2
$000.00 Call. 842-7238.
DOWN PARKA with hood, two inch loft, blue,
slightly used. $83. 945-5983.
2-21
94 TU-4. New head, recent valve job, good book,
$450, $843-3678. 2-20
And now you will see a Kinetica Autovideo A. With
this you can also view your iPhone 4. Also available, all Kinetica & Pentax cameras.
It is worth mentioning that you can buy
ORIGINAL -- SHOCKING! Complete Movie Available for you on tape! "KEEPER MADNESS" available for you on tape! "KEEPER MADNESS" day marijuana lawn Wheel From the Dear Willy's day marijuana lawn Wheel From the Dear Willy's day Warden Cause or Reel to Reel complete but without Warden Cause or Reel to Reel Send Cash or Check to SPECTRUM SOUNDS, Send Cash or Check to PARK KANSAS 61214 HIIRR, SUPPLY LIMITS
New Austrian "Dachstein" skid boots with tree
north-western "Snag clamp" Woman's $ 9.000-
composite $350.00
DODGE 70 Challenge, a special edition, purple
hardcover. $199.95. Full power, many extra, dryer. 842-855-6930.
For sale, 85 Ford Custom, very dependable, $250.
New, 91 Ford Mustang, very dependable, $450.
Ford before 4/31, 84-925 mustang after 10 p.m.
Mustang before 7/17, 84-925 mustang after 10 p.m.
Dynaket Stereo 70 watt and prep-am. Works
must. Must sell $113.00, Call 845-1866-286.
***
Dynaket Stereo 70 watt and prep-am. Works
must. Must sell $113.00, Call 845-1866-286.
Zenith Siren for sale with AM-FM Stereo radio.
Dirt cover included. 100 watts power call. Power
supply included.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
FOR RENT
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall. 2 rooms, 1 bedroom; 2 bedrooms, w/Study; Quiet闹房 location; Pool and gas-lighted, landed apartment. Building capacity: 2500 people. -643-733-789, Libby Cook
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
ROOM? Try a 2-bedroom directly across Masa.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
parking, library, recreation center,
swimming pool; security service.
reasonable rates; furniture available. Ideal roommates.
Saint Apter, 123nd Apt. 9; if
queens 634-213-61
For the latest up to the minute listing in rental
centres, Rental Exchange, Buxford, 8-5
901, 890 Kensington
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
NATIONAL FIREWORKS
THE CREWEL
CUPROARD
15 East 8th 914-2646
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Lawrence Auction House
642 MASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
7 p.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
843-709-4591 anytime. I For You.
Three Days
25 words or fewer; $2.00
each additional word; $0.2
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 3 days before publication
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Let Us Sell It For You
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
PEUGECF
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet courtyard. You can walk to shops and schools — Fraser Hall is only 10 blocks— onto the samba, or jazz room—or your game room, or just relax by your airplace.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
ADAPTMENTS
Pounecot PX-10-E $225.00
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over duplex has huge yards and is only one block away from a two-story extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms (kids' rooms) are large with large living area, electric kitchen with utility hook-ups, house and refrigerator, carpet, central air, storm windows, deck with deck railing, December 17 At 25:33 Edgardwood Avenue. Call 800-649-2525.
Come by and see these spacious apartments. Rent
are not available. All apartments are paid. Leaves of various lengths are included.
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing a 1,200 sq. ft. bedroom, furnished and uninterrupted by large windows for heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities paid. Close to campus. Call 843-8250 or see at 714-8250.
Serious Student: Nice front room in quiet home
Utilities and linens furnished. Student—own
bathroom.
Course Info:
For Rent - private warm room - two blocks from campus- Kitchen-based -842-4475 2-20
Sleeping room, single and double furnished for 2 persons (10, 15, and 20 people) and 1 and 2 bands from Union. Phone: 843-757-9777.
For rent. Clean, quiet apts, with carpeting, dishware, appliances, campus car. Earliest Admission: 1025 Missions Park, 842-807-6935
Apt. for sub-lease. Clean furnished, wall-to-wall
wall with 3-foot ceilings. Street parking, 2 blues
from Union, no pets. Parking $60 per month.
RIDE ON BICYCLES 1401 Mass. 843-848
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
842-5552
二. 考
For Rent: 2 b apt, AC, w/ carpet, $130, 1214
Tenn. #845-5486.
Hillview Apartments- 1745 W. 24th St. One and two bedroom apartments $99 and up 842-461-358.
Nice studio apt. close to campus. -Olst street-parking.
1422 Albio. 841-2131. -2-26
COUNTRYLIVING -4 ml to KU -5aparmum form
room, kit LIVING -A, C. AWER, driver, prer,
room kit, LIVING -A, C. AWER, driver, prer,
room kit, LIVING -A, C. AWER, driver, prer,
NOTICE
ATTENTION BENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
all prizes, no situation too difficult. Home Loans
are available.
Will pay $50 to make my Naimuth Contract for
Will spend 73 taken over, male or female. Call 842-515-8390.
151 Michigan St. B-B-Q, B-B-Q Bar. B-B-Q in an
10 oz. bottle. $30. An Oyster cake $40.
A slab at buy here $24. Large rib plate
$60. Bread plate $75. Beef sand $6. Sound of beef $3.1鸡片 chicken
plate $5. Soup plate $7. Phone, Tv phone $2-910, 511, Mile St. If
buy here $15.
No charge, list your houses, duplexes, duplexes, single-family homes waiting for more information or waiting. For more info call Home Locaters.
Lawrence, Auction House. Sell your household
for consignment information call 863-759-4200.
For consignment info call 863-759-4200.
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some items. Country Store, 707 North 2nd. open 9-7, day. Country Shop, 707 North 2nd. open 9-7, day.
Need to sublease my apt. immediately, Clean,
Cleaning and with AC and off 211-
parking Call 864-6478
Why buy a landlord's property for him with your own property? You can save money along with your diploma? 36 or 48 m³ rent can be paid on time. Why not check into a way to save money without nothing? You can buy a new property without anything. Why not check into a way to save money without anything? You can buy a new property without anything. Why not check into a way to save money without anything?
GAY LIBERATION IS GOOD FOR YOU: Monday–business, 7:00 p.m. on FRIDAY–SIOUGH, 12:30 p.m. on SAT–COUNSELING HAP-844-306-300 for referrals, OFC-BIL-112, BIL-864-609) Lawyers, 24 Lawrence
Orcad Quaker Meeting wants more Friends. We will be very happy to help you with information. Please note: More information ediited Annie McNeese Chapel, Fire Station 71, Orcad Quaker Meeting, 263 West Main St.
+ +
♂♂
info. center 864-3506
GAY COUNSELING & RAP
for referrals:
info. center 864-3506
Casa de Taco
Dollicious Nutritious
Mexican Food
403-98
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
Fair prices paid for good used furniture mf
842-7098.
Wanted: Use Ubertillet in excellent condition.
Call 843-8808 after 5 p.m. 2-21
ROOMMATE WORK! To share a nice mime,
you'll need a roommate. Provide a
monthly, including All Utilities. Call 853-829-
6971 or visit www.roommate.com.
Wanted: Female roommate to share apartment, 1
room from公寓. Rent $55. Call 844-163-291
1-800-856-2711.
Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates to share aap.
Room 643 - next year in Jaywalker
Room 643-183-266-226
Wanted: Female Roommate to live in house;
large private property, new campus; rent
$2-23
phone: 842-858-1000
Nord ride home-Jive close to meet center in the parking lot.
Please call 831-280-7692 and leave no furthest.
LOST
Converting. wife needs ride from $32rd Street.
Converting. wife needs ride from $32rd Street.
$30 A-RAT 9PM-10PM or L-MAR Call: 644-764-8567
$30 A-RAT 9PM-10PM or L-MAR Call: 644-764-8567
LOST-Hacket黑色夹克, Loot Tues. on 2nd floor strong. If found please all call 8431-3125.
Wanted: Date for Rock Chalk Reuse. Must make
alarming mistakes during a difficult period.
Anticipate: Call Bornstein at 820-357-1922.
Serve in Rock Chalk Reuse Program.
Brown and black just-shaded cepheus collude puppy
and dog. Answers to PERRY:
481-350 618-1086. Answers to PERRY:
481-350 618-1086.
HELP WANTED
SALES HELP WANTED - Morrings, apply in
person, Mr. Guy. 920. Mass. 2-20
Lost Valentine's Day, in Stuart Place area, our sister-in-law had her second pregnancy. We were worried about her baby being born prematurely.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waiters and
weekend and weekend hours. Phone 845-6260.
Weekend and weekend hours. Phone 845-6260.
SERVICES OFFERED
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent interned in part-time commercial work for TV-radio Age range 18-40 Interview Thursday and Saturday 9:30-12:30 Registration 834-3582 (please bring pictures) 2-22
TYPING
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers other misc. types; typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Acute and prompt service. Proofreading signed corrections. Ph.D. 843-954. Mrs. Wright.
For fast, dependable Volkwagen Repares:丹尼
phone 841-832-160 Eim Street, Lawrence, Kansas
phone 841-832-160 Eim Street, Lawrence, Kansas
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups
starting service
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
4 lows
V1 2-1008
DATSUN IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATESUN
500 E. 23rd 842-0444
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73.74 must pickup a budget request form from 1048 Kennes Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday through Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearing this spring.
8
Tuesday, February 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
SUA Flights Up in the Air
Trans for summer flights to Europe sponsored by SUA are indefinite because of the uncertain status of youth fares and group affinity fares, according to Bob Gaynor, Overland Park senior and SUA member.
The airlines and the U.S. government, working through the Civil Aeronautics Board have not determined 1973 fares. 1972 fares expire April 1.
In the past, SUA has sponsored group affinity flights to Europe which were open to the entire campus. These flights were based on group affinity fares, Gaynor said. Group affinity flights were successful because it allowed the company to constitute a flight, the complete service from a regularly scheduled airline and a fairly late reservation deadline.
SUA group affinity flights have featured a
variety of flights from Chicago and New York to Chicago and connect group flights from Chicago, Chicago City.
Current SUA group affinity flight plans, entirely dependent on the aeronautics board ruling, have flights leaving in late May. These are determined when the board rules are determined.
The travel group charters, newly developed this year, are open to anyone.
The organizer of the travel group charters must have a complete passenger list three months before the departure date. Each participant has a 25 per cent cent minimum deposit.
This year, besides the tentative group affinity flights, two plans may be used. These are travel group charters and regular charters.
Most travel group charters will depart in
Affirmative Action Gets Evaluation by SenEx
The Senate Executive Committee's (SenEx) representatives to the Affirmative Action Conference Committee discussed their roles with the entire Affirmative Action Committee during SenEx's regular meeting Monday, Kick Von Rendt, executive secretary, said.
The SenEx representatives to the Affirmative Action Committee are Lee Young, associate dean of the School of Journalism; Robert Friauf, professor of physics and astronomy; and Susie Cowden, Kansas City, Mo., senior.
The Affirmative Action Conference Committee will meet Wednesday, Von Ende
Three students, Moll Lafflin, St. Louis,
Mo., graduate student; Robert Duncan,
Wilmette, Ill., senior; and Janet Stokes,
Cincinnati, freshman, have been appointed
to the University Senate Committee on
financial Aid and Awards, Von Ende said.
The Faculty Executive Committee also met Monday, Von Ende said, and considered the list of nominees for the Faculty Council and Athletic Board.
The Faculty Executive Committee will meet again Thursday to weigh a policy
"This is the largest schedule we'd had in a long time." she said Monday.
Nine concerts have been scheduled for the next academic year by the KU Concert Course Series Committee, according to the College of Oklahoma, senior and president of the committee.
Concerts scheduled are the Preservation Hall Jazz Band from New Orleans; Leonard Rose, a cellist; Wanda Wilkornisma, a polish violinist; Patricia Wise, a former KU voice major who has sung at the Metropolitan Opera; the National Ballet of Washington, and its accompanying orchestra; the Awaij Appui Theatre of Japan, which will also present demonstrations of the making and handling of its instruments. The concert also features Roneros, a four-man family of guitarists; and Gina Gaucho, an American plunker.
Becker said that the schedule was only tentative and that not all the contracts have been signed.
She said that the committee was allocated only $28,000 by the Student Senate and that tickets sold to faculty and other nonstudents usually made only $5,000. This sum barely covers the cost of presenting the programs, Becker said.
She said the committee planned to make up some of the needed funds by charging $1 for student tickets to a Van Cliburn concert April 17 of this year.
Becker said that past concerts have been presented in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall because attendance was usually not large enough to fill Hoch Auditorium. She said, however, that in most concerts that year all the concerts next year except for the puppet theatre wend' be presented in Hoch Auditorium.
Loan to Print Whomper Shirts Remains Unpaid
A $1,992 loan for the purchase and printing of promotional "Whomper" T-shirts remains unpaid, although the loan was due June 1, 1972, according to Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the University of Kansas Endowment Association.
Youngbeg said Monday that only $134 had been paid on the loan, which was given at the request of William Bafour, vice chancellor for student affairs at KU.
"The problem is that we've changed directors so many times, things are really complex."
Molly Lafflin, assistant to the Dean of Women and former student body vice president, said that the loan had been requested for the purchase of Whomp T-shirts and that several hundred shirts had not been sold.
The loan was made last spring, Laffin said, and probably will be repaid this spring after a "Whomper Week" event sponsored by Lawrence University and Douglas County Commissions.
KU Plans 9 Concerts For 1973-74
statement by the Faculty Rights, Privileges and Appeals Committee of the university, which shall be
mid-June at the earliest, requiring
signs to sign for the flights by mid-
March.
Von Ende said the Executive Committee
meeting of the Faculty Council
for 'March 2016'
SUA plans to co-sponsor some reliable travel group charters. These flights will be organized by the Council on International Educational Exchange in New York. They will be most helpful for students wishing to leave after mid-June, Gaynor said.
Despite the changes in group flights normal charters still will be available. Charters are open only to members, organizations, such as the University.
Campus Bulletin
TODAY
French Table. 11:30 a.m. m.m. Meadowlark Cafeteria.
Kansas Union.
Kansas Union.
AAUP] noon, Alcove B, Cafeteria.
Ministry of Education Students : curry, Curry Room.
Ministry of Education Burger restaurant :念居餐厅,
Private Group: 12, p. 329
Ham an Religious Training Institute :
music, music room :念居餐厅
Sum uprelief Waksa : p. 1mea, Plone room: 300 A
sum uprelief Waksa : p. 1mea, Plone room: 300 A
Sedentry: 3:30 p.m. Woodsby Anderlorum.
Student Teachermen: 4:30 p.m. International Room, Partners.
College Teachermen: 5:30 p.m. Big Eight Room.
Lecture Hall: 6:30 p.m. Kramer Room.
Lecture Hall: 7:30 p.m. Kramer Room.
Baptist Executive Committee: 7:30 p.m. Parlor A.
Baptist Lecturer and Leaders: 7:30 p.m. — branch: 7:30 p.m.
Dean of Men 7:30 p.m. Council Room.
Dean of Women 7:30 p.m. International Lit Room.
SIMS 7:30 p.m. Oread Room.
Film Setter 7:30 p.m. Woodward Auditorium.
Woodward Auditorium 7:30 p.m. International Room.
Baptist Staged Union 8:30 p.m. Parlor A.
Wednesday Night Is GIRL NIGHT at the Flamingo
Paul Gray's
INTERVIEWS
Dixieland Gaslight Gang plays Good Music While You Watch
FOR
TOPLESS DANCERS
843-9800
Dancers from
7 til 1 a.m.
Dixieland Music
10:00 - 1 a.m.
Flamingo
501 N.9th
CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS
The Consumer Protection Association (CPA) Board of Directors are responsible for initiating the association's consumer oriented projects, gathering resources for those projects and seeing that they are completed. In general, Board members have ultimate authority over all of the organization's projects.
Any student, faculty or University staff member interested in becoming a CPA Board member should submit a short written statement to the CPA office. Send your resume to: CPA@ucan.edu.
Applications must be submitted by 4 p.m. Wednesday, February 21. Interviews will be held Thursday, February 22 beginning at 7:00 a.m., at a place to meet with the applicant.
CPA 299 KANSAS UNION 864-3963
Use Kansan Classified
SUa SKI CLUB BRECKENRIDGE March 18-24
TRIP INCLUDES ($106):
6 nights lodging
5 days lift tickets
Transportation by bus
Continental breakfast
Options: $19
Ski rental for entire trip (skis, boots, poles). Damage insurance included.
Payment Deadlines:
Feb. 23 — $50 deposit March 5 — Balance due
Initial payment may be given beginning Feb. 20 in the SUA Office
SKI CLUB MEETING MARCH 21 AT 7:30 In the Council Room. Contact SUA at 864-3477
Contact SUA at 864-3477
Commonwealth Theatres
— NOW SHOWING —
Movie information 842-4000
One MOMENT OF BLISS
A FETISH OF REQUIEM!
ROCER
MADNESS
MAK UP AMERICA!
AND A DOORBORNE WEDDING
PASS BECOMING NATIONAL NIGHTMARE
MARJUANA
WEED FROM THE DEVIL'S GARDEN
FROM THE CENTER GARDEN
Eve. 7;40;9;30
Mat.Mon.4;15 only
Rated PG Adults.1.75 Child.75
The Hillcrest
NOMINATED BEST ACTRESS DIANA ROSS
BEST ACTRESS DIANA ROSS
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
Eve, 7:15, 9:45
AM/FRI, 8:30 AM/PM
LADY SINGS THE BLUES
Eve. 7:15, 9:45
Eve. 7:15,9:45
Mal. Mon. 1:50,4:25
Hillcrest
Robert Redford for
"JEREMIAH JOHNSON"
Eve, 7;20,9;20
Mat.Mon.21;5,4;10
THE HILLCREST
Child: 75
Greatest Escape Adventure Yet!
hastest Escape Adventure Yell **"THE POESION ADVENTURE"** Rated PG Weekdays 2:10, 7:30, 9:50 Varsity TRAILERS - Telegraph 1-865
IN THE STORE
DLLS—"WHITE Wilderness"
Walt Disney's "THE SWORD IN THE STONE"
PLUS—"White Wilderness"
Eve. WORD. 7,000; 9:140
White 8:25 only
Mal. Mon. WORD. 7,000 only
Granada
THEATRE...telephone V13-5788
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
73
'73 ROCK CHALK REVUE
LEAVE 'EM LAUGHING WHEN YOU HAVE TO SAY ODBYE...
GOODBYE...
What is it?
It's time again for KU's production of "ROCK CHALK REVUE"
1. Town Crier, downtown.
An evening of entertainment, satire and enjoyment . . . delivered by members of our own student body.
Where can tickets be bought?
HOCH AUDITORIUM MARCH 2 and 3,1973 8:00 p.m.
At three locations in Lawrence, starting Thursday, Feb. 22.
1. Town Crier, the Malls shopping center.
2. SUA ticket office, in the Union. (8:30-noon & 1:00-5:00)
Block Ticket Sales Begin 6-9 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 21, in SUA Ticket Office.
How much are the tickets?
Friday night & $2.00 & $2.50*
Saturday night & $2.25 & $2.75*
'(Friday night ticketholders receive a
BREEE BEE at Mother Mary's)
STILL WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No.95
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday February 21, 1973
Some Deans Say Student Grades Are Rising
See Story Page 8
Kansas Photo by BILL JONES
Handicapped Request Curb Cuts on All Sidewalks Representative of KU committee testifies . . .
City Commission Sees Lack of Communication
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
City Commission candidate Gene Miller charged Tuesday night that former city collection office supervisor Robert L. Beach had been "railroaded" out of office.
Speaking at a meeting of the Lawrence City Commission, Miller requested that a grand jury be impanelled to investigate a disappearance of $2,840.73 in city funds last
Beech pleaded no contest Feb. 9 in Douglas County District Court to a charge of misuse of city funds. He is currently free on $1,500 bond.
"I don't think he (Beech) has the missing $1,500," Miller said. "He told me he doesn't have it. He it's not charged with them, I just misuse of city funds. Apparently someone did something wrong, and he's taking the rap for it.
Miller, of 305 Arrowhead Drive, told the commission that a recent article in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World implied that Mr. Miller had been hired at $1,500 from the city finance department.
"Obviously somebody here got money besides him. This body should use its influence to impanel a grand jury to try me." "Oh, you haven't happened and possibly p慰 this man."
City Manager Buford Watson Jr. said that an auditor's report last year showed $2,640.73 to be missing and that the city had a higher amount from the Traveler’s Insurance Co.
"Beech pleaded mote contend and is now a convicted felon," Watson said. "I couldn't get it right."
Miller charged that Beech had not had adequate legal counsel and had pleaded no contest because "he thought it might be the easiest way to get people off his back.
"I arm of the opinion that he is not guilty and is being railroaded."
Commissioner Chuck Fisher said, "If there has been a miscarriage of justice, it will be one that we must look at."
Fisher then moved that the commission request Court Attorney Milton Allen to
See CITY Page 5
Few Candidates File for Senate; Deadline Today
The deadline for filing for Senate and class officers is 5 p.m. today. Candidates may file with Sterling Hall. Subtitle III: Attendance. Attendance, chairman, or in the Student Senate office.
Only 26 candidates had filed for the 93 open seats in the Student Senate by 5 p.m.
Senate candidates need only pay a $5 filing fee with their declaration of candidacy. Class officer candidates must submit a petition signed by 50 students with a declaration of candidacy. Declarations and petition, 105B Kansas Union.
Filings as of Tuesday were: School of Architecture, no candidates for two seats; Business, 1-3; Education, 2-12; Engineering, 4-5; Fine Arts, 1-5; Graduate, 0-18; Journalism, 2-3; Law, 3-2; Pharmacy, 0-21; Social Welfare, 2-22; University College, 1-4; North, 1-4; Nunemaker, 4-0; Oliver, 0-5; and Pearson, 6-0.
Inquiry of City Funds Sought
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Lawrence City Commissioners announced Tuesday night their conclusion that there is a lack of communication between the commission and the community. The conclusion was part of a report on five city-wide meetings held last year.
i meetings took place in October and November and were called by the commission to investigate public sentiment on changes in the structure of the commission.
"It's not the number of people on the commission, but the willingness of the people to take responsibility," she said. "We're not communicating with boards and commissions as well as we should. We plan to have more meetings with them."
Commissioner Nancy Hambleton said the commission had concluded that there was a need for a better means of communication because it could not be a one-way street.
She also said she did not think the membership on the commission should be allowed.
COMMISSIONER Chuck Fischer, who said he was "president the distaff side," said he considered area representation an important issue.
rather, responding to statements by commissioners Hambleton and J. R.
"I behoves the commission to get people to come up with a petition to get this matter on."
Fullman that the issue could not be placed
bailout until 1974, urged immediate action
Commissioner Jack Rose said he did not think a significant public interest in area representation had been evident in the series of meetings.
"The city would be better off if we would elect a mayor as mayor and stay with five commissioners," Rose said. "The mayor could not vote except to break ties. That situation would create strong leadership for the commission."
The commissioners agreed that area residents should become more involved
"Don't just come to commission meetings when you are upright about a zoning change or something else," Hambleton said, since when you don't have an interest in it."
ROSE SAID the commission was con-
demned to investigate a Citizen's Advocacy
Bureau to help solve the problem.
The board would be composed of former city commission members and other qualified persons in the community, Rose said. There are about 20 former commissioners in Lawrence. Rose said that they will continue to enlarge the group to no more than 50.
The duties of the board's members would involve gathering information and opinions, assisting in the creation of good will for the city and, specifically, investigating the possibility of establishing a city "goals program." Rose said.
The commission plans to meet with the former commissioners within the next two months.
"The board would be intended to provide a mechanism whereby the diversified talents of citizens could be employed in the operation of city government," he said.
Commissioner Chuck Fisher moved that the specifications be put into the form of an ordinance and that the matter be referred to by the board. The motion was unanimously approved.
IN OTHER business, the commission beard a plea from Roger Williams, an education assistant in the geology department of the University of Kansas, to provide access to public sidewalks and public buildings for handicapped persons.
The commission also adopted a resolution ordering the construction of an $45,000 building.
$1 Million Loss in Aid Possible
Lawrence, Lloyd Davies of 1645 W. 19th St.
read a prepared statement to the commission requesting that the decision be either tabled or withdrawn. Davies recently formed a citizen's group to oppose the sidewalk plan.
COMMISSIONER Jack Rose told Davies and the audience that he "had no desire to table or withdraw the plan" and that the commission would proceed with it.
Davies said an opinion poll conducted by his group showed that 75 per cent of the property owners in the district to benefit from the sidewalks opposed the plan. The commissioners, however, voted 5-0 to go ahead with the plan.
In other business, the commission:
Kansan Staff Writer
By GARY ISAACSON
Arngersinger said that National Defense Education Act fellowships would also take a substantial cut. This cut will also cost the student instructional allowances, he said.
—Appointed James M. Harrell, 1329 Rhode Island, to the Traffic Safety Commission to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Ward Thompson Sr.
also receives $2,500 to pay for the student's fees and tuition. The difference between the stipend and student expenses goes to the college's academic programs and other expenditures.
Nichols said that although a specific figure had not been computed, he expected the biggest losses to come in student aid and graduate stipends.
The University of Kansas will lose about $1 million in federal aid in fiscal year 1974/75. President Nixon's proposed budget is accusered to the senator, Nicholls Raymond Nichols said Tuesday.
"Without federal funding, the center at kU and those in other schools across the country were unable to participate."
When a national defense fellowship comes to the University, Argersinger said, the federal government normally pays a stipend to the student. But, the University
Henry Snyder, of the office of research administration, said that funds for KU's language and area studies program would also be eliminated.
ALTHOUGH SOME agencies that sponsor research programs may have the same amount of funds, Snyder said, these funds are being reallocated to other areas. Therefore, funding for research has diminished.
—Decided to meet with members of the Building Code Appeals to discuss the Mining Rule.
this program, which supplies funds for equipment for undergraduate studies, he
William Argersinger, vice charger for research and graduate studies, is working on an analysis which is expected Friday, Nichols said.
"We have been using $40,000 to $60,000 a year for this program." Nichols said.
In regard to a possible appeal to Congress for reinstatement of these funds, Nichols said that he would notify Kansas's commissioners about the situation at the University.
"Federal funds from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health have already been cut in half and may be gone entirely by next year," he said.
—Approved on first reading an ordinance calling for annexation of about 79.5 acres located at the southeast corner of 31st and Iowa streets into the city limits.
NICHOLS SAID funding for the undergraduate equipment program had been cut for this year and next. The government matches the University dollar for dollar in
Nixon's budget would phase out the National Direct Student Loan program. Nichols said the loss in federal aid for this program would be about $700,000.
ARGERSINGER said all of KU's research programs would be hit hard by the loss of federal funding. He said at least six training programs at KU that provided financial support for students and faculty would be cut completely.
Israelis Raid Arab Bases
The attack by land, sea and airborne forces carried the Israelis to the Syrian-Lebanese border 112 miles north of the Israeli-Lebanese frontier, a spokesman
TEL AVIV (AP)—Israeli troops launched their deepest ever ground raid into Lebanon early Wednesday, striking at Arab terrorist bases in the north of the country, the military announced.
"Dozens of guerrillas were killed," and six skurailas were wounded, of them only three.
Police in Beirut, Lebanon, said
See ISRAELIS Next Page
1985
Roomy Classrooms
A tour of two Kansas school systems, Powhattan, which will spend $124 a student this year, and Spring Hill, which will spend $624 a student this year.
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
deteriorating buildings. The Powhatan school building seemed to be less crowded and students seemed to have more educational aids. Teachers in Spring Hill were meeting to protest the firing of a teacher for using profanity in the classroom room and to discuss what they called low salaries. This is a spacious classroom in Powhatan.
Kansas Senate Prepares for School Finance Battle
By ERIC KRAMER
Kansan Staff Writer
A court order to restructure the financing of Kansas public schools has left a good many legislators and educators in a state of confusion.
The problem is not new. For years books have been written about the inequality of financing schools by local property tax. Students who live in districts that contain poor schools have been getting better education than students in poor districts for a long time.
The Kansas Senate Education Committee ended weeks of work Tuesday when it voted to send a new school finance plan to the Senate floor today.
The new plan is an amended form of a bill written by the Joint Interim Committee on Environment.
Educators and sociologists have been writing books about the problem for years. The Supreme Court of California finally decided to consider the problem as a constitutional issue. It ruled that the local property tax to finance public education was a violation of the equal protection under the laws clause of the 14th Amendment.
Johnson County District court rulcd Aug. 30 that the financing plan used in De Soto violated Michele Caldwell's right to equal protection under the laws. The court gave the Kansas Legislature until July 1 to develop a new school finance plan.
But there are problems in such a plan. Price levels are different in different parts of the state. It is cheaper to educate a student in a large school than it is in a small school. And this could create more equality than the courts have asked for.
It has been suggested that a statewide tax be collected and given back to the districts on a per pupil basis. Hawaii does it that way.
So, the battle in the Statehouse is over two houses. The governor give some degree aid to the poor children.
Both plans were considered by the
S. B. 92 contained a 1½-percent income tax to help districtists share their share of the school budgets. The governor has vowed to veto any increase in the state income tax. However, the Republican caucus, which has a majority in the legislature, has endorsed
Education Committee. One plan was designed by the legislature's Joint Interim Committee on School Finance; the other, by Gov. Robert Docking and his staff.
The governor has attacked the committee bill because of what he calls a tax increase. He has also accused the Republicans of obstructing state programs to finance their proposal.
The committee says that it now has enough money in the state budget to finance the education plan and all other existing programs. The committee also says the education matter first and then look at
See Related Stories and Pictures on Page 7
S. B. 92 on the condition that the income tax be made onicial on a local basis.
The committee action Tuesday amended the bill to allow for an optional 50 per cent income tax surcharge instead of the mandatory 1/2 per cent income tax.
The governor's aides have refused to say that the bill if it contained an optional income tax.
new programs that are seeking state support this year. A tax increase, they say, will come if any of these new programs warrant it.
In the Michele Caldwell case, the Johnson
Actually, both plans will spend about the same amount on education in Kansas. The question is who will pay the money and to which schools it will go.
County District cited a Kansas Law Review article that suggested plans for school financing. The article, written by Robert J. Jones for the Spring 1972 edition, listed four kinds of equality for school districts.
The first method would be simple to simplify the same number of dollars on each student
In theory, a school district draws up its budget and divides the amount of money needed among the students by the amount of property they own. If there is little valuable property in
The second would spend the same amount on each student after adjusting for the efficiency of the size of school and for the price level in the area.
The third method is what is called "power equalizing." This makes the amount of money spent on a student dependent on the local tax payers' willingness to support education. The "power equalizing" is equality of tax base power.
the district, the budget will be low or the amount the tax payers pay will be high
The amount paid on each $1,000 of property valuation is the sum of the following and valuation:
Power equalizing in its purist form would make a district's expenditures per pupil equal to that of any other district that paid the same mill levy.
The fourth method would spend money on children according to their educational purpose.
The committee bill is basically a power equalizing plan. A pure power equalizing plan would collect money from the rich districts and give it to the poor ones.
The committee bill does give state aid to the poor district according to their willingness to pay and gives no state aid to the rich districts. A pure plan not only would cut off state aid to the rich districts but also would collect money from them to give to the
See SCHOOL Page 7
2
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Correction
Funding Cuts Cause Faculty Loss
Cutbacks in funding of federal programs and a reduction in the University of Kansas faculty will mean an addition of about 21.2 positions to the net loss of faculty for next year, Ambrose Saricks, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Tuesday.
Because of a decline in the projected enrollment for next year, 23.5 faculty
“It’s an accumulation of things for which nobody is to blame.” Serics said.
Mail Ballot to Decide Humanities Program
positions must be cut from the faculty. A net total of 21.2 positions must be opened for faculty members returning to the faculty, Senior Associate to a total of 44.7 positions must be vacated.
The future of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program will remain uncertain until results of a mail ballot have been tabulated.
The mail ballot contains a motion that was introduced at a meeting of the College Assembly Tuesday, Passage of the new motion would mean that the Pearson program could not substitute for any freshman or sophomore requirements.
The assembly voted to suspend the rules of the meeting, and consideration of the motion, a substitute motion took precedence over an original motion that would have allowed the Pearson program to fulfill the English 1, 2 and 3 requirements.
During the last three years, some fresh
Israelis . . .
(Continued from page 1)
helicopter-borne Israeli forces attacked a guerrilla base near the Nairr al Bared refugee camp 89 miles north of the capital near the Syrian border. The camp is a stronghold of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, an extremist group connected with last May's massacre at Lod Airport in Tel Aviv.
Nahr al Bared is the second largest camp in Lebanon with a population of 12,000 refugees, according to United Nations fixtures.
The Lebanese Defense Ministry said in a statement that "a number of persons were killed or wounded in the fighting," but a casualty count had not been completed.
It the attacking Israel's force engaged camp guards at Nahr al Bared and Badawi refuge camps. Badawi is near Nahr al Bared, in proximity of 6,500, according to U.N. figures.
The Israeli spokesman said the bases were training sites for such foreign terrorists as the Japanese responsible for the Lod Airport massacre.
The raid was launched at 1 a.m., he said, and installations and buildings were destroyed, and "several dozen" guerrillas were killed.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Rally at Capitol
"Your presence here today is a statement that this country belongs to all the people, not just millionaires who get subsidies even for their mistakes," she said.
WASHINGTON—Thousands rallied at the Capitol Tuesday after a day of protests against cuts in antipoverty funds and the state's budget deficit, creating opportunity. Rep. Bella Abzug, D-N.Y., told the crowd at the rally on the Capitol grounds to mobilize "against the horror budget" by taking steps toward a new plan.
Food Bills Rise
WASHINGTON - Secretary of Agriculture L. Buzz said Tuesday that the cost of food jumped 2 to 3 per cent in January for the sharpest monthly gain in 20 to 25 years. "Consumers are being misled about farm prices by big-city newspapers and the urban press," he told an agricultural news outlet. But a January rise to be disclosed in a forthcoming report by the Labor Department, would be interpreted by some reporters as an annual rate of 24 to 36 percent in consumer food bills.
60,500 Homeless
SAIGON—More than 200,000 South Vietnamese were driven from their homes by intense fighting during the first 19 days of the cease-fire and about one fourth of the population was discharged Tuesday. "The great majority were forced to leave their home areas only a few hours or a couple of days and have since returned to begin reconstruction," the office said. Most of those persons still cannot return because of continued fighting the report added.
Airline Drinking
TOPEKA-Most commercial airlines operating in Kansas agreed Tuesday to stop selling mixed drinks aboard instate flights in compliance with a request from Kansas Atty. Gen. Vern Miller, Spokesmen for Branif Institute, Continental Airlines, and Frontier Airlines have said on Thursday that their Kansas flights. Trans World Airlines has temporarily delayed a statement on the matter.
men and sophomores have been allowed to substitute four six-hour courses for western civilization, speech, humanities and English 1, 2 and 3 requirements.
Early in the meeting, an amendment to the original motion was made to allow the program to be a substitute for the English 3 requirement, not for the English 1 and 2 requirements.
Several members of the English department said they questioned whether the Pearson program helped the student develop writing skills.
This amendment was therefore amended to allow for a committee to make a comparative evaluation of papers of a random sample of students who had taken the Pearson program and who had taken English 1 and 2.
The amendment to the amendment was voted down by a large margin.
At that time the assembly voted to put the rules of order aside, the substitute motion was introduced and members voted to decide the issue by mail ballot.
If the motion not to allow the Pearson program to substitute for freshman and sophomore requirements fails, the program will not be able to underwrite the original motion to allow the program to fulfill English 1, 2 and 3 requirements, according to Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the School of Science Sciences and chairman of the assembly.
The results of the mail ballot should be available in three weeks, he said.
Cease-Fire Is Reached In Laos
VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)—The royal Laotian government and the Communist Pathet Lai signed a cease-fire agreement today to the popping of champagne corks and shouts of "bravo" from assembled diplomats.
the agreement to call a halt to more than a decade of fighting was signed at the green-and-white walls of Prince Souvanna Phouma, the 72-year-old premier of the tentative government also met more than a hundred times and has continued since the Vietnam cease-fire.
"This is an historical day for Laos," said Prince Souvanna, who is expected to continue as premier of a coalition government including the Pathet Luao.
The signers were Interior Minister Pheng Phongsavan for the government and Phoumi Vongvichi, secretary-general of the political arm of the Pathet Lao.
No text of the agreement, which was written in Lao, was made available after the short signing ceremony. But Pheng told newsmen it contains four provisions;
A cease-fire to go into effect throughout
Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday,
11 p.m.
Wednesday, Larry teaches.
The formation of the provisional government of national union representing the opposing factions equally within 30 days.
Instead, fewer faculty members are receiving career grants, research contracts and Health Service Advancement Award grants because of a cutback in federal funds.
—The formation of a mixed political council to organize elections.
There was no oversight in budgeting, as the Kansan reported Tuesday, Sarkas said.
—The exchange of all prisoners and withdrew of all foreign troops within 90 days.
Among the prisoners are seven U.S. servicemen and two American civilians, according to information supplied by the North Vietnamese.
"In years before, with new positions, these could be absorbed," Saricks said. "We're in a situation that under ordinary circumstances we could adapt to, but instead of gaining positions, we're losing positions."
Meanwhile, faculty members are returning from leaves and from research projects. Some of their replacements, a net number of them, are the ones that will be cut or reassigned.
Martin Jones, budget officer, said that the University was authorized to hire replacements for faculty members on leave under the assumption that those on leave would return and that the replacements would not occupy permanent positions.
Substitute personnel, therefore, work on a year-to-year basis, he said. In years when the University increases the size of the faculty, substitute faculty members can be absorbed into the permanent faculty, Jones said.
Jones said the 21.2 positions were not included in next year's budget in accordance with instructions by the Kansas Board of Regents.
The net figure of 21.2 positions may not all have to be eliminated at the end of this year, Saricks said. The number of substitute personnel that will have to be cut or resized must be based on the number of permanent faculty That go on leave or resign, he said.
Saricks said the possibility that a school or program would be phased out was only a long-range consideration that would require extensive study.
He said the final budget requests would be submitted to the Board of Regents May 1, 2014.
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SU
OLYMPIA, Parts 1 & 2
Directed by
Leni Riefenstahl
Woodruff Feb. 21
3
CLASSEAL 7:30
film Series 9:15
WED
Directed by Alain Robie—Gritlet [1968] A film about modern mythology, violence and erism.
FILM SOCIETY
Woodruff 3:30, 7:30, 9:30
Thurs. Feb. 22 75c
THE ADVENTURES OF
FILM SOCIETY
Summer of '42 A novel by Herman Raucher
Directed by Carl Koch Animation by Carl Koch and Lotte Reinger.
PRINCE ACHMED
SPECIAL FILMS
Woodruff 7:30
Mon. Mar. 5 75c
Herman Raucher
PLEASE READ THE LABELING ON THE PAGE BEFORE YOU BUY.
Part Six of Captain Marvel
Popular Films
Woodruff 7 & 9:30
Feb. 23 & 24 60c
METROPOLIS
plus-
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PHANTOM EMPIRE
AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS SMIF AUS SMIF
Science Fiction Films
Woodruff 7:30
Tues. Feb. 27 75c
Burger Chef's Student Night Prices!
Wednesday Eve 5-9 p.m.
REG. SPECIAL
Hamburgers . . . . . . . . . 23¢ 15¢
Cheeseburgers . . . . . . . . 27¢ 20¢
Double Cheeseburger . . . . . . 50¢ 39¢
Big Shef . . . . . . . . . 55¢ 39¢
Super Shef . . . . . . . . . 69£ 55¢
BURGER CHEF
HAMBURGERS
9th & Iowa
Let's All Go To Burger Chef
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS The Malls Shopping Center PIONEER TEAC UGL Dual disc preeners
KIEF'S
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MARY H. LEE
ROBERT T.
JOHN S. KENT
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PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
RSO Records
REG. $9.98
$488
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New Derek and the Dominos In Concert Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
NICARAGUAN BENEFIT DANCE
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
Fri., Feb. 23
7:30-11:30 p.m.
FEATURING
CHET NICHOLS and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils
Donation $1.50 per person
Sponsored by the Ananda Marga Yoga Society
George Washington Birthday CLEARANCE SALE at GOOBAY
BLAZERS regularly to 27.50 NOW19.99
BAGGIES regularly $14.00 NOW 7.99
BELLS AND regularly to 16.00 NOW from 3.99
VESTS regularly to 13.00 NOW from 5.99
FLARES Or 2 pair for $7.00
CNL
TURTLENECKS regularly to 16.00 NOW from 9.99
SOLID COLOR KNIT SHIRTS regularly 12.00 NOW 9.99
GANT regularly to 17.00 DRESS SHIRTS NOW 5.99
TWO TIES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!
ALL OUTER WEAR 20% OFF
These prices only last till the end of the month so hurry and pick up on these fantastic bargains!
DOOBAH
711 W. 23rd in the Mall
10-9 M-F 10-6 S
Use Kansan Classifieds
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
3
Court Denies Nader Move In ITT Case
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court Tuesday turned back a move by consumer crusader Ralph Nader to reopen an international Telephone and Telegraph Co.
In an 8-1 ruling, the justices agreed with a federal district court in Connecticut that the government did not have to reveal why it could not match each case of court settlement.
Nader's appeal represented an effort to give the public a greater opportunity to participate in antitrust action against big business. Only justice William Hearst, hearing,
The 1971 agreement permitted ITT to keep the Hartford Insurance Co. but called for divestiture of three other firms with annual sales of more than $1 billion.
Nader and an associate, Reuben B. Robertson III, said the government's support for his work and its stockholders great financial hardship. They claim this surfaced only because the suit became an issue during Senate proceedings at the Atty. Gil Richard Kleindemer.
The Supreme Court in another action declined to review the conviction of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan for the murder of Sen. Robert Kennedy in Los Angeles in 1968.
Sirian's lawyers claimed in an appeal that police had searched his mother's home unconstitutionally after the shooting and evidence that he did not fire the fatal bullet.
Kennedy was slain just after he had won the California Democratic presidential primary in his quest for the party's 1968 nomination. Sirhan was sentenced to the maximum five years in prison. Supreme Court banned life punishment he was resentenced to life imprisonment.
Campus Briefs
Nicaraguan Concert
A Nicaragua Benefit Concert, sponsored by the Ananda Marga Yoga Society, will be presented at 7 p.m. Friday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Donations are $1.50. The Ozark Mountain Daredevils and Chet Nichols will perform.
IEEE Meeting
There will be an Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in 200. Learned Hall. Ross University. Engineering, engineering, will speak on bio-waste treatment.
Psychology Club
The Psychology Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 547 Fraser Hall. The guest speaker is Dr. Marcia Riggs of psychology, will discuss "Why Tomorrow's Psychologists Will be Theologians."
Army Program
An Army officer from Fort Leavenworth will be upstairs in the ROTC building at 6:30 p.m. Thursday to discuss the Army's health professions scholarship program. The Army offers scholarships that pay all students a stipend for each year of medical school for all health professions. All men and women interested in careers in medicine invited.
Assistant Resident Director,
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Commonwealth Theatres MOVIE INFORMATION
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BILLY JACK WAS TOUGH ...
WAIT'L THEY MEET
TOM BLACK BULL
When The Legends Die
PG
Eve. 7:25, 9:25
Matthieu Saat Sun. 1:00, 3:15
Twilight Price good 3:15 Show
The Hillcrest
"One of the ten best pictures of the year!" — PETER TRANVERS, Head's Original
UP THE BARBRA STREI SAND BOX
Evenings 7:30 & 9:30
Maf. Sat-Sun. 3:35 & 5:25
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THEATRES ... September 9-17, 2023
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Eve. 7:15, 9:45-R-adult 9:50
Matthieu Saat Sun. 1:00, 3:25
Twilight Price Good 4:25 Show
The Hillcrest
Hell Upside Down!
THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE
THE GREATEST ESCAPE ADVENTURE YET!
Weekdays 1:00, 3:00, 9:40
Sat-Sun. 7:50, 4:50, 7:30, 9:40
Varsity
THEATRES ... September 9-17, 2023
The Ombudsman Office Can Help
Purpose:
To provide an independent office to counsel, investigate, and mediate student, faculty or administrative grievances.
Scope:
All areas are open to the Ombudman office except the area of faculty promotion and appointment and extra-University litigation.
Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Office Phone 864-3607 Location B-108 Kansas Union
SUNILALI
Remember, like Aunt Martha says,
"Campus Hideaway always delivers."
UNCLE GEORGE
Campus Hideaway
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4
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Tight Controls Needed
Devaluation of the dollar has been greeted with enthusiasm by governments throughout the world. Germany and Japan were particularly elated because the move precluded increasing the value of the mark and the yen, temporarily at least.
Increasing the value of a country's currency means that the cost of that country's products will increase proportionally in foreign markets. As it stands now, the costs of German and Japanese products will increase owing to the United States, one of these country will send 10 per cent more dollars abroad when they purchase foreign products.
This devaluation would not be so alarming if it weren't the second in a little over a year. In December 1971, world monetary leaders met at the Smithsonian Institute and assigned new values to the currencies. The dollar was devalued and the mark and the yen were revalued upward. It was agreed that Germany would assigned values by keeping the value of the dollar 3.15 marks. This was to be accomplished by buying excess dollars, which Germany has done to the tune of $6 billion this month.
Where were these dollars coming from? From the United States, where irresponsible import-export policies have been draining the country's economy. It is said that U.S. exports and imports each amount to only 4.5 per cent of the Gross National Product, so foreign trade and the overseas dollar are insignificant. However, multinational corporations have invested over $85 billion in the book value of factories and equipment overseas. The true value of these holdings is estimated to be $250 million. Multinational corporations do bring money
back into the country, though
Those countries in which American troops are stationed are free to channel resources which would normally go for defense into the production of consumer goods. This is one of the countries most likely to produce goods less expensively than the United States.
Among the larger drains through which American dollars flow overseas are American troops stationed abroad and American tourists, including participants in foreign study programs.
Sending American tourists and students overseas without placing a limit on the amount of money these tourists with them is nothing short of idocy.
The Nixon administration is now in the process of negotiating troop reductions. This is definitely a step in the right direction and the President should be congruent with local leaders. A similar action has yet to be taken to limit the number of dollars flowing overseas with American tourists.
Import quotas should be renegotiated to allow the United States a fair balance of trade.
The economy is not on the brink of collapse. Latest figures for 12-month changes in the inflation rate show the United States' rate at 3.4 per cent. This is lower than any major global economic output and real growth of the economy are also outpacing our European competitors.
But the devaluation does indicate a serious weakness in our economy; one that must be dealt with immediately by making a determined policy to counter inflation, and shift the balance of payments in our favor.
—John P. Bailey
Death for Committee on Crime Would Be Congressional Folly
WASHINGTON—The House of Representatives will make a regrettable mistake if it carries out the death sentence now proposed for its Select Committee on Crime. The idea is to abolish the court system and transfer its work to Judiciary
James J. Kilpatrick
instead. Those who have followed the crime committee's excellent advice will hope the idea is scrapped.
From a purely political point of view, the scheme doubtless has advantages for a few members. As various public opinion polls indicate, it would be a domestic concern of the American people. Investigations of crime are bound to have popular appeal and Judicary's new chairman, Peter Rodino of New York, would like a little of the limelight.
The proposal has no other merit. Under the vigorous leadership of one of the most remarkable men in Congress, Mr. Obama, a crime committee has an excellent record. Its investigations have been marked consistently by fairness, balance and careful scrutiny. The investigators have reflected no trace of extremism in any direction.
All this is a tribute to the 72-year-old chairman—a tribute few observers might have anticipated 35 years ago. The ebullient "Red Pepper" of the Thirteens has been a constant stateman. Now in his sixth term in the House, after serving 14 years in the Senate, Pepper has earned respect by hard work. He has made the crime committee his principal labor, but he hasn't been a solo performer. His five Democratic colleagues and the members have worked as a team, sometimes disagreeing but never getting disagreeable.
Most committees, for good reasons, stay in Washington. Pepper's crime committee, created at once in Boston and in Boston, New York and San Francisco on the problems of narcotic addiction. It went to Florida for hearings on organized crime. It went to the Midwest in Omaha and Lincoln, and at crime in the South
in Columbia, S.C. Last year the committee explored the sickening picture of drug use in our schools.
Out of these investigations, the committee has produced first-rate reports on marijuana and heroin. The marijuana report, a comprehensive and well-attained a sensible recommendation that the mere possession of marijuana be treated not as a felony, but as a misdemeanor, is one of the sentences of no more than seven days. The heroin report put forward 21 hard-hitting recommendations for a worldwide attack on the problem. A number of these have been enacted.
Another effective study had to do with amphetamines. The committee discovered that between six and eight billion amphetamines were being manufactured annually. At least a third of them—perhaps half—were winding up in the black market because of the misuse of the mittee's work, the number has been cut to some 400 million and much tighter controls have been imposed.
From its inception, the crime
committee has concentrated on the juvenile offender: More than half of all persons arrested for serious crime are under 25. Some 40 per cent are under 21, and 28 per cent are under 25 alarming, the trends grow worse. Between 1965 and 1971, while total arrests increased by 26 per cent, arrests of persons under 18 increased by 40 per cent. If the committee survives, it plans to make much of its work in this field.
Because of the nature of its work, the crime committee's investigations encroach upon the turf of other committees—not only Judiciary, but also Commerce, Education and even Foreign Affairs. A part of its effectiveness is that there it has to go. It would be a cruel disservice to disband the committee, break up its experienced staff and lose the momentum already gained. Speaker Carl Albert, who has his own reputation to build, will do nothing to enhance that agency or the agency of the House that is working solely on the nation's number one concern.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Nicholas von Hoffman
IRS Prosecutes 'San Diego 10'
LOS ANGELES - Hank Hostenstein isn't your ordinary garden-variety felon. Still, on March 6, he's going to drive down to San Diego and get himself sentenced by a federal judge for conspiring to kill two children, that he's a former major in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve or that he's active in the Boy Scouts of the Rotary and
although he has continued to pay his taxes since he got into difficulty.
If Heck had been a distressed major corporation or a big-time millionaire, the IRS undoubtedly would have let him pay off the debt in installments, or, more likely, they would have forgiven him half of it. Instead the IRS seize Heck's office equipment
sane situation the authorities would have charged the people with nothing more than disturbance or may be disorderly conduct.
Bernard LeRoy Blum
Today, Nicholas von Hoffmann tells of the peculiar woes of 10 San Diego taxpayers who protested a decree of a businessman property.
But not the IRS. Armin Moths, another one of the San Diego 10, was arrested, indicted and sent to prison, and attempting to rescue seized property. Moths is a 48-year-old building contractor, a Harvard graduate, class of 45, a father of four children, John Birch Society, as well as being a lieutenant commander in the Naval Reserve and a post candidate for Congress on an American Independent Party ticket.
what to do about it. Writing Congress and the President is difficult, but we may work, but Mobs has found out, as the Left did before him, that it can lead to police officers who are about to be about you on the witness stand.
If he and his fellow convicts were driven to a picket line, it was, as he says, "because people are being robbed but we don't know being robbed but we don't know
It also can lead to the political use of the Conspiracy Act, probably the worst law in the U.S. It can be used for coercion and they include several plumbers and a couple of chiropractors as well, can be convicted is that they attended various parties, and can prove that protest was planned, and thus they can be prosecuted if somebody they don't know—possibly a police provocation—has hit the ticket line and throws a punch.
suggests that the tax revolt may be more widespread than we have guessed. Johnnie Walker, commissioner of the city flew into San Diego last month to make a speech calling for prison for all tax evaders. So perhaps the man who kept people out here tell all kinds of stories about folks banding together to fight the revoeners.
"There's quite a grass-roots movement growing," says Mohs, "here in Utah, Oregon, California." I don't know about the East."
lords for Tots, or that he writes poetry, or even that he runs a successful real estate investment business. In the eyes of the middle class in nine co-capitalis are a bunch of buddy-waddy criminals.
That the IRS would go after them with such brainless energy
Hank was done in by the Internal Revenue Service. No, he didn't litter it any money. He pays his taxes in full. Hank's crime is the IRS treated another businessman, a stranger whom Hank didn't know until last May 9, the day of "the over act," as the prosecutors put it when they under the Conspiracy Act.
If there isn't a movement, the ISG is going to create one. It may have wanted to make an example of it but it has made martys stead.
It was Hank's indignation about what the IRS was doing to John Heck, owner of a small moving company in San Diego, that got him into trouble. Heck had a nice business going there until he had some minor domestic difficulties a few years ago, and fell about $5,000 behind in his taxes. His tax account hasn't danced up with the money; so that last year, what with interest and penalties, Heck owed the government about $8,400.
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
"I made efforts to borrow money to pay the taxes," says Heck. "I tried to borrow money from the bank."
But he couldn't come up with the cash in one lump sum,
and his moving trucks.
they just came in and seized the property," he recalls, referring to the fact that the IRS doesn't need a court order to grab what it wants. "But if I owe you money, you don't just take my car. You have to go to court, with them a civil service clerk can sign a paper, walk in, and close my hip on the floor. The law can do it to anybody, but our founding fathers didn't throw out King George of England to have the IRS do worse."
The protest went routinely until Heck took a stone and broke a window in order to enter his room, but he couldn't premise. The IRS didn't honor him by legally seizing his building until the next day. A minor scuffle with a few of the pickets followed, and there were more scuffles. The hurt was Heck who cut his finger breaking his own window. In any
It was this absence of due process that convinced Hohenstein and some other businessmen to associate with the Radical Left. They picketed Heck's warehouse where a bunch of FBI agents had installed themselves. They carried signs that said such outrageous things as "Stop ISPs" and "Illegal Seizure of Property."
Brand Xposed
By JAY SHARBUTT
Associated Press Writer
But now they're frequently specifying which competitions, thanks to a little push of encouragement that came from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about a year ago.
NEW YORK—Television commercials may be heading toward a new, improved series of claims. Many still say their products are better than those of the leading competitors.
The agency then persuaded the ABC and CBS networks to temporarily lift their restrictions against comparative advertising that specifically named competing products.
NBC lifted its ban against such advertising eight years ago.
The two other networks agreed to air compular ads for a one-year trial period. ABC now says it is extending the trial for an as yet unspecified length of time. CBS says it is studying whether to continue running such advertising.
Comparative advertising may give the networks-and publishers-a massive beadache, but it benefits the consumer, says Evan Tracy of the FTC's consumer protection bureau.
"The FTC believes it is pro-competitive, pro-consumer to name competing brands in comparative advertising," he said. "This of course must be subject to the same kind of adequate substantiation and standards of truth required in other advertising."
"But we believe it's more meaningful to consumers if they know exactly what products..."
are being compared to the advertised products."
He says comparative advertising has increased, though not dramatically, in the past year: "It hasn't been as great as we would like it to be."
But comparative advertising is starting to catch on, according to N伦曼 Nelson, director of the Google office.
A classic and controversial comparative ad campaign was begun last October by Schick, Inc. The company said independent tests proved its Flexamatic electric ranger gave closer shaves than those of Norcelo, Barrionnung, Schick commissioned the Tests.
Schick's president, James Badgett, last month offered to make the test data available to 'responsible parties' who sought it. He said in an interview two weeks ago that he meant to define those parties as broadcasters, publishers and consumer groups.
"We didn't submit the data because they were threatening us with a lawsuit and we felt that we wanted the data to be tried in court and not by them or by the press," Badgett said.
But right after Badgett's speech, North American Philips, which makes the Norelco shaver, asked for the test data. The company didn't get it.
Wallace Collins, North American Philips' chief lawyer, said his company had complained formally to Schick about the ad campaign, but decided yet if it would take the matter to court.
Jack Anderson
Politics Should Disqualify Gray
WASHINGTON-L. Patrick Gray, with his bullet head and pugnacious jaw, has the look of an FBI director. It is now clear that he lacks the qualifications. His credentials were less than impressive when he was appointed acting director in May, but after that he lacked whatsoever in law enforcement. As an attorney, he had specialized in taxes and trusts and paper shuffling.
He was selected, insiders knew, because of his complete devotion to Richard Nixon. Gray had joined Nixon's personal staff in 1900 and had established himself as a loyal team member. There is no higher qualification than loyalty to the team.
Gray's main mission was to make the FBI responsive to the President's will and, thereby, to
He was away from Washington so much that he became know around BFI headquarters as "Two-Day Gray." When he was in the Army, he re-election the re-election of the President, he was usually splashing in his
assure that the FBI, like Gray himself, became part of the team. In short, Gray was chosen for his political reliability to fill a position the Senate has decreed should be kept out of partisan politics
He immediately started roaring around the country, ostensibly to inspect FBI field offices. Almost everywhere he went, however, he took the occasion to say something that would annoy Grey's travels had the earmacks of a political campaign tour, yet he flew in Air Force planes at the taxpayer's expense.
DOLLAR
" YOU KNOW WHAT, FATSO? I'M THROUGH TAKING ORDERS FROM YOU! "
But most serious of all, Gray has used the FBI as a political police force. He denied to newsmen last May that the FBI kept dossiers on politicians, newspapers, movie stars, black celebrities and "American"s. "None of you guys are going to believe this," he said, "... but there are no dossiers or secret files."
We promptly furnished him with excerpts from the files of a number of notables, who had been abducted and unlikely to commit any crimes. Yet the files showed they were under active FBI surveillance. To help Gray locate the hidden files, we provided the FBI file numbers.
swimming pool at his summer home in Stonington, Conn.
Six months later, FBI agents were caught actually checking on a democratic congressional candidate in Ohio. This flushed out objection to the governor's gathering information on both congressmen and candidates.
An embarrassed Gray pleaded that the practice had "just come to my attention" and said that he had ordered it stopped. All that had been collected, he insisted, was "biographical data on major figures of the period." Representatives and the Senate from newspapers, magazines, campaign literature and various reference publications."
Once again, we published details from the files of several congressmen, in House Speaker Carl Albert and House Republican Leader Gerald Ford, to prove that a nuclear drop trap information, surveillance reports and gossip from informants.
We can now cite a more personal abuse of police power. On Jan. 31, eight FAI members were arrested as Winston Lehman while he was reporting on the return of stolen Indian documents. The agents tore his notes out of his hands, snapped on the handcuffs and threw him into a fire.
in poetry.
We made a painstaking investigation to find out how this violation of Whiten's constitutional rights could have been committed by agents sworn to uphold the Constitution. We learned that the White House had passed down the word to the FBI to make a case against, us, for wrongdoing, enough to迎面 newmen who might try to dig too deeply.
Loyal old Pat Gray sent his agents into action against Whiten, although the FBI knew that he had been offered theft or possession of the stolen documents. The FBI knew, indeed, that the documents were about to be returned to Whiten. Whiten was on hand to write the story.
We have detailed, documentary proof that the FBI not only knew no crime was being conducted but that the FBI deliberately withheld this information from the Justice Department. Its top
prosecutions found themselves gleaning crucial bits of evidence, not from FBI reports, but from the newspapers.
Nevertheless, the prosecutors allowed Pat Gray's boys to present the best case they could to the grand jury. It is rare for a grand jury to refuse to let a case go to trial when the FBI wants it prosecuting. The judge decided the FBI's case, the grand jury decided that the FBI had no case and, therefore, refused to indict Whitten.
The President now wants to make Gray, as a reward for his loyalty, the permanent FBI chief. In our view, this would turn the nation's most formidable law enforcement political police force. We hope the Senate will refuse to confirm him.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
to All American college newspaper
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas daily during the academic year except holidays and examination periods. Mail Subscriptions to: M.A. Johnson, 801 W. Main Street, KC 60445. Accommodations, services, services employment offered offered to all students without regard to color, eveed or national origin may not necessarily be available. Contact the State Board of Regents.
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser .. Susanna Shaw
Editor .. Joyce Neerman
Associate Editor .. Bob Smithman
Campus Editor .. Bob Smithman
News Editor .. Steve Hurl
News Editor .. Joyce Dunbar, Anita Knopp, Hal Ritter, Linda Chapot, Ginnie Minkle, Linda Schald
Associate Campus Editor .. Robin Groom, Salt Morgan
Associate Campus Editors .. Robin Groom, Salt Morgan
Features Editor .. Mary Lied
Sports Editors .. Emerson Lyon,
Wire Editors .. Jim Kendell, Cushy Sherman, Ginnie Minkle
Makeup Editor .. Harry Wilson, Anita Knopp, Hal Ritter
Picture Editor .. Ed Palio, Dan Laung, Chris Canela
Picture Editor .. Peter Mansfield, Robert Duncan
Curtontails .. John Bailley, Caleb Carewll, Robert Duncan
BUSINESS STAFF Business Adviser . . . Mel Adams
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Business Manager
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Laura Dyatt
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300 LEXINGTON Ave. New York, N.Y. 10017
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
5
Week Scene Movies,
MOVIES
selvesidence, from
utors
s to
could
for a
case
nits it
ing to
jury
o case
indict
nts to
nor his
chief.
n the
law
to a
cope
the
confirm
UP THE SAND BOX: Barbra Streisand plays in the sandbox and the part of a hallucinating housewife. This week at the Granada Theater.
r except
ster, $10
dations,
without
successarily
Neerman
Simonis
Vee Riel
Ollander
a Schild
Olander
in Shafter
Winters
Aritter
Cannella
Sokoloff
Spurlock
Spurlock
THE MATCHMAKER: A 19th century comedy 8:00 p.m., Friday and Saturday at 10:30 a.m.
OUR TOWN AND JANE EYRE: Our Town, Torthern Wilder's story of life, love and death in a small New England town, where a man and his family under the direction of Sam Scott. Jane Eyre: Effective recreation of the great Bronte novel, starring Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine. Double feature at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 23 at the United Ministries Center, 120 North Avenue.
POEIDEN ADVENTURE: A breathtaking escape from a sinking ship, starring Gene Hackman, Shelly Winters, and a cast of gene. This week at the Varsity Theater.
Dir Kolks
Gooddeell
e. Cooner
Hildreth
Sauderies
Hilbrech
ra Dysart
WHEN THE LEGENDS DIE: Richard Widmark and Frederick Forest star in this movie about an Indian boy who is forced to live a white man's life. Hillcrest 1 Theater.
LADY SINGS THE BLUES: Recently nominated for five Academy Awards. Diana Ross portrays Billie Holiday, one of the all time great black blue's singers. Hillcrest 2
THE MAN WHO LIES: he story of a man who decides to create his own personality. He creates a world that Alain Robbe-Grillier, the film's director calls "modern mythology, violence and ecstasy." The film shows at 7:30 and 8:39 p.m. Feb. 22 in Woodruff.
Summer of 42: A truly moving experience involving a young man and his first incounter with love. Showtimes are 7:30 and 9:30. Audiotime is 8:50 and booffudd Auditorium. Admission is 75 cents.
DERTY LITTLE BILLY: A new, nasty bill at Billy the Kid. Hillcrest Theater.
A SOUL GONE HOME AND WE OWN
THE NIGHT: Two Black Theatre
productions that deal with life and society
as interpreted by black writers and portrays
themes relevant to contemporary Showing.
10 consecutive nights beginning Sunday at
the Experimental Theater.
City...
(Continued from Page 1)
(Continued from Page
review the sequence of events and state his opinion.
Both Benth had adequate counsel. The commission approved the motion unanimously.
Mayor John Emick expressed concern about Miller's charges and said, "I know he (Beech) had a fair trial. It's unjust to him and his family to bring this up again."
Emick said that he had known Beech for several years and had employed him before
"This man won the bronze star for his communications work in the Battle of the Bastille."
Music Invade Lawrence
Emick appeared angry at Miller's remarks.
court here and listen to hearsay," he said, "This man has received phone calls threatening him to shut up." Miller replied, "Do you want to just sweep this under the camera?"
MUSIC
Other area residents at the meeting were curiously about the whereabouts of a man who had been arrested.
MONTAGANA TWO: Presented by the University of Kansas Music Series. Featuring Delores Stevens at the piano, John Gates at the clarinet and Caroline Worthington on the cello. The presentation is at 8:00 p.m. Wednesday at Swarthout Recital Hall. Admission is $2.50; KU-ID does not admit.
Montagna Trio will perform at a toon in Swarthout Recital Hall as part of the University of Kansas Chamber Music Series.
London Trio To Perform In Swarthout
The trio, formed in London in 1968,
recently completed a 10-week European
ORLAHOMA CITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Presented by the University of Kansas Concert Series at 8:20 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
The trio performs a great deal of contemporary music and is in the process of building an extensive repertoire of works composed for them by noted U.S. composers.
MANANA: Presenting the latest in fine entertainment from Topeka, Kansas. This is a group that has made great strides in the last few months under the leadership of
HUMMING BIRD: Friday and Saturday at the Red Baron.
their new manager, Charles Wolfe. Wednesday night only at the Red Baron.
COMMANDER CODY AND HIS LOST PLANET AIRMEN: The first country and western band to break the long hair barrier. They come all the way from San Francisco to give Lawrence the latest in country rock. Feb. 22, only on the Red Dog "Saloon."
BLACK THEATRE
ENSEMBLE IN BLACK
K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982
Feb. 25-Mar. 6
SUA
SUA
PASSPORT PHOTO:
for details inquire at SUA
office.
THE NINETEENTH ANNUAL KANSAS DESIGNER-CRAFTSMAN EXHIBITION: How through March 13 the Student Union Exhibition will be sponsored by the Department of Design.
Use Kansan Classifieds
MOTHER MARY'S
"A Beer Joint"
Special! 75¢ Pitchers
Every Wednesday 3-5 p.m.
8:20 Hoch
Remember . . .
At Mother Mary's
What you see
is what you get!
2406 Iowa
CAREERS SEMINAR
C
Feb.21-22
Kansas Union
KU COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN 222 Strong 864-3552
Sat. Feb. 24
Wednesday evening, 7:30 p.m.—"How to Get A Job." Parlor C, Kansas Union. (Speakers: Panel of personnel from various K.U. placement offices.)
The Shoe with The Sole
Bass Saddles Take You Everywhere
in Super Comfort
The Sole's The Thing
In Navy, Brown or All White
Try a Pair Today
Bunny Blacks
Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty Seven Massachusetts Street
Career Information and Counseling 9 a.m.-5 p.m. in the Kansas Kansas Union main lobby.
Thursday, February 22:
Wednesday, February 21:
Career Information and Counseling, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., outside the Trail Room, Kansas Union.
The KU Concert Series presents
THE OKLAHOMA CITY SYMPHONY
Non-Students 3.00, 3.50, 4.00
A FINE AMERICAN ORCHESTRA WHICH IS FREE WITH STUDENT I.D.
LIMITED NUMBER OF RESERVED SEATS AVAILABLE AT MURPHY BOX OFFICE
1973 SPRING ELECTION INFORMATION
On March 14 and 15, new Student Senators, Officers of the Classes of 1973,1974 and 1975 and a new President and Vice-President of the Student will be elected.
To become a candidate:
Seats to be elected to the student senate:
Architecture . 2
Business . 3
Education . 12
Engineering . 5
Fine Arts . 5
Graduate . 18
Journalism . 3
Law . 2
Pharmacy . 2
Social Welfare . 2
LAS . 18
Centennial .4
North. 4
Nunemaker. 4
Oliver. 5
Pearson. 4
A candidate for the STUDENT SENATE must file a declaration of intention to seek such office as a representative from his respective school with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. This declaration must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
Candidates for CLASS OF-ICERS must file a declaration of intention to seek such office with the secretary or elections committee chairman of the Student Senate by Wednesday, February 21. Each declaration must be supported by the signatures of at least 50 members of the appropriate class and must be accompanied by a $5.00 filing fee.
All Declarations may be picked up in the Student Senate Office, 105-B Union, 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
All Declarations must be received by 5 p.m. on the deadline date.
For Further Information: Call 864-3710
6
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
University Daily Kansaa
Missouri Upsets Wildcats; 'Buffs Now Half Game Back
COLUMBIA (AP) — Sixteenth-ranked Missouri combined a balanced offensive attack with its best defensive performance to date to stop 10th-kansas State 80-66, in Big Eight basketball game Tuesday night.
The loss to Missouri puts the Wildcats a half game ahead of the Colorado Buffaloes. Colorado defeated Kansas Monday to up its record to 7-2.
It was only the second loss in 10 conference games for the league-leading Wildcats. Missouri scored its sixth win in 10 Big Eight games to remain in third place.
The Missouri defense held K-State to 32.9 per cent from the field, giving up 29 field goals in 82 attempts. The Tigers' offense hit 50.7 per cent, canning 34 out of 67.
Missouri's John Brown regained his form to lead all scorers with 20 points, 18 of them.
Sports Festival Ends; Seagren Tops Field
ROTONDA WEST, Fla. (AP)—Pole vaulter Bob Seagreen, who had never "earned a legal dime in athletics," turned the Superstars' sports carnival into a one-man show Tuesday and collected a whopping $39,700.
"We've been rising a nice home in Los Angeles," said Seagreen's wife, Karm. "Our bank account hasn't matched our taste in houses. Today, we bought the house."
The handsome part-time actor, a gold medalist in the 1968 Olympics but a disappointment for him, the last game was outlaid, swept four of the last six events on an 10-sport program
them in the first half, to give MU a' 52-33,
haltine lead.
Brown, who fouled out of the game with 1:56 to play, sat out the last 10 minutes of the first half with three fouls, and missed most of the second half after picking up his fourth.
In his game against Oklahoma Brown managed only eight points. In Saturday's contest against Colorado, which Missouri beat, Oklahoma Brown failed to score before fouling out.
★ ★ ★
BIG 8 STANDINGS Conference Games
Kansas State 8 2
Colorado 7 2
Missouri 6 4
Oklahoma 5 5
Kansas 4 5
Iowa State 4 6
Nebraska 3 6
Oklahoma State 1 8
WOMEN'S COALITION
Self-defense class
organizational meeting
Wed., Feb. 21
at 6:00 p.m.
at Women's Center
in Wesley Foundation
THREE and BOBBY McGEE
(Live-6 Nights a week)
-FREE-
Live Music
3 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Friday and Saturday
Admission with K.U. I.D.
YUK IT UP AT THE YUK DOWN Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
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$50.00
KIRSTEN'S
9th and Iowa
Monday Final Day For Coed Entries
team lists for this year's coed volleyball must be turned in to the women's amural office no later than 5 p.m. today. Tournament play will begin on rch 6.
The coed squads must be composed of at least three males and three females. The am captain must be a girl. A living group an field more than one team, but each girl must play on the same team throughout the competition. All members from a team must be from the same women's group. Members of men's living groups also can play on only one team.
There is a $5 entry fee fro independent teams that have not participated in an intramural sport this year. Health cards are required if the participant has not turned one in.
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents
THE MATCHMAKER
by Thornton Wilder
February 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K.U. students will receive free reserve seat ticket with Certificate of Registration
GAY GIBSON'S "THREE-IN-ONE SAUCE"
Add space to your leather life with this same pant set. It looks like three separate pieces, but it is two piece doubleknit. White dotted shirt. White pan striped pullover and solid pants. Aqua blue sailbed with White Doubleknitted polyester
$50.00
KIRSTEN'S
9th and Iowa
Sell It Fast With Kansan Classified
Payment Deadlines:
Feb. 23 — $50 deposit March 5 — Balance due
Monday Final Day For Coed Entries
Initial payment may be given beginning Feb. 20 in the SUA Office
Options: $19
Ski rental for entire trip (skis, boots,
poles). Damage insurance included.
SKI CLUB MEETING MARCH 21 AT 7:30
♥
The only thing I don't like about being a reel-to-reel tape player is that I have to record all the time.
Contact SUA at 864-3477
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THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents
THE MATCHMAKER
by
Thornton Wilder
February 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K.U. students will receive free reserve seat ticket with Certificate of Registration
del
AUDIOTRONICS 978 MASS
SUa SKI CLUB BRECKENRIDGE March 18-24
In the Council Room.
6 nights lodging
5 days lift tickets
Transportation by bus
Continental breakfast
TRIP INCLUDES ($106):
14
GRAND OPENING
SALE
TACO GRANDE
10c off
All Food Items
FREE ICE CREAM [with food purchase.
Tacos .35
Burritos .60
Sanchos .60
Tacoburgers .40
Beans 35
Testados 25
Tostados .35
Chile .55
WEDNESDAY Feb. 21
50
50
50
25
25
45
THURSDAY Feb.22
900 Indiana 1720 W. 23rd St.
FRIDAY Feb.23
1
hrs. Sun.-Thurs. 11-11 Fri., Sat. 11-12 midnite
1973 YEAR OF THE TACO
1973
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
7
Equalizing Education Statehouse Battle Starts on 2 Plans To End School Support Inequality
Either financing plan will solve some problems for some districts and create new problems for others. In all solutions and problems the plans will mean for eight Kansas school districts.
MULLINVILLE
Mullinville has one of the highest budgets per pupil in the state because it has one of the lowest numbers of students. A high assessed valuation per pupil, however, eases the burden of this on the district by keeping the tax rate low.
R. W. Gallion, superintendent of the Mullivune District, said last week that he thought the people in the district would be "real happy" with the committee bill. It would not require any local tax money to be spent outside the district. If the committee plan called for pure power equalizing, the money would go to poor districts.
Gallion said he did not like the governor's proposal because of the 8-milliliter state tax levy. This would collect about $210,000 in Mullinville, he said, and return only $101,000 under the grandfather clause. This would decrease to $65,500 after five years.
He said he thought the taxpayers would be willing to fund the maximum budget. Otherwise, he said, the district would have nothing to lose and there was nothing in the budget that could be cut.
ROLLA
The taxpayers will complain, he said, but they will except the new tax rate and fund the program.
There is some doubt as to whether the people in Rolla will fund a maximum budget, according to Niel Hays, superintendent. To fund the maximum budget, the taxpayers would have to pay 14.40 mills under the committee plan or 11.58 under the governor's. They now pay 5.78 mills. A mill is $1 per 100 of assessed valuation.
If the budget had to be cut, he said, it would probably be cut a little in several areas. He suggested combining some elementary grades, cutting back on extracurricular transportation and cutting supplies.
ULYSSES
In Ulysses, Superintendent Murri Durr call back. He said he thought the district call back. He said he thought the district call back.
would be willing to pay the increased mill to support education at its present level.
SHAWNEE MISSION
School officials in Shawnee Mission are not as worried about the tax rate as they are about the size of their maximum budget. The committee plan would lower their tax rate by 16 mills; the governor's plan, by 6 mills.
E. V. Richley, director of revenue, said he did not favor either bill in its present form. He said he preferred the committee bill but said an increase in Social Security tax would neutralize some of the 5-percent budget increase allowed under the plan.
He said the governor's plan had been arbitrarily derived
"I don't think he made any attempt to educate educational opportunities," he
The committee was expected to amend the bill so that an increase in Social Security tax will not affect the remainder of the school budget.
The Shawne Mission budget per pupil is not high, but the number of pupils allows them to provide high quality instruction with this expenditure.
Richley said that the district could support its present programs with a 5-per-cent budget increase but that there "certainly wouldn't be any increases."
The district, which has a large amount of income compared to property, would favor a statewide property tax as suggested in the governor's bill.
WICHITA
"We'll be better off by either proposal,"
SOURCES OF TARLE
Col. B. K. Isaac State Department of Education commissioned the $10 million Federal School Finance Plan, that to be administered of school financial aid.
Cet. 4. Kansas State Department of Education commissioned the following recommendations to the 1977 Legislature, "mailed to the governor" and "to the secretary."
Col. 8. Docking printout Col. 5.
Col. 5. Docking printout Col. 9.
Cat. 7. Kansas State Department of Education comm-
mission on the Governor's Special and Special Committee
under the Government and Special Committee Plan in
the State of Kansas.
Col. 4. Proposed mill levies印刷 Col. 22.
Col. 5. Proposed mill levies印刷 Col. 13.
Col. 10. Docking printout Col. 18.
Col. 11. Docking's printout Col. 17 divided by 2.
Effects on Individuals Prove Hard to Gauge
Actually, it would be hard to tell a rich school district from a poor one by casually skimming through the news.
People in the Statehouse have been talking about the "poor kids in Galena" as if they expected to find them writing with charcoal on the back of spades as they added an accent to their words and the children found along the railroad tracks during recess.
Johnson County District Court in its
A study in the early 1960s by J. Alan Thomas appeared to show a high correlation between school district expenditures and achievement test scores, and a more comprehensive study by James S. Coleman found a much smaller correlation between expenditures and achievement test scores. Very few new research studies in Sociological Abstracts in recent years.
School...
(Continued from page 1)
The governor's plan does not come close to any of the methods mentioned in the article cited by the court. It collects money and teaches students how to count a number of pupils and teachers. An adjustment is made so that rich districts get less money per student and teacher than the poor.
His formula would cut off state aid completely to some of the richer districts, but it could be used under which state aid could be cut to only 90 per cent of last year's level. It would then go down by 10 per cent a year until it reached 60 per cent of last year's level, where it would stay.
No one is certain whether either plan would pass the court test, but most people involved think the committee plan is the unlikely of the two to gain court approval.
ruling last year did not attempt to determine whether there was substantial difference in educational opportunity; it merely ruled that spending different amounts of money on students was inequality enough.
A class of 100 students can list, class and each learn as much as their instructor. But in some subjects the exclusion principle does apply. A student can learn a lot more if his art teacher gives him three minutes of mutual attention each day instead of one minute.
In some subjects, the quality of a student's education depends heavily on the amount of individual attention the teacher can give him. This is not true in all cases.
The number of certified employees per student varies substantially in Kansas. Certified employees are administrators, teachers and counselors. Some schools have more than 24 students per certified employee, and some have as many as 24 students per certified employee.
Schools offer jobs to the best teachers first and work down their list until they have all of their vacant positions filled. It is not uncommon for a rich school district to offer a beginning salary of nearly $1,000 more than a poorer district, with beginning salaries ranging from $750 to $1,000 difference is significant. This allows the richer school districts to do their hiring first and leave the other districts to take what is left.
The quality of the teacher is also important to the student's education. There are some good teachers and some bad teachers in all schools, but the present system of school financing tends to concur with the good teachers in the richer schools.
STORES AND TABLE
By ERIC KRAMER
SALLY CARLSON
The governor's plan would raise property taxes slightly in Wichita, and the committee plan would lower them by more than one percent. The budget idle that is the concern in Wichita.
M. C.
said Bob Nispel, assistant budget director in Wichita.
The present tax lid has frozen the mill
wall and made new construction the
only source of energy.
The committee bill would allow a 5-percent per year increase in the budget and Docking's bill allows a 4-percent increase the first year. Nisipel said the district was planning a 2-percent increase for next year under the tax lid.
construction raises the assessed valuation so that the same mill levy brings in more
Assessed valuation has not risen rapidly in Wichita recently and, Nispel said, "For three years we have predicted that it would last year we could fund a 100-percent budget."
In Lawrence, the main concern is with the budget idle. Kenneth Fisher, budget director, oversees all department budgets.
Teachers meet in Spring Hill to discuss the firing of a fellow teacher and to discuss wages. The poorer school districts usually cannot offer a salary that competes for teachers with the richer districts.
He said the district had been cutting into supplies and equipment to pay teacher
1. District Name Number Plan
2. Budget Per Papel 754
3. General Bud. Per Papel 754
4. Adjusted Valuation Per Papel 754
5. Local MILY Per Papel 1971
6. Max. Budget 724 Max. Budget 724 Max. Budget
7. Local Neeson for Max. Bed.
8. Proposed State Ad G.F. Clause 724-724
9. Gov. Plan G.F. Clause 724-724
10. Minimum G.F. Clause 724-724
11. Reached 724-724
LAWRENCE
Kunsan Staff Photo by DAN LAUING
Comm Mullinville Dist 424 168.5
Docking $1,996.97 $2,204.87 $99,003 13.88 $377,490 21.15 0
Comm Rolla Dist 217 200 $1,664.50 $1,634.33 $101,431 5.75 $35,402 14.40 0
Docking $1,634.33 $1,731.08 $1,918.91 $391,311 11.58 $126,000 0
Comm Ulysses Dist 214 1666.5 $1,098.11 $1,119.83 $1,958,294 20.18 0
Docking $1,119.83 $1,142.03 $2,107,452 13.69 $839,000 $304,854 $466,518
Comm Shawnee Mission Dist 512 42,515.8 $800.62 $861.87 $37,078,619 17.34 $18,290,000 Grandfather Clause Does Not Apply
Docking $832.64 $14,766 33.73 $39,350,432 27.49 $20,053,000
Comm Wichigan Dist 259 53,568.5 $863.57 $908.18 $48,504,126 18.62 $26,765,000 Grandfather Clause Does Not Apply
Docking $898.11 $12,276 30.66 $32,547,209 31.70 $25,110,000
Comm Lawrence Dist 497 7404 $736.23 $829.38 $6,285,925 16.11 $2,550,000 Grandfather Clause Does Not Apply
Docking $765.67 $19,481 20.05 $6,627,563 21.21 $3,288,000
Comm Galena Dist 499 990 $608.24 $5,384 38.63 $615,148 9.32 $499,000 Grandfather Clause Does Not Apply
Docking $537.19 $5,384 38.63 $650,970 24.79 $513,000
Comm Valley Center Dist 262 1642 $767.55 $9,125 31.18 $1,295,711 14.42 $892,000 Grandfather Clause Does Not Apply
Docking $713.85 $9,125 31.18 $1,314,734 20.25 $928,000
Eight Representative Districts
EXPANATION OF TABLE: Cah. 1.1. This identification sheds the plan. The figures for the governor's powers are based on the United States Commission, the figures for the government's powers are on the United States and unidentified Canadian figures. Table 1.2 shows the total powers of the governor.
C. 3. The amount of money budgeted by the school district for the 79-82 year school years according to the courts. Accounts are large and vary in size and amount according to the courts. Estimates are larger than actual amounts received from the courts and may be larger based on available information.
C.6. The assessed valuation of the district divided by the number of grossly assessed valuation has been adjusted to 30 per cent of actual value of property.
C.8. The district's 1979 tax rate in dollars per thousand assessed valuation. The taxes were assessed when the property was assessed at 30 per cent of value. These rates have
the state and to the 39-year-old in lieu of being employed for that time.
This behemoth money paid from state and local funds. When the governor makes an annual budget figure in 160 per cent of last year's, he will provide that same amount in the general budget figure.
budget or 14 per cent of the average for schools she it. It is no lower than 14 per cent of her year's budget or 14 per cent of the average for the school'sake, which ever lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower. It is lower.
The local mill required to support the maximum budget. This does not include the local area necessary of the monthly necessary to pay the state's tax and other necessary costs. The local area proposed by the board was not necessary to support the municipality but proposed a per cent income tax. Nine of these taxes are included in the municipality.
Cell 9: The aid the state would give the school district if it adopted the maximum budget.
**Cis. 19. The Ducking fading formula allows a grandmother clause. The clause allows a duck to die while the grandfather clause allows a grandchild to die.**
**Cis. 20. The paradox of the indirect object and the grounded clause in case 19-70.**
**Cis. 21. The paradox of the indirect object and the grounded clause in case 19-70.**
The governor's bill would raise the local property tax about one mill, and the committee bill would lower it about four mills. He would also fund the education fund any new programs under either plan. He said bids on gasoline went up 20 per cent this year; paper went up 8 per cent, and the teachers needed a cost of living raise. He would take care of the additional money.
cent increase allowed in the committee bill if Social Security tax increases were not audited.
GALENA
The "poor kids in Galena" have been the subject of much conversation in Topeka lately. The property valuation per student in Galena is extremely low. This means that the taxpayers pay a high tax rate and the budget, per pupil is still small.
F. K. Pontious, the superintendent in Galena, said the district would be able to expand vocational education under either of the new plans. He said he also hoped to add some teachers to get class size below 30 in all classes.
when asked how much the financial situation in Galena hurt the students, he said, "Not to the extent some might imagine."
He said the district paid low salaries and was unable to compete for good teachers.
He said the physical plant was in good condition, but the district needed more classrooms. He said he was afraid that the remedial education program would have to be cut off. He said he was afraid that the federal funds for such programs might be dropped and that the district would not be able to reduce the federal funds with local money.
was unable to compete for good teachers. The court decision was the "best news we could have until they pass something to carry that out," he said.
VALLEY CENTER
"We can't go anywhere but up," Odes Sapp, Valley Center school superintendent, said. "We have been in a state of shock for the last five years that able to run a school ademately."
He said the district would use its new state aid to get the salaries of its certified and noncertified employees up to the level of other schools its size. He said the school had been trying to start office practice courses, but funding held had the program back. He said the district would need three or four more teachers next year.
Gov., Republicans Clash on Method
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Docking Plan
System 807
The governor's plan is designed to collect money into the state treasury and give it back to the districts with a formula that considers the number of students, the number of teachers and the assessed valuation per student of the district.
The money would come from $106.6 million now given in state school aid, $15.9 million now used for the state school employees retirement fund, $86.3 million raised by an 8-mil statewide levy and $4.00 million revenue from the state general fund.
Kathy Kestner, a first grade teacher at Powhattan demonstrates a learning device that plays a record to ask students questions. The student is shown three answers on the screen. If he pushes the button below the right answer the record goes on to the next question. If he pushes the wrong button the record repeats.
The districts would have to provide $15.9 million to pay for the employee退休 fund. Public finance experts say this shift from a state expenditure to a local expenditure would neutralize some of the effects of the equalizing program.
The plan then takes this money and divides it into 60 and 40 per cent shares. The 40 per cent share is divided by the number of students, the distribution share, by the number of students. This results in an aid per student and an aid per teacher amount. The districts multiply the numbers of students and teachers by these figures to arrive at their unadjusted state.
This unadjusted state aid figure is multiplied by an equalizing index so that the effect on the value of the index, find the index, the formula uses the average assessed valuation per pupil in the state. Districts that have the average assessed valuation per student are given an index of 0.81.
If the districts assessed valuation per student is below the average by $1,0000, the index is increased by .01. If it is $20,000 below the average, the index is increased by .02. The opposite is also true. If the districts assessed valuation per pupil is above the average, the index is decreased. If the index reaches zero, the process stops.
Many consider this formula to be arbitrary. Marvin Harder, the governor's education expert, defended the plan recently by saying that it achieved the amount of equalization the governor wanted.
This index is multiplied by the amount allotted for the district's students and teachers and federal aid is subtracted to get the amount of state aid to be given.
The governor's bill has a rather complicated budget lid. The maximum budget is the least of the last year's budget plus a percentage increase of twice the consumer price index, last year's average budget gap for school districts in its state and for other regions once the consumer price index or 110 per cent of last year's budget.
A grandfather clause prevents a school district from losing more than 10 per cent of pupils.
The aid will be gradually reduced to 50
and will resume at five years and
will remain at this level.
In any event, the budget can be increased by the percentage of the consumer price index.
Docking defines size categories as under
800 students, 800 to 1,899 students and 1,900 or more students. The two largest categories can be changed by the State Board of Education after the first year.
If the voters in the district approve a
budget increase, the budget can be increased to any level so long as the budget per pupil figure does not pass the highest pupil figure in the school's size category;
Small Rural Schools Complicate Financing
One factor that complicates the financing of schools in Kansas is the small, inefficient size of some of the schools and school districts.
There is a certain amount of fixed overhead no matter how many students the educational factory is clawing out. This brings the cost per unit of output, or student, up.
When most of the school districts in Kansas were formed, agriculture required much more manual labor than it does now. Mechanization has ended the need for much of the labor, so many of the workers and their families have moved away from the farms, leaving school districts with very few students.
A simple solution would be to close some of the schools and form larger school districts, but this solution would meet with much local opposition.
A school is a matter of civic pride for a small community. Kansas City has the Chiefs, and Mullinville has its school. And any attempt to close the school would meet with more opposition than a plan to move the Chiefs to Omaha.
In the early days, the people from several sections of land would join together and form a school district. One teacher, who often lived in the district president's house,
taught all of the grades offered at the school in one room.
Then a wave of school consolidation swept across the country. Unified school districts were formed and larger schools were built in the towns. Many of the rural schools were
But some of these rural schools still remain as headaches to administrators of the unified districts. Rolla has two of these districts. One school has 13 students; the other
The school boards of the unified districts are powerless to close the rural schools. The schools cannot be closed without the approval of the voters of the old rural school district, because these people are unwilling to give up their town and send their children into town.
Many of the unified school districts themselves are below an efficient size.
The issue is so important to the people involved that the legislature, through the years, has devoted more than a third of its legislation or education to consolidation.
One bill introduced in the Senate this session even seeks to limit the ability of an act of God to close a school. The bill would also mandate damaged school or hold an election if the cost of repairing it would be less than half of building a similar facility.
Committee Plan
The committee bill is designed to equalize
the committee power powers the school
district.
The wealth of the district is multiplies by a local effort index to determine the local share of the budget. The local share along with the total budget determines the total budget to determine state aid.
The plan is designed, basically, so that any district willing to pay a 1/4-percent income tax and a 15-mil property tax will be able to spend the statewide average budget per pupil for school districts its size. If the district is willing to pay less than 15 percent, the pupil will be higher than average and if the district pays less the budget per pupil will be smaller.
The committee has amended the bill so that a district can raise all of its share through a property tax. An optional 50 per cent share is charged to the regulatory rate of 1/4 per cent income tax.
The district's wealth is found by adding the adjusted valuation of property in the district to the taxable income that is earned in the district. Adding these figures at a one-to-one ratio is an arbitrary decision that the committee reached because it was equitable, Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Iowa, president of the Senate, said recently.
This district wealth figure is multiplied by a district effort index. The effort index is set at 1½ per cent for schools whose average budget per pupil equals the statewide average budget per pupil for districts its size. The index is adjusted up or down proportionately if the district's budget per pupil is above or below the statewide average.
This index is multiplied by the district wealth to determine the local share of the school budget. The local share and federal share are added to obtain the total budget to determine the state's share.
The committee would pay the state share with $106.6 million presently used for state education aid and $99 million that it says can be taken from the state general fund without raising taxes or cutting existing programs.
The committee would also transfer the cost of vocational and special education from the districts to the state. Public finance experts say this would enhance the equalization of education resources necessary for it is available in the state general fund, the committee says.
The budget lid of the committee bill allows a budget of 120 percent of last year's budget per pupil or 165 per cent of the average budget per pupil. The district is smaller. In any event, the district can increase its budget per pupil to 165 per cent of last year's level.
With an election, the district can increase its budget up to the level of the highest budget per pupil at any school the same size.
The committee bill has a size category for districts under 400 and two larger categories. The categories have a scale to adjust the competences in enrolment within the categories.
8
Wednesday. February 21,1973
University Daily Kansan
Four Cleared of Drug Charges
Evidence Said Insufficient
By ERIC MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
Four cases involving illegal drug sales have been dismissed because an undercover agent "apparently used trumped drugs" against Bergen, Douglas County attorney, said Tuesday.
Charges were dropped in the cases of Le Rossiame, Le Brissanime, and Chauzier charged with sale of firearms. Ed Acker,
Lawrence, who was charged with sale of amphetamines; Robert Dean Blankenship, who was charged with the sale of heroin; Robert W. Gorski, who was charged with sale of barbiturate.
Spotts failed to pass polygraph (lie-
All four were arrested in a June 1972 drua raid based on uncorroborated evidence from Jim Spinns, an undercover agent for the Douglas County attorney's office.
Student Marks Rising Some KU Deans Say
By ANN McFERREN
Kansan Staff Writer
Student grades in general are on the rise, and honor rolls are expanding at the University of Kansas, according to several deans.
"You only have to look at the increased number of students on the honor roll to know that grades have gone up." Emily Taylor, dean of women, said Friday.
In the fall of 1965, the average grade point for KU students was 2.45, according to Gary Thompson, assistant to the registrar. In 1965, KU was on a 3.0 grading system, but Thompson translated the figure into terms of a 4.0 schedule.
By 1972, the average had risen to 2.93, an increase of 20 per cent, be said.
The School of Engineering is among the schools that have had an increase in the number of students on the honor roll, accreditations and associate dean of the School of Engineering.
Since 1965, the percentage of students on the engineering honor roll has increased from 10 per cent to 22 per cent, he said, and the average grade point average is trade point average to be on the honor roll.
Motzler said he thought students were receiving a better high school background than they had in the district.
Students in the School of Journalism qualify for the honor roll if their grades are in the top 15 per cent of the grades given to students in the school, according to Lee Young, associate dean of the School of Journalism.
The grade point required to be included in the top 15 per capita has risen significantly in the past decade.
However, the tendency for some teachers is to grade easier now than they have in the past. It is more likely that said are, said are more reluctant to give a student an F than to allow late withdrawal from a
The requirements to qualify for the honor
Director Says Hilltop Center To Pay Debt
The senate claims that the center overspent its budget allocation by ap- plying for services to 10,000 people.
Bencivengo said that the center was presently struggling to be self-supporting and that it would take a long time to pay the debt.
Any placement of blame would be difficult, she said. In the beginning, the center experienced problems with the Student Senate treasurer, she said, and as a result neither the center nor the senate have accurate books.
She said the problem would be discussed in a Friday morning meeting with the staff.
Don't almost forget.
Judy Bencivengo, director of the Hilpont Day Care Center, said Tuesday that the center planned to pay its debt to the Student Senate and would not request additional
In size, your ring may be the smallest thing on your wedding
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enamelled from fine gold each.
Marks Jewelers
Del Eisele, certified gemologist
817 Mass.
V13-3-4266
Art-carved jeweler
AGS
Authorized
roll of the School of Business were changed last semester, according to Rhetta Nover, secretary of the School of Business. Students must now have 12 hours with a grade point of 3.5 to qualify, which stricter than the previous requirements, she
Ambrose Saricke, vice chancellor for academic affairs, presented the awards. He said that during his years as a professor of history, librarians librarians had come to know him.
Although the percentage of students on the School of Business honor roll was down slightly last fall, the decrease was not dramatic. There were more difficult requirements, Nover said.
Mary Royer, library assistant, research, received an 11-year award.
Nine library staff members received awards Tuesday from the University.
E. Lleanor Symons, book selection
S. Eliasen Symons, book selection
Shikhar Jain, received 15-year awards.
Shikhar Jain, received 15-year awards.
The credito-in credit option available to students have helped boost the grade point average for their classes.
Nine Librarians Obtain Awards For Longevity
Emma Lou Copp and Everett Jones received 20th awards.
George Jerkovich, Slavic librarian,
received a 10-year award among his 118
papers.
The awards were accompanied by monetary gifts and were signed by Chancellor Raymond Nichols and David Heron, director of the library system.
detector) tests in the cases of Tredo, Acker and Blankenship.
Marion Howey, documents libarian; Bernice Smyssor, library assistant, mathematics; and Kent Miller, serials libarian, received five-year awards.
The Marantz 250 Is Good, Clean Sound.
Berkwitz and both Trebo and Acker took and passed polygraph tests. No polygraph tests were administered in the two other cases.
Satisfy Your Power Hunger.
A Mini-Package With Big Power: The Marantz 250.
The $495 Marantz Model 250 is the ultimate professional stereo power amplifier for ultimately high-quality sound and custom stereo applications.
Features include: gold-odized front panel with illuminated professional panel level meters; front panel meter-sensitivity range controls; direct-coupled output circuitry; complete automatic self-power and current limiting circuits and current overload recovery.
With flawless high power and uter reliability, it offers 250 watts from 20 Hz to 20 kHz with under 0.1% THD and JM distortion, and is rated for 30 minutes.
"Due to the agent's failure to pass the previously mentioned polygraph tests," Berkwitz said, "as well as in one other case already dismissed, I felt, after consultation with other members of my legal staff, that it would be unethical to go forward with any case based solely on the uncorroborated evidence of Mr. Spatts."
He forseal for your the Model 250 — and all the Marantz component family, with professional quality in every price range.
Now you can buy an Marantz
stereo component and save up to
$60 on a pair of super Marantz
headphones. Come in for complete details.
SPECIAL MONEY-SAVING
MARANTZ SPEAKER
BONUS:
"Everything in sound"
"Everything for the audiophile"
SPOTTIS VOLUNTEERED TO serve as an undercover agent after this case was
"I would also like to point out," Berkowitz said, "that Mr. Spotsa was an agent in no fewer than seven cases which resulted in drug convictions on a felony level and of these seven cases, six were by pleas of guilt."
PRIMAVERIA
HAMMERHEAD
The case in which the defendant pleaded not guilty is being appealed.
RMS Electronics
10-6 Mon.Sat.
724 Mass. 841-2672
Berkowitz refused to comment about the strength of Spots' testimony in that case.
"Spots apparently feared other charges could be brought against him," Berkowitz said, "if he did not make a certain quota of arrests."
"We must impress on them (undercover agents) that they do not need to trump up their reputation."
Berkowitz commended former county attorney Mike Elwell, now probate judge, for his use of undercover agents but said, "by the use of safeguards we can continue to fight hard drugs and have innocent persons to arrest and long periods of court action."
Berkowitz said he would still prosecute on uncorroborated evidence from an amateur agent, however. There are no agents working directly through his office now, he
THE COUNTY ATTORNEY said his wife was in response to a campaign promissor.
Undercover agents are usually given an apartment, a car and a certain amount of money with which to make purchases. Atty. Cynthia Reid is a national and amateur agent, Berkowitz said.
Eile and Milt (Uncle Milly) Collins are now
broken Brooks Tavern & Lunch.
"But there's more careful preparation now," he said. "The days of the mass arrests and raids may be over. There is something offensive to the American spirit in going out at 3 a.m. and knocking on doors."
NEW MANAGEMENT
*"Happy Morr. Night." p.m.-p.m.
*Pool Tournament every Twes. Eve.
*"Every Monday Nite—Pitchers $10."
Lunch Special
10 a.m. 2 p.m.
Hamburger and 12 oz. BUD — 50c
Brooks Tavern and Lunch
1307 W. 71th 842.9429
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Now in new location Room 203-Second floor ELDRIDGE HOUSE
PAT READ "The Indian Trader"
We carry the largest stock of Indian Handcraft in the Middle West— Reservation-made jewelry, rugs, Kachinas, pottery, and baskets.
Classified ads get results
Have you tried McDonald's big, thick, hot, juicy Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with Cheese
We start with a quarter-pound of 100% pure beef ... cook it up just right. serve it with ketchup, mustard, pickles and onions on a toasted sesame bowl. Pounder-Pounder Cheese comes from all of the above plus two pieces of golden cheese. After we have tried them, we know you will agree: They's a great McDonald's menu addition.
901 West 23rd — Lawrence, Kansas
McDonald's
SPRING RECORD SALE February 19 - February 23
HUNDREDS OF LABELS & ARTISTS INCLUDING
LIST OF LABELS: ABC • Atlantic • MGM • Nouschu • Cadet • Blue Note • Janus • Pacific Jazz • Reprise • Warner Brothers • Elektra • Columbia • Immediate • Angel • Capitol • Uni • Turnabout • Soul • Tamla • Vanguard • Soul City • Stax • Atco • Gordy • Mace • Everest • Liberty • Blue Note • Music Guild • Westminster • Command • Checker • RCA • Chess • Verve • World Pacific • Dunhill • Westminster Gold • impulse and many others.
LIST OF ARTISTS: Thelonius Monk • Cream • B. J. Thomas • Otis Rush™ • Mamas & Papas • John Mayall • Amby Dukes • Laurino Almeida • Sabicas • Eric Clapton • The Doors • Joan Beaz • Arena Franklin • Odetta • John Colfrane • Louis Armstrong • Fifth Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick • Ramsey Lewis • M C 5 • London Symphony • Julian Beam • Wes Montgomery • Moby Grape • New York Pro Musica • Tim Buckley • Vanilla Fudge • The Rascals • William Steinberg • Joseph Krips • Otis Spann • Eddie Harris • Tom Paxton • Al Hirt • and many others.
NOW ONLY
$1.98
Schwann
Cat. List
4.98 to 6.98
MANUFACTURERS
OVERSTOCKS
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES
WHILE THE LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION
E PLURIBUS UNUM
BLETHOVEN
THE SINN APHRIANES
1704-1735
and his companion in the theatre.
BETTHOVEN
THE NINE SYMPHONIES
7 Record Set
Value to $3.50
898
BRICKNELL
WILLIAM STEINBURG
The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
BRUCKNER -SYMPHONY NO. 7.
2 Record Set
Value to $10.00
98
THE CLASSIC MUSIC HARP
LITTLE CAT'S LITTLE CAT
LIFE IN THE EARTH
A GREAT JOURNEY OF
MUSICAL STORIES
FROM A WONDERFUL MAN
TO A FILM WRITER
AND A SONGSMASTER
BY TOMMY BOWEN
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
5 Record Set
Value to $25.00 698
BLACK AFRICA
MELBOURNE
GREAT SONGS FOR
BEGINNING GUITARIST
BY HENRY RUSSELL
1970
JULIAN BREAM
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00
498
ANTHOLOGY OF MUSIC
OF BLACK AFRICA
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00
498
AN ANTHOLOGY OF FOLK MUSIC
5 Record Set
Value to $2.00
98
An Anthology of Folk Music
Various Artists
Bill Evans
Johnny Appleseed
Little Richard
T. R. Jones
Ritchie Valens
Lisa Fonction
Jimi Hendrix
Jerry Garcia
John Coltrane
Tony Bennett
Mike Martin
Fats Thomas
Eric Clapton
Alvin Lee
James McCartney
Billy Gibbons
Brian Johnson
Johnny Hallyhead
Sidney Beeching
Kevin Costello
Jazz Ensemble
Trevor Richards
Acoustic Ensemble
Conductor
Musician
Organist
Playing Band
MOZART
COMPLETE WIND CONCERTI
4 Record Set
Value to $20.00 598
2. 98 to 9.98
Schwann Cat. List
$9.98 to $44.50
RAMPAL - ART OF THE FLUTE
7 Record Set
Value to $35.00 898
THE WORLD FOOTBALL
RAMPAL
KTA
The Baller
THE BALLET
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00
498
SPT
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
9
KU Debaters Take Third At Dartmouth
A University of Kansas debate team won third place honors at Dartmouth College last weekend in the largest major debate tournament in the country.
The team composed of Bill Hensley, Wichita senior, and Bill Russell, Omaha, Neb., senior, compiled a record of nine wins and two losses. That record resulted in a invitation to the Tournament of Champions at Illinois State University next weekend.
About 150 teams from across the country gathered in the Dartmouth tournament.
KU debate teams also took second and fourth place in a tournament at Butler County Community College in Durham. Older players, including senior, and Lynn Hurd, Shawnee Mission sophomore, finished second. Diane Glaser, Emporia sophomore and Dennis Harmon,
At another weekend tournament at William Jewell College, the KU freshman teams of Charles Whiteman, Atlantic, Iowa, freshman, and Stewart Bishop, Topeka, Iowa, freshman and Phil Snow, Sugerland, TeX, freshman, both won "outstanding team" honors.
The SUA Ski Club is planning a trip to Breckenridge, Colo., during spring vacation, according to Marc Turner, Overland Park freshman and member of the club. A ski coach will be on hand Wednesday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union to discuss the trip.
SUA Ski Club Plans Excursion To Breckenridge
The first 46 people who sign up can go on the trip, Turner said. Interested persons may sign up through Friday in the SUA office.
The trip costs $106 and includes five days of ski lift tickets, six nights of lodging, continental breakfasts and transportation to and from Breckenridge.
A down payment of $0$ is due Friday. The balance is then due by March 5, Turner
Participants in the ski trip will leave
at 12:01 a.m. March 18 and return
March 24.
Turner said that the trip was planned because of the success of the ski trip to Aspen over Christmas vacation. After the Aspen trip, questionnaires were sent to the Aspen community in order to find they would like to take a trip to Breckenridge during Spring break, he said.
Filings Complete In Sports Board Faculty Senate
The process of nominating faculty members to the F Faculty Senate and Athletic Committees.
Rick Von End, executive secretary of the University, said 12 faculty members had been nominated to the Athletic Board and 42 had been nominated to the Faculty Senate.
Von Ende said he would release the names of the candidates when all nominees are ready.
He said that nominees did not necessarily know that they had been nominated. Letters were mailed Monday informing faculty members of their nominations, and nominees to inform the secretary of the university of rejection of their candidacy by March 1.
names of the candidates when all nominees had informed him of their intentions to run. Senate Code rules specify that at least twice as many people must be nominated as there are positions to fill and that each person's position must be represented on the University Council, Von Ende said that both these requirements had been met.
KU Action Committee To Discuss Revision
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
The University of Kansas Affirmative Action Conference Committee will meet at 1:30 p.m. today to discuss a new revision for the Code, which the Chancellor Raymond Mickens said Tuesday.
The plan is being formulated to satisfy an NEW requirement that the University and department have a firmative action to eliminate alleged discrimination and discourage future discrimination in faculty hiring, student recruitment and 'representation' in University bodies.
Nichols said the entire review would probably not be corrupted in one session.
Final Names Offered For Health Director
said the entire review would possibly be presented at the Affirmative Action Conference Committee consists of representatives from the Affirmative Action Board, Council of Students, Student Executive Committee and the Responsibility Committees.
The names of two final candidates for a new director of Student Health Services were delivered Tuesday to William Balfour, who is the chairperson, by the health director search committee.
Balfour had he expected to name the new director in about two weeks.
KANSAN WANT ADS
The new director will replace Dr. Lawrence Bridger, Jr who will retinue as director of student affairs.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Three Days
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to race or religion. Please visit ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE STOCK Shop - 3 blks. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Hwy. 215, biko. Assortment of growers' and store owner's bicycles including 10 speeds, sheds, odd pot belly stools, baskets, chairs, baskets and ladders, i10 basket bushel and wood crates. Fireplace wood, ladders, baskets and wagon boxes. Baled alfalfa, brome and wheat straw. grown farm potatoes. Also fruits & vegetables available. Baked alfalfa, brome & wheat straw.
CARS Bought AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vernor, 844-808-9088
Joe's Joe Used Car
Bash
RAY AUDIO WAREHOUSE The finest
landmark store in worth its weight
in time. STREET ART, 600 N. 13th St.
Lawrence, KC 46072. 842-391-7800
Western Civilization Note—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
2. If they are an advantage.
3. If you don't.
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—
Either way it comes,
the city of Kansas Civilization
is available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier.
Stereo company package AM-JM Stereo re-
store package AM-MJ Stereo re-
store package BMR headphones and 10 blu-
fins, BBR charger headphones, and 10 blu-
fins.
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all-
erators, Hoover, Eureka, Electrolux, etc.
will be available to you at:
www.hoover.com/warehouse
4-Channel Silver, component system, AM/FM
channel, player. HSS 16 channel 4, AM/FM
player. HSS 16 channel 4, AM/FM player.
Fisher 202 Bce Reciver Amp. 12, 28 watts MRS per
channel. Width Amp. 1/2", 5" aperture.
$600.00; Call 842-7236.
DOWN PARKA with hood, two inch loft, blue,
slightly used, SQ 843-5093. 2-21
Let us sell you a Konica Auto-softc. A with
desktop and tablet support. All devices
also available. ktonics & Konica & Pictures &
curtains
ORIGINAL — SHOCKING! Complete Movie
Orignal for your iPhone or iPad available for you on tape! **EFFECTIVE MADNESS** the 1986 movie, largely responsible for press coverage of The Quantum of Concern: Silicon Valley Bombing in 1983. The Quantum of Concern: Silicon Valley Bombing in 1983. Send Cash Check to SPECTRUM SOUND,
For sale: 55 Ford Corduroys, very dependable, $250.
For sale: 60 Ford Corduroys, very dependable, $350.
86-449-7411 for p. 842; 86-449-7410 after 10 p.m.
86-449-7411 for p. 842; 86-449-7410 after 10 p.m.
lynaket Steere 70 wart en amp- and amp-p. Works
must. Sell must $115.00. Call 843-1846. 286-
Zenith Stereo for sale with AM-FM Stereo radio.
190 watts wall power 2-48
Art. 684-633
60 Chev. Pickup, top condition, low mileage,
350/850 miles, chrome engine and rubber
848-863-1803 to 7:30 P.M.
MARTIN D-18 dinger with hard shell case. 6 months old.助 Fork K424-8579. 2-27
85 Buick Special 4 drs, 8 cylinders, excellent
carbon fiber suspension, $99.00; 84-287
between 5-7平米
GTO 2-D-RT, HT, yellow with black vinyl tape)
1988 condition. 841-298 after 5 years. 5-27
inch
PHILIPS GAR12 furnatable with Shure V-15 cordless microphone and $22 will surrender $22 at 642-8480 or 642-8482.
Casa de Taco
Delicious Nutritious
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with pulses 843-9880
PEUGEC
Pearseot uo-s $117.50
Now in StockAmerica's First Choice Ten Speed
WHY RENT?
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND
RIDE ON BICYCLES
1401 Mass. 843-8484
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club, Summer and Fall
weekends; 2 bedrooms w/Budget; Quilt sibirian
location; Pool and gas-light; landed
carriage house; Pool and management; 2500 Bedroom
-843-723, Liberty Co. W-22
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRD OF STEEP CLIMBING? PARKING IN FIRE-FLAR LOTS? BUILDING FROM STADIUM? from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Cabinet doors, office desk, rental rates, furniture available, ideal roommate. Suite: Saints Apte, 1123 Iad, Apt. 9 tfr 843-211-61
For the latest up to themu financial in rental
countries, call Lawrence Rental Exchange,
$842 250 911 or www.lawrence.rentalexchange.com
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 lowa (South Hwy. 59)
**FREE BENTAL SERVICE**
Those beautiful apartments surround a quiet tennis court and the indoor basketball courts. Play basketball with the indoor basketball court.
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
Guitars
Amps
Recorders
Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1902 Mass.
843-3007
Open Evenings
Come by and see these special apartments. Rent to a woman or man. Water bills are paid. Leases of various lengths are available.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE APARTMENTS
Sleeping rooms, single and double, furnished for males. One with, one without cooking private kitchens.
Fender MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS CALL EXCLUSIVELY
Fender
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
• Guitars
• Amps
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass.
843-3007
Open Evenings
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Newly furnished apartment apt. for the Spring semester, Central heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities include electric hot water (84-852-269) or at 11 th wb. W 19th, sbp 18.
GREAT FOR KIDS and couples, this over-and-over block away from the new Naismith Park, in an extra-quiet neighborhood. Two bedrooms kits with kitchen and utility appliances, an electric kitchen with utility uploys, stove and refrigerator, a full bath, large attached garage, $15/month, available February 17. At $235 Cedarwood Avenue. Call (866) 490-5200.
Ant. for sub-lease. Clean furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, panned window near parking level. 2 blocks to building.
For rent. Clean, quiet apts, with carpeting, dish-
ting ware, kitchenette, camping. Evanvale.
Apos. 1023 Lakestappi. 842-697-6711
For Rest: 2 b, apt. 4, AC, w/c carpet. $130, 1214
Tenn. 845-5486. 2-22
Hillview Apartments- 1745. Wash. St. Oren
and two bedroom apts $90 and Call 824-445-1
5-30.
Nice studio apt. Close to campus. -Off-street park-
1422 Utah. 841-213-1. 2-26
COUNTRYLIVING -4 ml to KU -195mhorn form
room, kitchen, living room,
kitchen, bedroom, bathroom,
room, lift, A.C., wash, toilet, prt, odr,
stair, tub, bed, bath, laundry.
3-bedroom apartment--455 unfurnished. Clean
room. Enclosed kitchen. Bathroom. 481-
for showing, 482-351 for information. 822-
for showing, 823-351 for information.
--tune-ups starting service
YARN--PATTERN--TREWEL
NUMBER--
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10 AM
10-5 PM Saturday
Tony's 66 Service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
Be Prepared!
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
NOTICE
1015 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We B-Que B-In-Que in an old pnw wooden cliff wood shed. We have $20 rb plate $40 rib plate $50 Small rib plate $10 chest $20 chicken plate $30 Phone VI $29-9108 Mid Sum. S-16. Phone VII $29-9108 Mid Sum. S-16.
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
Mountain. 105 acres. Homeowner. Hewlett.
311 E. 78th St. 84-618-6100.
ATTENTION BENTERS
Open 24 hrs.
DRIVE IN
MAYOR
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
HOMES
843-5304
No charge. List your house, apartments, duplexes,
flats, condos, rentals, and vacations for real estate.
For more info call Home Locator
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
to me for concession call 843-729-6650.
For concession call 843-729-6650.
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some
Country Shop, 707 North 2nd, Open 9-17, 7 days
To need to sublue my apt. immediately. Clean, clean, clean! parking with AC and off street parking. Call 864-768-1073.
Why buy a landlord's property for him with your
phone? You can rent it from anywhere along with your diploma 36 to 48 min. rent can be paid online or on the phone again. Why not check into a wavy living. It sounds like a nice place to live. To maintain it, bring the nail band. No, it doesn't need that. Band the skin. Skin -841-827 -22
GAY LIBERATION IS GOOD FOR YOU: Monday—7.00 p.m., 8.00 p.m. FRIDAY—SOSU—6.00 p.m. for dental counseling/RAP-844-360-2425/BILE-812, Union, 864-608-894, 202, Lawrence.
Orcad Quaker Meeting wants more Friends. We need a new meeting space, for a better experience. Please move information at Anime Mosee Library. Fax info to 415-792-6033.
(Karn 500-1500) This spring, as campus coordinat
to P.O. Box 2158, Karn 20-28
JIAYHAW KARAIE TOURNAMENT **exiting**
Karachi - Jalandhar - Jaipur -
Community Building 11th & Vermont
Garage 9th
FLY TO EUROPE HALF PRICE. Save up to $400 on special round-trip charter flights and returning this summer. Welcome Dehry & Hilton Travels, 5620 Woodbine Road, Lake City, Utah 84109 D-2-21
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and antiques. 845-7098 tt
Wanted: Used Buffet clarinet in excellent condition.
Call 643-8520 after 5 p.m. 2-21
ROOMMATE MATURE To share a nice space
in your home, you may be required to
mollify including all utilities. Call 613-5629 or
e-mail roommate@roommate.com.
Wasted: Female roommate to share apartment, 1.
from campus. Rent $35. Call 843-160-6922.
Wide selection of gifts
Alexander's
Cash & carry flowers every day
826 Iowa 842-1320
Lawrence Auction House
442 IASS,
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Independent
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
is Date Nite
Coin-Op
For Consignment information call
842-7925 anytime.
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
Friday Nite
Let Us Sell It For You
SPECIAL
days per week
For consignment information call
You and Your Date
3 games each
$2.00
COIN OP
LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
812-430-6100
928 Mass
3 games for $1.00 Daily-Noon
ARKANSAS
till 6:00 p.m.
842-9450
8 8 8 8
KANSAS UNION
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
---
843
8500
Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates to share ap-
teryx and have room in new Jayhawks year.
Call 849-1630. 2-26
Wanted: Female Resident to live in house:
Wanted: Female Resident to new rent; campus;
month: Call 842-6313; rent: $2.25
Need ride home- live close to med center in
nearby area. Call 611-4800 or leave no
pastive. Please call 611-4800 and leave no
pastive.
Commuting. wife pide ride from 30th Street,
4th Avenue, 100 West 42nd Street, 96th
AM to 8 AM. Return 5 PM or l.m. call Cell
584-736-5700.
Dispersely needle rinse from Kansas City in KU. Disperse the needles as directed by instructor. If interfed cell m-384/m-404
Wanted: Date for Rock Chalk Revue. Must make
abilities desired. Call Bernie Schwartz at
610-234-7925 or bernieschwartz@nytimes.com.
1 need | 2 roommates. 4 bldm. double duplex.
Rent $150 + itf. ull tm. R42-6464. 2-27
LOST
Moved from country. Have 1 yr. old pre-owned
phone. In August. Will supply tool. Call 863-2548
One brown wallet vicinity McColton Hall fire station. Anyone please reward me call 861-2345 anytime. Generate credit card number.
LOST- leather key chain. Lost Twin on 2nd
Novembrer 2015, lost to the wrong person.
2-22 Del Valentine Day. Key chain Place-
ment. Calle cal, black, brown, and white. 'Brandy' is about beet,
callie phone. Callie phone: 642-8343 after 5. Thank you.
REWARD Lost necklace with a stainless steel clasp. INSENTIMENTAL VALUE Please if found in cash or in a bag.
HELP WANTED
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses.
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 843-8560
Weekend and weekend hours. Phone 843-8560
Recruiters on Campus:
Feb. 19-23.
Contact them in the Union, Fraser, or Strong Hall.
5 weeks. $287 inclus. London departed
travel. Travel (ages 18-30). Also Europe.
Africa, India. 3-11 weeks. Write: Whole
Travel, Ltd. Box 1497, K.C., Mo. A.
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
DELICATESESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843 765 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
THE HILE in the WALL
96
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Lawn Blvd.
1) ; Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu Shrimp, to K. C. Steaks Our menu is and always have been "there is interest for quality food."
Sixteen
器
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent entertained in part-time commercial work for TV-radio. Age range 18-40 Interview Thursday and Satafternoon. Phone 435-6720 (Please bring pictures) 2-22 482-3580 (Please picture)
*JOBS IN ALASKA* Available now. This hand-
basket plan includes a travel package to
tunisia. Plan YOUR VOYAGE $290 JAX.
Book online at www.jax.com/playgrounds.
PERSONAL
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
Steve-Happy Birthday! When I am 64, I'll still be crazy about you and I'll still be your friend. 3-28
CHEAPER BEER EVERYDAY $1,00 pitches and
20 draws EVERYDAY from 6-8 p.m. at the
NIMH HAVEN, 12 Oread & Play Football.
Chase & Chess and drink cheaper BEER
DAY!! 2-21
Employment Opportunities
If You're Planning on FLYING
Experienced in typing theses, disertations, term papers, other mite. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accelerate and prompt computer typesetting, corrected. Ph. 84-9354. Mrs. Wright.
FOUND
For fast, dependable Volkwagen Repairs; Dons
WV Service; 229 Elm Street, Lawrence, Kana-
phone 841-4833. 2-22
GAY
Consider College Men interested in part time
work. Write O. E. Bernstein 8225 West Hills
evenings, Writing O. E. Bernstein 8225 West Hills
evenings.
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Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 7/3/14 must pick up a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 8:04-3:00 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
10
Wednesday, February 21, 1973
University Daily Kansan
1.
Taylor Sees Sex Barriers Diminishing
Speaking before a small audience at the first session of a career seminar sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women, Emily Taylor, dean of women, said Tuesday that she thought sex barriers were diminishing.
Taylor said that according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of women in the labor force should increase by 43 per cent during the next decade.
"Even though this paints a rosey picture," she said, "all career opportunities will not be available."
Some career roles traditionally filled by women are now being over by man, Taylor said, such as nursing positions or grade school teachers.
"I think that's great. The more men inadvertently expose themselves to be forced to look further," she said.
Industries are pushing for women to fill engineering jobs previously held by men to such an extent that the School of Engineering has issued a publication urging women to consider engineering as a career possibility, she said.
possibilities," Taylor said.
Tom Moore of the Kansas Commission on
waste discrimination partially stemmed from
traditional employment practices.
"People find themselves saying, 'It just wouldn't feel right,' when they are confronted with the possibility of a woman policeman," Moore said.
Another problem that women have had, Moore said, is an inability to qualify for jobs in higher positions because they cannot gain experience on a lower level.
"With women, just as in the case of race.
employers are being compelled to be more responsible about rentments," he said.
Moore said about one-fifth of the total caseload handled by the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights dealt with sex-based complaints.
"We've just really started our investigations around the first of this year," he said.
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WILLIAM H. SPENCER CANDIDATE FOR CITY COMMISSION SPEAKS TO KU
I am Bill Spencer, candidate for City Commission of the City of Lawrence. Before I tell you about my qualifications, I want to tell you something about myself.
I was born and raised in Chicago and came to the University of Kansas in the summer of 1962. After living in Pearson Scholarship Hall for the first two years, I lived in an apartment with my wife, Anne. In 1965, I completed my Bachelors in Psychology and Human Relations, going on to obtain an M.B.A. degree in 1967. I went to work in Minneapolis, Minn., as a market research analyst, then returned to Lawrence in September of 1968 and opened Competition Sports Cars, Inc., which I still run.
Not being a politician, my experience with city government has tended to be quite informal. As a student, as a businessman and, as always, a taxpayer, I have had to deal with the city, its administration, and its policies. I am seeking the office of City Commissioner because the results produced by those administrators responsible for setting and implementing policy have not always been in the public interest. Obviously, I feel that whatever strengths I possess and those experiences I have had, have prepared me to capably represent the student, the businessman and the taxpayer.
P. S. I'll be saying some very specific things in future issues, watch for them.
Paid Political Advertisement Paid for by Wm. H. Spencer
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THE UNIVERSITY.DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 96
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Doctors Seeking Detection Method For Breast Cancer
Thursday, February 22, 1973
See Story Page 3
---
Kansan Photos by FELICIA SMALL.WOOD
Some Building Maintenance on Campus Postponed for Lack of Funds Top priority goes to emergency repairs and upkeep of new buildings .
Buildings Need 'Ring Jobs'
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN Kansan Staff Writer
Buildings in need of maintenance at the University of Kansas can be compared to cars needing piston ring jobs, Keith Lawton, of planning and facilities, said Monday.
When a piston ring job is postponed, blue smoke may blow out of the pipe, he said, but the car still runs. He said it was possible that postponement of the maintenance would make the piston ring job cost more when it eventually was done.
Lawton said there was an "undefinite no-man's land of maintenance" that, like many other universities, the University could continue to operate without it. The maintenance in some cases costs more in the long run when it is cumulative. Better deterioration is often cumulative, he said.
The no-man's land is so called, Lawton said, because it involves an "in-between" amount of funding and ranks in priority below day-to-day maintenance and long-range capital improvements such as new buildings.
Lawton said he agreed with these priorities.
He said the state was willing to fund for daily maintenance. A small fund, a part of which is held unencumbered for emergency use, pays for special repairs or improvements that are necessary to keep KU operating on a daily basis. Replacement of
New buildings rank second in priority, Lawton said. Getting rid of the worst buildings, which are unsuited to education and become a drain on maintenance, is not only expensive but also not only inconvenient but also cost more to maintain than do new buildings, he said.
Third on the priority list is the no-man's land of overhunting, modernization, renovation and deferred maintenance, Lawton said. These kinds of repairs involve more money than daily maintenance, but less than routine cleaning or items deleted from the budget, he said.
Lawton said he could make a list of 200 maintenance jobs in this category.
Deferred maintenance eventually becomes emergency maintenance, Lawton said. Funds are readily obtainable for most of the conditions, which are dangerous to life and limb.
Lawton said that the University would never knowingly allow buildings to deteriorate to the point that structural problems would become dangerous. He also said much money had been spent during the school year to make buildings electrically safe.
Next in priority after maintenance problems that are dangerous are situations that are intolerable to the buildings or structures, and they would cause irreparable harm to a building.
Lawton gave several examples of deferred maintenance that could become expensive.
have priority over deferred maintenance, he said.
See BUILDING Page 7
Israelis Open Fire On Libyan Jetliner
TEL AVIV (AP) — Israeli warplanes fired on a Libyan jihadist that refused to heed warnings Wednesday and forced it to crush a military base in the desert, Israel's military command reported.
The official casualty toll reported at least 74 persons dead and nine seriously injured.
The command said the airline pilot acknowledged repeated warnings that he was violating Israeli-held territory, but did not comply with them. The government said the plane had intruded into a "highly-sensitive military area" and "behaved in a way that aroused suspicion and concern regarding its intentions."
An Israeli spokesman said that the airliner flew over Israeli installations on the Suez Canal, which acts as a cease-fire line between Israel and Egyptian troops, before Israel air force fighters were sent to intercept it.
A spokesman for the Libyan government asserted the plane overpass Scoir's airport and then, because of bad weather, strayged it up to the plane, where he described the plane as "shot down."
The Libyan government said one of the passengers was from West Germany, another from Poland and the rest from Syria in Iraq and Jordan. The airline crew was French.
Libyan radio said the plane was brought down in "an aggressive attack by the Zionist enemy," and Cairo radio vowed that all attacks were aired at the hands of the Arabs for this crime.
A Tunisian government statement said the international community should take
measures against "this new form of terrorism."
President Hourih Boundienne of Algieria called the incident "a violation of the most basic human rights."
Premier Goldi Meir expressed the Israeli government's "deep sorrow at the loss of life resulting from the Libyan crash in Sinai and regrets that the Libyan pilot did not bear the repeated warnings which were in accordance with international procedures."
Mrs. Meir apparently meant to designate the pilot of the Libyan plane without reference to his nationality. Air France announced in Paris that the pilot was French, part of a five-man crew on under contract with the Libyan airline.
Air France said two members of the crew survived.
In Cairo, Libyan Airlines identified the plane as Flight 114 bound for Cairo from Tripoli, the capital of Libya, and said it apparently overflow the Cairo airport. The Suez Canal is seven minutes' flying time from the airport.
An airline spokesman said 116 persons, including six babies, were aboard. There was no explanation for the discrepancy and the Israeli count of dead and infured.
An Israeli source said the pilot was warned three times to land the plane, but he refused. Another source said the pilot's source, 'I don't take orders from Israel.'
The Israelis opened fire and hit the plane, but a highly placed source contended that
the damage was not enough to cause the crash.
U.S., Peking To Issue Communique
The crash came just 12 hours after Israel commands struck seven Arab guerrillas bases deep in northern Lebanon in a drive to break up terrorist centers. The rulers of the country, an official report said, Arab guerrilla sources put the death toll at 15 to 26.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The United States and Communist China will issue a joint communique Thursday that is expected to report new stricts in relations between the two nations.
The communique is the outgrowth of Henry Kissinger's lengthy talks with Chinese leaders in Peking, including Chairman Mao Tse-tung.
The White House said that it would be made public in Peking and Washington at 10 a.m., Lawrence time, today.
Action Plan Upsets 3 Minorities
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
Not all minority groups on campus are satisfied with the Affirmative Action Plan, representatives of three minority groups said Wednesday.
The plan is under consideration by the Affirmative Action Conference Committee, which met Wednesday afternoon and will meet again today, according to Juliet Shaffer, chairman of the Affirmative Action Board.
Tom Beaver, chairman of the Committee
Shaffer said she thought that few revisions had been made in the plan and that the final form would be approved as soon as possible.
Members of the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front, the Association of Mexican American Students and the Committee on Education, consulted about the contents of the plan.
on Indian Affairs, said he had neither seen the plan nor been consulted about it.
Beaver said that there was no Indian representative on the Affirmative Action Board and that he thought the plan was weighted toward blacks and women.
Antonio Cardona, president of the Association of Mexican American Students, said Chicano students had no knowledge of what was included in the plan.
Cardona said he did not think Mike Jaimez, a Chicano who is on the Affirmative Action Board, was familiar with student problems.
He said the Association of Mexican American Students would make some announcements, and he said.
he said he hoped adjustments would be
otherwise to directly include other
major groups.
Kissinger, who has reported to Nixon since his return from Asia Tiaulo, will hold a news conference at the White House to discuss the details of efforts to both Peking and Hong Kong.
faculty members employed by the University.
"It the Affirmative Action material was to our office," Cardona said, "I think it was an affirmative action."
Reginald Brown, Kansas City, Kan., junior and coordinator for the Lawrence Gay Liberation Front, said, "The avowed purpose of the Affirmative Action Plan is the elimination, in all University activities, of discrimination against members of groups which have been in the disadvantaged status in universities and in the general society.
"We feel that the members of the Affirmative Action Board have fallen short of their stated goal by not specifically making mention of gay people."
"I feel that it is important that such discrimination be specifically prohibited," he said, "to provide adequate protection for faculty, staff and students of the University."
Kissinger's talks in Hanoi resulted in the establishment of a joint economic commission to consider postwar reconstruction aid for North Vietnam.
While the White House has declined to give any details on the forthcoming China commune, it is expected to provide for improved trade relations and possibly the establishment of trade missions in the two countries.
There also have been reports that Kissinger may have made some headway in negotiating the release of three Americans held prisoner in Communist China.
Both sides have indicated that the Kissinger talks in Peking Feb. 15-19 were very good and expanded the breakthrough between China and Japan, with his visit to mainland China a year ago.
While the United States appeared to be making significant new advances in its relations with Peking, it also had word on Beijing's involvement in movement in relations with the Soviet Union.
District Judge Says
Ruling Eases Districting
From Kansan News Services
A ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday should make easy a reaportionment job facing the Kansas Department D. Justice Judge George Templar said Wednesday.
Templar was one of a three-judge federal court that ruled the 1972 Kansas House Reapportionment Act unconstitutional Feb. 2. The panel gave the legislature until
Feb. 16, 1974, to enact a new one or face
the court draw its own.
The Supreme Court in a 5 to 3 ruling on a Virginia case said strict population equality was not constitutionally required when there were traditional county and city boundaries.
248 Candidates on Ballot For KU Government Posts
Templar said the main problem with the 1972 Kamas law was that it cut across much of the state's land.
Two hundred forty-eight candidates
were on the spring elections ballot when the
election was held.
There will be a candidates meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas State University Hall. Sublette sophomore and election candidates meeting would be an opportunity for the candidates to become familiar with the procedures and to meet their competition.
by the 5 p.m. deadline Wednesday, 192 students had filed for 93 open seats in the Student Senate, and 54 had filed for class records and team filed for student body president and vice president.
The candidates are:
Student body president and vice president - Merri
t Williams, president of Student body president - Merri
t Williams, junior vice
dependent Student Association (ISA); Dardkind贝兰.
Dermott贝兰; Eckert艾克特; Feldman菲德曼; Pakistan,ahan; Charles David斯. II Shawnee Mumson saponbyn, Karl Wiedner,Lyndon,Karol, Gary Holerow, Vivian Woods,Vivian Woods, Gary Holerow, Lawrence saponbyn, G. Kronen, Chicago, Chicago, Chicago, Michael Michaels, Nicholas Michaels, Wichita,Michael Michaels, OverleyOverley, Overland Park Schmacker,Norman, Com. Norman, HiberniaHibernia, Schnauzer,Norman, Com. Norman, HiberniaHibernia, soponbyn, Com. Hobers,Hobers, overleyOverley, Hutchinson,Hutchinson, Larry Wade, Ohrman, Ken, Ken
The Virginia plan had been upset by a four-judge federal court in Richmond, which substituted a plan that broke political boundaries in 12 instances but reduced the population variance to slightly more than 10 per cent.
Engineering (5): Jo Abbott, Hutchinson junior. In
Business (1): Hirschfeld Van Aken, Kansas City, KS.
Mary Carey, Wichita State; Ann Dillon, Hutchinson
Marc Carey, Wichita State; Ann Dillon, Hutchinson
Tupelo Hills, Kans., Gary Leatha, Overland Park
Rockford, Kans., Gary Leatha, Overland Park
Pasadena, Cal., Lawrence, Overland Park
Pratt Junior, Rockwell Vaughan, Lawrence school
Pratt Junior, Rockwell Vaughan, Lawrence school
that if the legislature did not have to
evidently district equal in size, its tax should
be lower.
Law (2): Jim Poeow, Wichita graduate student; Joe Speckman, Cityidge city graduate student; Hal Walker.
*
The Supreme Court specifically approved a Virginia plan with a range of 16.4 per cent from the largest to the smallest district in the House of Delegates.
**Fire Ace (13)**
Five-time All-Star, St. Louis sophomore, Kady Neumann.
Cincinnati, PA; guard Lou Lomax, junior, student,
Curtopeau, Pa.; senior No Lomax, junior, student,
Curtopeau, Pa.
Graduate School (IB) David A. Kessler, Daryl graduate
Kevin Gonichschäfer, Owen Park graduate
student
MICHAEL
(MCCY) D. Randle S. Andrew S. Wicklender,
Lawrence D. Blank, Overland S. Parken, Kestel Eell
Harrison, Dale R. Smith
www.mcytum.edu
See 248 CANDIDATES Page 9
Acting on an appeal by state officials, the high court reinstated the General Assembly's scheme with the exception of a Senate district in Norfolk.
State Rep. William W. Bunten, R-Topke, chairman of the House Reapportionment Committee, said Wednesday night that he had not read the Supreme Court decision but that he thought the decision would not affect the Kansas Legislature.
The deviation in district populations in kansas is from 10,124 to 17,012, or a difference of 6,998.
The Supreme Court decision says that states can create districts with a higher deviation in population size to maintain traditional county and city boundaries. The Supreme Court also ruled such traditional lines so that districts would be as equal in population as possible.
He said the House ran into trouble when it cut certain districts with the expectation that the population in those districts would decrease or increased others in the expectation that populations would increase. Kan, for example, was expected to City, Kan. for example, was expected to
See RULING Page 3
Russian Brought Wheat to Plains
By DAVE LINK
Kansan Staff Writer
Without the help of a Russian immigrant by the name of Bernard Warkentin back in the fall of 1873, the United States might never have able to complete its $600 million wheat deal with Russia last fall.
It was Warkentin and his band of 24 Montevites who introduced Turkey red winter hwetter to Kansas and the United States 100 years ago last fall.
Without red hard winter wheat, which is still the major variety grown in Kansas, Kansas could have never become the nation's leading wheat producing state, contributing over 20 per cent to the annual U.S. wheat crop.
The Kansas Legislature has given tentative approval to a resolution proclaiming 1974 as the centennial year of the constitution of Turkey Red wheat into Kansas.
Warkentin, by the way, was forced out
last fall, which could be called a return to the womb for Turkey Red hard winter wheat.
According to James C. Malin in his book, "Winter Wheat," Warkentin and his followers each brought a bushel of turkey Red with them when they immigrated to Marion County, Kan., from southern Russia.
Many varieties of wheat were being tried in Kansas at the time, and Turkey Red was one of the few that were able to survive the Kansas winter.
Hard red winter wheat is now Kansas' major crop, producing almost 300 million bushels annually. Fifteen million bushels of Kansas wheat were exported to Russia
of the farming business by the locust plague which hit Kansas in August, 1874 and went on to become a leader in the milling industry of Kansas in the 1900s.
24 BUSHELS 15 MILLION
TO KANSAS TO RUSSIA
2
Thursday, February 22, 1973
University Daily Kansan
U.S. Seeks Early POW Release
SAIGON (AP)—The United States asked the Communists Wednesday to free the next group of American prisoners as soon as possible, and to move its aid teams to subregional truce sites to deepen major hostilities.
At a meeting of chief delegates of the United States, North and South Vietnam, and the Viet Cong to the Joint Military Commission, the United States must move its Communist side not moving its teams into the field. The United States and South Vietnam teams
were at 24 of the 26 sites, North Vietnam at five and the Viet Cong at none.
Despite this, teams of the International Commission of Control and Supervision began their move to 14 of the subregional sites Wednesday.
The deadline for these sites to be operational, as specified in the Vietnam Protocol, is June 27.
While parties to the Vietnam agreement worked to clean up fighting there, the warring factions in neighboring Laos signed a cease-fire which would take effect at noon
The agreement signed in Vientiane would end 10 years of conflict following breakdown of the 1928 Geneva accord designed in its time to bring peace to $2\frac{1}{2}$ million Laotians.
Senate OKs Extension Of Property Tax Lid
TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Senate voted 35- Wednesday to approve a bill extending the state's property tax law lid and increasing the budget lid federal governments.
TOPPKA (AP)—A committee of the Kansas House heard pleas Wednesday from various representatives for the addition of corridors to the Kansas freeway system.
The bill, which now goes to the House, continues to prohibit local governments from increasing tax levies from year to year but allows cities and counties to increase their budgets by more than 5 per cent a year without a vote of the people. The present tax lid law, first enacted in 1970, requires this vote.
In Washington, Secretary of State William P. Rogers halted the agreement in Laos as an important move towards over-all peace in Indochina.
State highway officials estimated that it would cost $250 million to construct these roads.
Tuesday local time, which is 1:00 a.m.
Lawrence time Thursday.
Expanded Freeway Supported in House
At the current rates of financing, including the issuance of $320 million in bonds, it will be several years before the completed freeway system could be completed.
The five corridors would add 315 miles to the way already designated as the freeway system.
The tax lid bill approved by the Senate also contains a provision giving authority to vote a local sales tax increase of up to 1 per cent, with the source of revenue for cities and counties.
The Kansas House voted on a major issue Wednesday, giving tentative approval to a bill in which the state would take over full administration and funding of the welfare program. The measure is principally easy 76-33 preliminary approval on a roll call vote following debate.
The bill, which comes up for a final vote Thursday, met opposition from largely rural legislators who said it was full of "indeguacies and confusion."
Rep. E. Claycomb, R-Scott City, said the
committee recommended "the 'no'
and should be returned to committees.
Rep. John Peterson, R-Topema, chief proponent of the welfare bill during debate, denied accusations that there had been any attempt to ram the measure through.
Peterson said a House committee worked five days on the bill, and he called upon House members to pass the measure, which abolish county tax levies for social welfare.
Gov. Robert Docking has recommended that the state take over the welfare system, which would remove the $18 million a year burden from the county tax roll in a trade agreement with the government. Valorem property tax reduction fund which will pay counties nearly $20 this year.
In testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he also pledged that the Nixon administration would not commit to further support of the program without support from Congress.
Rogers said the cease-fire in Laos should help in getting a full account of all U.S. prisoners held there and arranging for their release.
North Vietnamese delegation, said the subcommission would meet again Thursday and that there could be word from the Communist side then.
North Vietnam and the Viet Cong freed 143 American military and civilian personnel Feb. 12 in the first of four scheduled releases. Another 20 Americans were released Feb. 18 in North Vietnam in advance of the second scheduled batch as a goodwill gesture after the visit of Henry A. Kissinger to Hanoi Feb. 10-14.
At a meeting of the subcommission on captured persons in Saigon the United States proposed that the second installment of about 140 U.S. prisoners of war be released in North and South Vietnam before next Tuesday's deadline.
Bul Tin, the chief spokesman for the
The Communist side now holds 422 U.S. military and civilian personnel in North and South Carolina.
Seven thousand Communist POWs and, 1,000 Sanction troops are scheduled to be released in the second phase of Vietnamese exchanges, the same numbers that were exchanged in the first group, which took more than a week to complete.
U. S. sources reported that the Communist side claimed that lack of security and of suitable accommodations were the reasons behind the attack, keeping representatives to the field sites.
California Coastal Towns Damaged by Earthquake
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A rolling earthquake shook the southern California coast Wednesday morning, cracking plaster, building blocks and several fires and inflicting property damage.
The structural damage, mainly to older buildings, was heaviest in Oxnard, a coastal city of 70,000 persons, 50 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Estimates by the State Office of Emergency Preparedness placed damage there at up to $1 million, mostly in cracked walls, broken windows and collapsed roofs.
Several minor injuries were reported.
California Institute of Technology seismologists measured the intensity of the quake at roughly 5.75 on the Richter scale and measured it in the ocean off PL Muu, near Oxnard.
Jolting sleeping residents at 6:44 a.m. and lasting about 20 seconds, the quake recalled
the 6.5 trembler of Feb. 9, 1971, in which 64 persons died. That quake, centered in the San Fernande Valley north of Los Angeles struck at 6:01 a.m.
"It felt like the end of the world," said Richard Rodriguez, 32, manager of a Mayfair market in Oxnard, who estimated damage to the store at $10,000.
Residents from Santa Barbara on the north and San Diego to the south said they felt the jolt, and shocks were noticed as far inland as San Bernardo.
Three rock slides were reported in Ventura County and one blocked all lanes of the Pacific Coast Highway for a time but the way was open to traffic again by 8:30 a.m.
The quake occurred along the Malibu
coastal fault, reported the state Division of
Military Affairs.
Authorities at the Naval Air Missile Test Center in Pt. Mgu said there were no signs of explosive activity.
10
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 22, 1973
3
Med Center Develops Cancer Test
By MYLA STARR Kansan Staff Writer
A new cancer detection method being investigated at the University of Kansas Medical Center could lead to earlier detection and treatment of breast cancer, according to doctors involved in the program.
The test, which is based on detection of an antibody that has been found in the blood of some cancer patients, has shown some encouraging results. Dr. William R. Jewell, assistant director of surgery at the Cancer Centre and researcher in the program, said recently.
"We have established that something happens," he said. "Now we are trying to prove that there is a serological response in cancer patients."
According to Dr. Loren J. Humphrey, chairman and professor of surgery at the Medical Center and co-developer of the program, two or three years may be required to determine the accuracy of the test.
"It's a numbers game," he said. "We will need to test many subjects."
Jewell said that the total number of blood samples tested would depend on the specificity of the reactions, but he estimated that between 600 and 800 samples would be
Humphrey said that blood samples from 140 women with breast lumps had been tested so far. The antibody was found in 30 per cent of the samples from women with breast cancer, he said, and in 12 per cent of the samples from women with fibrocystic
disease, a precancerous condition of the breast.
Only one of about 80 samples from patients with benign lumps or no breast cancer are tested.
Continuing research may help to determine why all of the women with breast disease did not have the antibody, Humphrey said. He said that if the antibody was present in some women as well as to other cancerous tissues, it might be a general reaction to malignancy.
ied
"We're trying to determine if the body reacts to just breast cancer, or to severe breast disease that is not cancer, or to other cancerous tumors." Jewell said.
According to Jewell, the research is the only project of its kind in the country, although other methods of cancer detection are being investigated.
He said that the test was similar to the Gold test, which is also based on serological response to cancerous tissue, but that the test used to test the blood were different.
Humphrey said that he began investigating serological response to cancer in 1967 while at the University of Kentucky. He became interested in the reaction while evaluating patients who had been treated with cancer vaccine, he said.
In 1968, Humphry_jy joined the Medical staff of Emory University in Atlanta and continued the research with the help of Dr. Robert Boehm, an immunologist who is also involved in the Medical Center research.
While at Emory, Boehm and Humphrey found the antibody they are studying and
Humphrey said that the test was based on immunotherapy, or the treatment of cancer by using a patient's natural immunity to suppress the immune system that have a built-in defense to cancer he said, and that persons who develop the disease are those whose natural immunities are weak.
began development of a specific blood test for cancer.
Two years ago, Boehm and Humphrey came to the Medical Center and began working on a program to obtain a large number of blood samples for testing in a lab. This year, they joined Humphrey at the University of Kentucky, later came to the Medical Center project
The program is funded by a five-year
funding from the National Cancer
Institute, devel and贤
The grant provides about $60,000 a year, and is used to pay for technicians, mailing costs of blood samples and computer time, he said.
Information from the patients doctors and laboratory data are being compiled by computer, he said, and the first printout was received two weeks ago.
Jewell said that he and Humphrey began talking to doctors throughout the state about a year and a half ago about sending blood samples from all breast disease cases. He said that 60 Kansas doctors were now participating in the program.
Jewell said that the main goal of the research was to test enough samples to determine the accuracy of the test in both cancer and non-cancer patients. Another
goal is to increase the sensitivity of the test so that it will be able to detect as many cancerous tumors as possible in an early state of development, he said.
Jewell said that a related project was the establishment of a breast disease detection center at the Medical Center.
The American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute hope to fund about 15 or 20 such centers across the nation, he said.
A proposal for a breast disease detection center at the Medical Center has been submitted by joint commission of the two medical groups, and a mid-summer decision is expected
Mammography, he said, is an established x-ray technique for breast tumor detection that has recently come into wide use. Thermography is an ultrasound technique that registers the heat generated by increased blood circulation around a tumor, he said.
Jewell said that a breast disease detection center at the Medical Center would administer physical examinations and use mammography to detect tumors such as mammography and thermography.
Jewell said that if a breast disease detection center was established at the Medical Center, a blood test for the antibody now being studied would be made on patients with results which would be compared with results from other tests administered at the center.
Ruling Eases . . .
(Continued from Page 1)
decrease and that the population of Johnson County was expected to increase.
He said the three-judge panel did not accept such projections and wanted all districts to be more equal by present population figures.
The Apportionment Committee of the House earlier Wednesday heard several county officials say it would be difficult to comply this year with a proposed change in the date that county population figures are to be reported to the state.
The reporting date for population figures is now July 15, but state officials said that last year some counties did not get their reports in until October.
The committee wants to speed up compilation of population figures so that 1973 populations can be used in drawing up a proposed apportionment for consideration in the 1974 legislative session ahead of the deadline.
The committee voted to introduce a bill calling for a May 15 deadline for population figures. George Schnellbacher, Shawne County County Judge, said by her testimony, the date to May 15 would make it possible to plan and meet this deadline in the future.
Counselors Sought
Campus Briefs
The Mid-Western Music and Art Camp is seeking counselors for its summer session. Room and board and a $50 stipend will be provided for the eight-week camp. Seniors and graduate students are preferred, although others will be considered. For an interview appointment, contact Russell Wiley, professor of music.
Costa Rican Study
The Philosophy Club will meet 7 onight in the Curry Room of the Kansas Union. Joe Van Zandt will speak on "Kant and Freedom."
The Foreign Study Office said Wednesday that 16 students from various parts of the country had arrived at KU for a two-week course in French. Students will be Costa Rica for an 10-month Study Abroad Program. One of the lectures, entitled "Everything You Wanted to Ask About French," will be given by Jon Vincent, assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese at KU.
Philosophy Meeting
Justice William Reinhquist of the Supreme Court said for the majority that even in 1964 when the court first applied to the "one-man, one-vote" standard to state legislative districts it allowed great flexibility from a court in drawing U.S. congressional lines.
Writers Award
Entries are now being accepted for the Fourth Education Writers Award, sponsored by the American Association of University Professors. Examples of entries will be made in both the print and broadcast media between March 1, 1972, and March 1, 1973, are eligible. Announcement of the award will be made at the association's annual meeting April 27 in St. Louis. Entries should be submitted to the information officer, Suite 500, One Dupont Circle, Washington D.C. 20036. Deadline for entries is March 5, 1973.
He said, "Application of the absolute equality test of the court's rulings in congressional cases to state legislative bodies is not correct," fioning of state and local governments."
The Sailing Club will meet 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union. All members as well as those interested in joining are welcome to attend.
Sailing Club Tonight
But Justice William J. Breman Jr., dissented, and said the court had never held that different constitutional standards were not equal to those of U.S. concessional resoultionism.
"The need to preserve the integrity of political subdivisions as political subdivisions may in some instances justify small variations in the population of districts from which state legislators are elected," he wrote.
"But that interest can hardly be asserted in justification of 'malapportioned consent.'"
League of Women Voters To Hold Finance Meetings
The Planning and Zoning Committee of the League of Women Voters will hold unit meetings Thursday and Monday to obtain a consensus on the financing of city improvements, according to Claudette Smith, publicity chairman.
Questions to be considered will be whether Lawrence should change its policy of public financing of internal improvements, whether Lawrence should adopt a capital improvements master plan and whether expenditure of public monies should be shifted from financing improvements to paying present expenses.
The committee has studied city loans for capital improvements, bond and interest levies, the effect of delinquent assessment taxes and benefit district financing and its alternatives in preparation for reaching a consensus.
Ave. at 1 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Milo Stucky, 508 Pioneer Ridge and at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Richard Moore, 715 Lawrence Ave.
Mettings will be held at 9 a.m. Thursday in the home of Mrs. Clark Coan, 1646 Barken
The Monday meeting will be held at 9:15 am. in the First Christian Church.
Committee to Discuss Graduation Reunion
The Gold Medal Club consists of alumni whose classes have held their 50 year reunions. This year the club includes all classes up to and including the class of 1922.
The planning committee of the Alumni
Old Medal Club will meet today to discuss
the program.
Last year, about 125 club members attended activities at commencement, according to Steve Clark, assistant director of the Alumni Association.
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4
Thursday, February 22, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Vern Miller—the modern-day Carry Nation?
The Big Drought
The long arm of the law has reached into strange places before. But now that arm is reaching into the skies of Kansas to prevent the flight of alcohol on airplane flights originating or terminating in the state.
The elastic arm, of course, is that of Atty. Gen. Vern Miller, who has received confirmation from Continental Air Lines that liquor will not be served on their flights originating or terminating in Kansas while the planes fly over Kansas. Miller says he is confident that other airlines with flights in Kansas soon will follow suit.
Miller's action regarding the airlines follows logically from an incident in late 1972 when an Amtrak train rolling through Kansas was boarded, and liquor, by the case, was confiscated. Railroad employees were taken into custody for violating state liquor laws.
That the action follows logically does not mean that it is logical. No apparent harm is caused by consumption of liquor in the skies of the United States or carted away. Besides, only one major airport is situated in Kansas.
Then, too, there is a question of enforcement. Who, for example, will finance airplane tickets for the Kansas law enforcement agents who
Enforcement would not extend to flights that do not originate or terminate in Kansas, according to Miller, because this would be imminent. It is a goal of this new campaign, but it is not going to be achieved.
Wayfairers who board flights in towns outside Kansas and fly over the state can still drink with impunity, so long as their flights don't land in the state. Heaven help them if they crash.
Even passengers whose flights originate or terminate in Kansas can still take a drink when they cross the state line. People on flights from Wichita to Dallas can drink within five minutes after takeoff.
Then, too, airlines might avoid the whole problem by simply applying for licenses as private clubs in Kansas.
Listen, the next time you enter an airport, for the announcement: "Private club 707 now departing at gate 16 for St. Louis and points east
Steve Riel
WASHINGTON — Howard Phillips, the young arch-conservative whom President Nixon picked to demolish the Office of Economic Opportunity, has in two weeks turned the war on poverty into a purge of moderate Republicans.
Moderates Purged from OEO
Jack Anderson
Phillips is supposed to be dismantling OEO and reducing the staff. Actually, he has been hosing dozens of arch-conservatives who, collectively, are earning tens of thousands of dollars to advise Phillips on where to arm his wrecking ball.
replacing moderate Republicans who are being summarily dismissed, some worse than even a new "acting" poverty chief.
Phillips' demolition crew is
"Phillips isn't dismantling OEO. He's dismantling it," one outgoing OEO official complained. "It's a bloody business. It could have been done with dignity."
A typical firing took place late one afternoon last week when a phone call from Phillips eight floor suite came down to Rodger and was responded by the minister who served as a deputy assistant director. Betts
was told he and his staff had 30 minutes to clean out their desks and move across the street where OEO outcalls are now in a holding pattern until they can find new jobs.
The next morning, New York Senator Jim Buckley's ad campaigns against Jones, took over Betsi fifth floor offices and began to direct operations. Buckley's office tells him that the temporary leave of absence."
Conservative consultants earning $100 a day are invading other OEO offices." My office has actually doubled," an OEO adviser told me, and got three consultants, now, and three professional staff people."
"Of all the OEO programs, Legal Services is the one most capable of fundamentally altering America," states the memo. "For that alone, it should be the first eliminated."
uncertain terms, the memo spells out what Phillips should attack first.
This program has been providing free legal services to the employees of the esternation of landlords, employers, banks and local officials, who have been hauled into court for disadvantaged and deprived.
corporation is dismissed as "not salable politically." In place of the corporation, the memo suggests that the federal agency take more money" to "more traditional" private legal aid groups.
SST and Cancer
BY FRANK CASSIS
AP Science Writer
Bv FRANK CAREY
"First," the memo points out, "control of the traditional legal aid societies rests with ABA-type lawyers, a group not noted for a special profession." Second, the local groups are necessarily fragmented, and with no special focus. Although national coordination by law overtly exists, it still possible it might consider more difficult."
WASHINGTON -The launching of large fleets of supersonic transport airliners (SSTs) might kill 300 Americans a year and give 8,000 skin cancer, a special panel of the National Academy of Sciences said Sunday.
The report, released by the academy's Environmental Studies Board following a study partly funded by the government, said the exhausts of large numbers of SSTs might partially destroy the earth's protective shield of ozone and permit increased ultraviolet radiation to bombard the earth's surface.
The White House has assured liberals on Capitol Hill that the President will submit a bill to Congress soon to establish a legal service corporation. But Philips' campaign has argued that the President's promise and considering alternative ways of reforming legal services.
Overexposure to ultraviolet rays from the sun can cause skin cancer, particularly among white males, the panel.
The report added, "Sufficient knowledge is at hand to warrant utmost concern over the possible detrimental effects on our environment by the operation of large numbers of supersonic aircraft."
The report conceded the ozone-shield-destruction theory is still a subject of scientific debate.
If the ozone shield were shattered, the 46-page report said, "the effects of increased levels of ultraviolet radiation on biological systems other than man may have greater long-range significance than the problems of human skin cancer.
"Although definitive predictions are difficult, present information suggests an increase in terrestrial solar-ultraviolet radiation might diminish the biological productivity of the ocean, interfere with the mating and other behavioral patterns of insects and other lower animals and damage plants, especially agricultural species."
A spokesman for the Vice President insists that Agnew personally endorses the President's idea of a legal services corporation. "The memo," he spokesman, was sent to ODE without the Vice President's official endorsement."
The study group called for establishment of a global network of ultraviolet-radiation monitoring stations to check environmental effects of the SST fleets if they go into operation.
It also said intensified research should be conducted on the biological impact of increased ultraviolet radiation.
No SSTs are operating commercially yet. The United States has scrapped plans for building its own plane in the foreseeable future, and major U.S. airlines have announced plans to buy the British-French Concorde which is still final test runs.
The Soviets have flown a prototype SST but haven't scheduled mass production of the craft.
Ozone is a form of air that girds the earth 10 to 20 miles above the surface. The theory, previously voiced by some scientists and endorsed by the panel, is that water and oxygen react with oxygen by numerous SST engines would partially erode the ozone.
"The consultants" are busy crating thousands of OEO documents—some for the officers others for the incinerator.
The academy panel said its analyses suggested that a five per cent reduction in the ozone shield by a fleet of commercial SST aircraft would account for at least 8,000 extra cases of skin cancer in the white population of the United States leading, with current treatment, to about 300 extra deaths.
In the memo which vice presidential aide David Kenne forwarded to Phillips office last week, President Nixon's legal
Meanwhile, Vice President Agnew's office has sent over a document that Phillips' wrecking crew is guarding closely. In no
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Ellsberg Fights for Acquittal Doubts Supreme Court Mercy
LOS ANGELES — Daniel Ellsberg was duplicating several law review articles about the First Amendment on a Xerox machine and had become the most famous Xerox operator in history through the Pentagon Papers, he had a professional's admiration for the company's new model and machines. (AP)
Nicholas von Hoffman
to a cent per page. At that price we could have given every newspaper in the country a Xerox of the papers."
Instead he gave it to the New York Times and the Washington Post, thus setting off a chain of events that has brought him here to a federal court accused of theft of government property.
Ramsey had been captured by the Viet Cong and was given up
While he Kerosen he talked about Douglas Ramsey, whom he had watched on television that morning walking down the steps of an Air Force transport plane at Clark Field in the Philippines. He had not seen Ramsey for seven years before he became a civilian officials working on one of those hearts-and-minds programs in South Vietnam.
for dead years ago. Their boss, the celebrated guerrilla fighter, John Paul Vann, died in a helicopter crash during the last North Vietnamese offensive, and Ellsberg had gone on to become the Daniel Ellsberg of the Pentagon Papers.
"I'll be interested in the effect of the Pentagon Papers on Ramsey," said Ellsberg. "His position back then was like Vann's and mine. He was very critical of the GVN (the name for the government of South Vietnam in the officialese that I discovered) luars (languages.) He wanted it to be more effective, more like the Viet Cong, but he though we had a right to be there."
Ellisberg spokes a lot of people with his single-mindedness about the papers, but he's not quite as obsessive as he may seem from afar. He is concerned about little human feelings and has been in correspondence with Ramsey's parents. A letter from them had arrived just that morning, and Ramsey said he knew what Ramsey must have gone through: " living in those tunnels for seven years! They're not built for Americans and he's six-four-five. It must have been torture."
There is a degree of similarity between an Ellsberg and a Nixon. Neither of them believes in amnesy and both of them place great faith in their own brand of medicine. Ellsburg wants
Ramsay to read the papers. He believes that if Vann had read them, he might have changed his life. If Vann did the combat zone before he died
But most of all Ellsberg wants the makers of the war policy to read them: "They should be sent the same task I was.
to read the Pentagon Papers. The truth is that for all these guys ignorance is their excuse. What ignorance they did after a short they went to not to know."
But even if the prisoners of war are coming home, even if the United States is paying the North Vietnamese 2.5 billion devolved government, Ellsberg had inside the government are his most vivid recollections, the present and future meanings of his case aren't lost on him. His intelligent words aren't all focused backward.
Readers Respond
He points out that 'the period mentioned in my indictment covers the time, not when I was giving the papers to the press, but when I was told by Congress. There is a Boston grand jury looking into the distribution of the Pentagon Papers to the press.'
Library Union
Library Labor, Southard Reply
To the Editor:
According to the Kanus of Feb. 16, in an article referring to attempts of KU Library employees to make universities more universiarly profuse that there be larger and fewer labor unions instead of many small ones because this would make theresses of bargaining simpler.
In reply to this we would like to say that if our main goal was to make things simple for the University we wouldn't organize at all, which is undoubtedly what the University adopts. The University probably gets if our unit determination is denied in favor of combining the
whole scattered civil service staff at the University into one unit. The letters column of the Kansan is not the place to present our work, so we will staff as a separate unit, but we would like to say that our right to improve our salaries and working conditions is as critical and important as the University's effort to keep its processes simple.
Management is seldom enthusiastic about dealing with unions and the administration at a given institution, different from any other boss. We might regret taking their valuable time in pursuit of union rights and unhappy people working at the KU libraries, and so far the
Communications Workers of America are the only party to offer us a realistic chance for improvement.
improvement.
Sandra Wilson
Library Assistant,
Architecture and Engineering
Library
Cecile Deaton
Library Assistant,
Watson Library
Southard
To the Editor:
Since my initial observations appeared in the Kansan on Feb. 14, I have been the target of several rather unprincipled attacks on both my opinions concerning the Pearson Program
and my integrity in general. In spite of this, I have remained an impartial observer, even though I have received strong urgiments from my opponents on the same level that they responded to me.
I will not do so, however, as enough rhetoric has already been expended on the issue. Rather, I would like to present a portion of a curious document which has been forwarded to me by an author who is unfamiliar with the program. Although he did not reveal his name, he did enclose a copy of what he called "The Pearson Creed." This creed, he informed me, is an integral part of the little-known rises and falls of the program being initiated of the program. It reads as follows:
Griff and the Unicorn
HEY! HI, UNICORN...
HOW ARE YOU?
WHAT
DO YOU
CARE?
HEY! HI, UNICORN...
HOW ARE YOU?
WHAT DO YOU CARE?
WELL... HAVE A NICE DAY!
I DON'T WANT TO HAVE A NICE DAY!!
I WANT TO GO BACK TO BED!!!
YOU'VE GOT TO ADMIRE THAT KIND OF HONESTY
WELL... HAVE A NICE DAY.
By Sokoloff
I DON'T WANT TO
HAVE A NICE DAY!!
I WANT TO GO BACK
TO BED!!!
YOU'VE GOT TO ADMIRE THAT KIND OF HONESTY
SOKOLOFF
"I believe that the great majority of students are incapable of judging what is best for themselves, and that therefore they should be guided by the doctrines of the Program.
"I believe that the Program will prove to be the balwark of truth, the judge of truth, the judge of justice and the wonder of all mankind, and that it is the best method of education which has ever been advocated.
"I believe in the infallibility, all-sufficient wisdom and infinite goodness of the Program and that it is immune to error, that it is immune to error."
It is said that there are other such oaths and vows, but of them even less is known to outsiders.
"I believe, finally, that to speak, write, read, think or hear what I say, I must be vicious and odious heresy, and that anyone who differs from me in belief concerning the Program is more probably a fool or devil."
Thus, as Elsberg sees it, his conviction would mean that leaking information to either the government or the police would henceforth be a crime when heretofore the worst that had happened to a leader who got caught was being fired. His case, however, remains an open question. Whitten, Jack Anderson's associate, must result in the government's receding yet further from both the view and the judicial judgment of the governed.
I
Jeff Southard Wichita Sophomore
C
F T
So Ellsberg and his co-leader, Anthony Russo, fight for an acquaintance here at this first level of proceedings because they doubt the Supreme Court's President. Nixon's pre-centralized government will ever vote to save them. Their fight is as it is against the government, which can afford to send special troops and forth from Washington with carboids of evidence.
To compete, the defendants must have an entire office and staff of 20 people including lawyers, legal researchers, public relations representatives and money raisers. Even with most of the people accustomed to the money raisers will have to find something like $500,000 to pay for the trial.
The money may not come easy. The war is over, and Ellsberg, the intense man who makes people feel mild, makes people feel funny. He's not a martyter who exiles love, and free speech has never been a popular issue, but Daniel Kamenov, who mighty Xerox machine, and we know what he was able to do with the old one. (c)
(C)
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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college newspaper
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NEWS STAFF
News Adviser . . Susanne Shaw
Editor ___ Joyer Neerman
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Business Manager . . . Carol Dirks
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Thursday, February 22, 1973
5
University Daily Kansan
Battle for Coed Hall Lost
By CAROLYN OLSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The coed scholarship hall proposal is dead for this year, but supporters of the hall say that they will try to establish the hall next year.
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Mike Glish, Overland Park sophomore and chairman of the coed scholarship hall subcommittee of the All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC), said he was excited about facilitations early next semester for the establishment of the coed ball for the following year.
come and who of it, its not and been a daniel w and we with
"The University Housing Committee seems to be solidly behind the concept of a coed scholarship hall." Glash said. "The committee doesn't enough students interested this year."
Larry Marcum, campaign chairman of the Douglas County Heart Fund, said recently that about 100 University of Kansas sorority and fraternity members would participate in the drive. He said that solicitation for fundraising during the year, but that the campaign concentrated on Feb. 25, which is National Heart Sunday.
County Canvass For Heart Fund To Be Sunday
One project funded by the Kansas Heart Association is the research of six KU professors in cardio-vascular diseases, he said.
Volunteers from Alpha Phi sorority and
Sigma Epsilon Pi will be collecting
batteries from the Douglas County
Members of the Alpha Phi and Sigma Phi Epsilon living groups typed 1,200 business contribution requests about the fund drive during the first week in February, Marcum said.
Marcum said that this year's Heart Fund drive was organized on a block-by-block basis and that about 800 volunteers would be needed to contact residents of Lawrence, Lecompton, Eudora, Baldwin and the surrounding areas.
Marcum said that thus year's campaign goal was $21,000. All of the money collected will go to the Kansas Heart Association, an affiliate of the American Heart Association.
According to Marcum, $2,500 was collected on National Heart Sunday last year. An estimated 5 per cent of the Douglas drive was reached by the drive, begg.
Marcum said that if 50 per cent of the Douglas County population was reached this year and if each person contributed 25 dollars in campaign goal for $1,500 would be reached.
shaw
leerman
lams
1 Dirks
Educators Meet With Freshmen Discuss School
More than 250 secondary educators from Kansas and surrounding states met in the Kansas Union Wednesday for the 24th annual Counselor-Counselor-Freshman Conference.
The conference, sponsored by the Office of University Relations and the Office of Admissions, is designed to bring secondary school personnel together to discuss new developments in University freshman education. Jackson, assistant director of admissions,
Jackson said the school representatives met with selected KU students who had attended his university. The representative were from. To help give the high school educators a better knowledge of college preparatory requirements, the university helped adjusting to the University environment.
The program is specifically designed to make communication between the teacher and high school students easier.
The conference began with registration at 8 a.m. During the morning the educators attended three information sessions in which they examined student financial aid, American College Testing Program and non-fractions patterns of high school education.
The demise of the coed hall proposal came Monday night during a meeting of students who had already signed contracts to live in the coed hall.
The group voted 11 to 9 to drop the coed scholarship hall proposal to the 1973/74 school year. Previously, the University Housing Committee had ruled that students could vote to drop the coed hall proposal or accent more applications for the coed hall.
"One of the problems in establishing the hall was getting enough people to sign contracts," Frank Bencivengo, assistant to the dean of men, said Wednesday.
"We could always get plenty of people to say that they were interested, but there just weren't enough people who finally signed contracts." Bencivengo said.
The University Housing Committee ruled Feb. 6 that the cood hall could be established and financed if 22 women and 30 men would live in the hall. The committee also said that there should be five men and five women alternates in case some of the original 52 persons who signed contracts out during the summer, Kenango said.
■ incivencivo said that 19 women and 24 men had signed contracts for the proposed coed scholarship hall, but that there just were a few representatives as the housing committee required.
"I am confident that a coed scholarship hall will be established sometime," Benciveno said. "It would be such a good learning experience for students."
Bencivango said that there were 10 men on an alternate list and that two other men had applied to live in the hall. Eight women applicants were needed to assure the financial support of the hall, but only four applications were received.
The coed scholarship hall would have been established at Stephenson Scholarship Hall. The male residents of Stephenson and Stephenson at Stephenson would have moved to the coed hall structure, or can have moved to another scholarship hall or into another type of housing, Bencivengo said.
To be eligible for residence in the coed hall, the applicants had to have lived in a room.
"Perhaps we could have gotten more applicants if we had let freshmen live in the hall or opened the hall to persons outside of the scholarship hall system." Glash said.
Glash said that persons outside of the scholarship hall system would have had to be transferred.
Hal Eden, Kansas City, Kan., junior and president of Stephenson Scholarship Hall, Stephenson residents were glad the coed scholarship hall proposal was rejected.
Schwegler said that the higher operation costs could be covered by increasing the
If the families of students were permitted to use the new student health center, hospital operation costs would rise. School officials calculated until more research was done on the proposal, he said. Corroboration with representatives from Yale University, which has recently instituted such a program, would be part of cost evaluation, he said.
There will be 20 examining rooms and 13 working staff physicians at the new health center compared to the 12 examining rooms and 13 working staff physicians currently at Watkins, he said.
Persons not enrolled at the University of Kansas are currently treated at Watkins Hospital on an emergency basis only due to an acute lack of snake. Schweger said.
Men who would have been eligible for the draft this year but have had student deferments should keep them until the end of 1973, Dean Kearny, assistant to the dean of men and draft counselor at the University of Kansas, said Monday.
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He also said that the health center's staff physicians would probably find their jobs more interesting if they were able to treat patients who weren't students.
According to Schlegel, the proposal is part of plans for services at the new health center. He said he did not know when a recommendation be reached on the recommendation.
A recommendation that the spouses and dependents of students be permitted to use the new student health center has been sent to William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, by Dr. Raymond Schiff, director of the student health service.
Ruckey said he did not expect the draft to be reactivated this year, but added, "Theoretically it's safer to hang onto it until the end of the year. There's still a selective service system and the President can reimplement the draft any time he wants."
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Schweger said Wednesday that if the proposal was approved by Balfour, it would be sent to the Kansas Board of Regents for further consideration.
Schweigler said that he favored families being treated at the new student health center because he did not think that they were able to freely obtain medical services elsewhere. This is because of a current shortage of doctors, he said.
Treatment at Hospital Proposed for Families
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KU students currently pay $23 a semester for student health services, he said, which pays most of the bills of the hospital. If a student is admitted to the hospital, there is usually no charge. In some cases, said, which compares with a cost of $60 to $70 to "keep the bed ready" for the student.
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fees of students whose families would be using the new student center on a per person or per family scale. He said payment could also be made on a per visit basis.
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Schweigler he said thought the cost of family services at the new student health center should be lower than the cost of visits to the school. Because of the limited income of most students,
Program Deadline Extended
Fred Ricks, Wichita senior, spent one year in Germany under the Study Abroad program. Speaking of the romantic conceptions people usually have of foreign countries, Ricks said that his stay helped him understand what life was really like in Germany.
The costs of the program are not much higher than the expenses involved in going to KU, Herfeld said. Limited financial assistance is also available, she said.
The deadline for applications for a one year program at the University of Bonn, Germany, in connection with the KU Study Abroad program is being extended until the first week in March. The original deadline was Nov. 30.
The student will be accredited with 30 hours for study at the university.
During the initial orientation period, she said, the students will live with German families. After that they are free to choose missions they want for the rest of the year.
Anita Herzfeld, foreign study adviser,
said the program gave students a chance to
study in a different atmosphere and know a
foreign land and its people.
Adjusting to the environment was not one of a problem and, because people were unaware of it, the problem was missed.
To be eligible, a student must have a grasp of non-majestic language and should possess it for 4 years. It'd for you
Herzfeld said that shorter summer programs were also available and were programmed to take place.
8:20 Hoch
These involve six to eight weeks of study in countries such as France, England, Germany, Russia, Yugoslavia, Poland, Spain and Mexico, she said.
Sat. Feb. 24
THE
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The KU Concert Series presents
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THE OKLAHOMA CITY SYMPHONY
COTTON MILLS
Woodruff Tues. Feb. 27
Directed by Louis Bunuel Woodruff Feb.28 75c
Part Six of Captain Marvel Popular Films Woodruff 7 & 9:30 Feb. 23 & 24 60r
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Thursday, February 22, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KU Alumni Big Recruiters
By HIM WINTERS
Kansan Snorts Editor
Rv TIM WINTERS
Don Fambrough, head football coach at the University of Kansas, says he has had more pie and coffee in the homes of high school students than in all of his 60 years.
this new diet is a change from the previous recruiting practice of entertaining a prospect in his home town. A new NCAA rule says that the college can only talk to the high school athlete in his home—no more going out to movies or restaurants.
This means that the KU alumni and athletic fans must now play an even greater part in the recruiting process, either by attending the athlete or writing him informative letters.
According to Fambrrough, the alumnus fills many roles. He helps to inform the University of good high school prospects, perhaps talks with prospects and their parents and helps to gain the interest of high school players in KU as a school.
"Coaches pretty much say the same thing about the game," he said, drawing our football program and the University.
then an atom will come by and talk about something outside the area of football. For example, if a prospect is interested in engineering, we try to get Alumni who are engineers to write letters about the KU engineering program."
Farnbrough said that he had a large stack of copies of letters the alumni have sent to him, which he says will be useful.
about the University's programs
"I think the alumny have been a tremendous help this year," Fambrough said.
Fambrough also said that it was very important to the high school players to know that someone besides the coaches was interested in them.
Fambridge said that the athletic department got letters from alumni in all parts of the country informing the coaches of outstanding players in various areas. But the information process sometimes back-fires on the coaches.
"When recruiting first starts, it's exciting for the prospect," Fambrough said. "But after a while it almost becomes boring. It gets better when you come from somebody outside of the coaches."
"Some alumni are especially interested in a player from their home town," Fambridge said. "and they'd like to see him come here. But we can't take all of them—that叫 thatuler of football player, and we are limited to the number of scholarships.
"And sometimes the alumni get mad when we can't take the player. But all-in-all, they don't."
The KU Alumni Association tries to be of help to the athletic office during the recruiting season by passing on any letters to the alumni concerning high school athletes.
Richard Wintermorte, director of the alumni association at KU, said that the
KU Primed for Indoor; Huskers Picked Again
Bob Timmons, head track coach said, "Everything we've done this season has been predicated toward doing the best possible in the conference meet. We won't go there any other way other than trying to win."
The defending champion Nebraska track squad has again been picked as the team to beat in the Big Eight Indoor championship, March 1-3. And the best way to stop them, Thad Tailley, assistant track coach said, is to dominate in the middle distance events.
Talley said he also hoped that KU would get some help from the other Big Eight schools in trying to cut points from the Nebraska middle distance man.
Talley said, "Jim is running well and stands a good chance of placing."
"The alumni office often helps the coach, who cannot scout a player because of the location." Wintermote said. "We help to provide the name of a good alumnus who the coach can then recommend to the team for the student-athletes by supplying names to the coaches of various alumni involved in work that would be beneficial to the athlete."
However, Timmons was not satisfied with dependency on the other schools and said he wanted to place at least four men in the middle distance events.
Being counted on for a good performance in the 800 and 1,000-yard runs is Jumel Ewell.
alumni office acted as a clearing house for the athletic department by directing letters to the coaches and also by helping the coaches to locate certain alumni members.
In the 440 and 600-yard races, the coaches are looking to Phil Tepple, Tulsa, Okla; senior; Mark Lutz, Rochester, Minn.; junior; Eddy Lewis, Mobile, Ala., freshman; and Bob Bornkessel, Shawnee Mission senior.
Bornesselk lobz Lutz when he said, "I can run man open open quarters, but I think I can do it."
Both Lutz and Borknessel said they thought KU had the capability of winning, although Lutz said that it would take an all out effort by everyone involved as the Jayhawks were in second place going into the meet.
"We send about 6,000 to 7,000 letters to alumni members each week (out of a total of 21,000)."
I-State Picked In Big Eight Meet
Iowa State, picked as favorites in the annual tourney, will receive stiff opposition from defending the conference charges, Oklahoma, State, and perennial power, Oklahoma.
Before the Big Eight indoor the Jayhawks batte a dual with Southern Illinois at 6 p.m. on Monday, the team will be dual is the only home appearance the 'Hawks will make during the 1973 indoor season, and the team will be using the meet team to win the championship the following week.
Wintermorte said that each football season the alumni association offers to send association members a weekly newsletter from them, describing the previous months of sports.
COLUMBIA (AP)—Led by the defending national champion Iowa State Cyclones, the 40th annual Big Eight Conference Wrestling Tournament, the Heares Multipurpose Building here.
Four defending champions will try to regain titles a wann a year. Oklahoma has won its last three games, Breece and 185-pound Jeff Callow, Iowa State returns Olympic bronze medal winner Chris Taylor at heavymen and Oklahoma State returns 42-pound champion Bobby Sites.
The Alumni association does not have one club with a function of helping to recruit, but Wintermute said that various athletic groups, such as the Quarterback Club, took part in recruiting process, especially in the informing of coaches about prospects.
in the championships KU's strongest events will be the high and low hurdles with Bornkissel, Delario Robinson, Los Angeles, Shawnes, Oklahoma, Gregg Vanderwae, Shawnes, Oklahoma, Gregg Vanderwae
Another strength is Terry Porter, FTL, Worth, Tex., junior, in the pole vault. Porter said, "Okahama has two very good knees." Terry said, "I'll be very disappointed if I don't win."
According to Talley, the high jump should also be a good event for KU with Barry Schur, Tucson, Ariz. junior, leading the state in the heat. The boys will be Gary Johnson, Lawrence senior.
Rounding out KU's top hopes in the field events is Rudy Guevara, Newark, N.J., sophomore, in the shot put, Guevara, who won the event last year, said, "I feel I can compete. I have a 62-foot throw in me, it's just a matter of getting it out."
Wintermorte said that the athletic ambassadors were used extensively by the coaches for recruiting. The athletic ambassadors interested in helping the athletic department reach the high school prospects. Each area in Kansas has at least one athletic ambassador, and some of the more populated areas had many ambassadors, Wintermorte
In the sprints, Timmons is looking to Tom Scavuccio, Littleton, Colo., junior; Delvin Williams, Houston, Tex., junior; Eddy Lewis, and Emmett Emmets, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, to pick up some points for the Jawhawk.
Finally, a willingness to compete on the part of the athletes will aid KU's bid for the championship. As expressed by hurdler Gregg Vandever, "If it could get a point by running the half-mile, I'd do it. Everybody on the team wants this one."
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Fambrough said that the athletic department tried to keep the alumni informed of the new rule changes as soon as the rules were started.
The alumni association does not send out information on the new NCAA recruiting
"We're not recruiters," Wintermute said. "If a coach involves an alumnus in recruiting, I'm sure he would make sure that the person knew the recruiting rules."
"It is hard to keep up with," Fambrough said. "But these people are interested in our program, and don't try to break the rules. They are not going to break them, so we try to keep them informed."
Farnburgh said that most of the time alumni would contact him or another coach before graduation.
Fambrough said that for the most part the alumni did not attempt to spend a large amount of time there.
"They know that they have to work within the rules." Fambroub said.
"what it bolt down to is that the coaches have to recruit the player," Fambrough said. "There are certain things the alumni cannot answer, such as questions about the defense, how many times a back can carry the ball and what the scholarship amounts to."
"But the alumun can be a big help by writing the kids and letting them know that they are interested in them. They play a very important role in our recruiting."
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STILLWATER (AP)—Sam Aubrey submitted his resignation Wednesday as head basketball coach at Aklaheim State Athletic Director Floyd Gass announced.
"It's with the deepest regret that I accept Sam's resignation as head basketball player for one of the most times and only a man of great integrity. We have emphasized the priorities of
"I want to make it clear the resignation is that of the position of head basketball coach. Sam has tenure and will remain at the university in another capacity."
loyalty and interest in his team and to the university as Sam Aubrey has.
The Cowboys are 5-16 on the current campaign with five games reamining in Aubrey's third and final contractural season.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 22, 1973
7
Philippines
Kansan Photo by ALICE COSTELLO
Freeman Talks on China's Foreign Relations
Charles W. Freeman Jr., President Nixon's chief interpreter on his trip to China, will be on the University of Kansas campus. Dr. Martin Kovacs will speak before various University classes.
Interpreter For Nixon To Visit KU
Wednesday, Freeman spoke to students in
East Cham study center; program on
problem solving for middle schoolers
Freeman will discuss U.S.-China relations at 11 a.m. Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. At 9:30 a.m. Friday in 303 Bailey he will speak on Asian history, geography and politics. At 10:30 a.m. Friday, when he will speak before a Chinese documents class in the East Asian Center, 1332 Louisiana.
Freeman will be the featured speaker at a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce breakfast at 7:30 Thursday at the Eldridge House. The event will be made at the Chamber of Commerce office.
Freeman was born in Washington D.C., in 1943. He attended the Universidad Nacional in Mexico City and Yale University, and received his law degree from Harvard Law School. He began work with the U.S. Foreign Service in 1965.
From 1966-68, Freeman served as vice-consul and cultural affairs officer in Madras India. He is currently county of Mumbai. He has also served in an affairs section of the State Department.
Audio-Visual Evaluation to Continue
RvGARY ISAACSON
By GARY ISAACSON
Kansan Staff Writer
The chancellor's communications task force, which submitted its phase one report to the university to evaluate future facility to evaluate audio-visual facilities at the University of Kansas into next year according to Bruce Linton, the university's chief spokesman of speech and drama journalism.
some of the problems brought out in the
incremental's phase one report can be solved
quickly.
"But I hope that we will be able to continue to work on some of the more complex issues."
The committee, appointed by Nichols last fall, recently completed the first part of a two-part study of the problems and facilities required for the equipment and facilities on campus.
The report said KU was far behind other universities in facilities and use of equip-
"The most troubling conclusion is that KU is alarmingly deficient in the quantity and type of equipment used in direct support of the teaching function," the report said. "We remain in the age of film projectors and audio tape recorders, and even here we cannot stay up to date. The age of cablevision passed by almost un-
(Continued from Page 1)
Building Need . . .
unrepaired, he said, the sheathing may rot. Then the whole roof must be replaced. In this case, the repairs would cost more when the warmer was closer to emergency proportions.
Lawton emphasized that there were two sides to the story. He said he realized that there was not enough money for all main priorities and that had been *e*stablished.
"We feel it is obligatory, at the maintenance level and at the facilities level, to identify defended maintenance problems to be addressed," he said, "and to try to obtain funding." Lawton said.
If over a period of 10 to 25 years maintenance crews do not point up the mortar in wall joints, water seeps into the plaster and the mortar becomes mushy. If they chisel out the old mortar and replace it results in structural damage to the building. What was once deferred then becomes an emergency, Lawton said, but the University has now dealt with such dangerous structural defects develop.
After his office has taken inventory of maintenance needs, Lawton said, it is up to the state to decide whether there are funds for the maintenance projects. He said the state should also ensure that emergency maintenance had been quite good but that funds were still unavailable for many deferred maintenance projects. The situation is not trouble to complain about, he added.
"There is some light on the horizon," Lawson said. "The problem is not unoccupied."
He said that as people at the grass roots level became more aware of the importance of water, he said that they were less
Custodial care of buildings is financed through a different fund from that for repairs and building improvements, Lawton said.
He said that KU had a shortage of janitors
Campus Bulletin
East Asian Studies: 12:30 p.m. English Room.
West Asian Studies of Managuerre Interviews: 1 p.m.
Room 303A
TODAY
Human Relations Training: 12:30 p.m. Alcove A.
Psychology: 12:30 p.m. Alcove D.
Social Welfare; noon, Abreve B, Cateredia, Kanaan
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Junior Year in Costa Rica: 12:30 p.m. Cork Room
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Student Teachers: 1 p.m., Big Eight Room.
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The report said that 45 per cent of the funding for equipment came from the state. KU has a total of $1.25 million in audio visual emuiement.
noticed, and now it is the age of multiple delivery systems and computer-aided aiding.
John Conard, director of university relations and a member of the committee, said that the state money came from supplying companies and funds that certain departments had saved.
but that the University could run without a full lantilier staff.
But, he said, custodial service at the university is pushing the borders of accountability.
Inadequate custodial service has a detrimental long-range effect on the buildings, Lawton said. Failure to keep sand off the floors and carpets causes deterioration, and dirty walls eat into paint, he pointed out.
Conard said the outlook for more state money was not very good for the next few years. For the next two or three years, he said, any legislative funding would have to come from other sources than other expenses. But, he said, the outlook for five or six years from now is brighter.
Lawton said low salaries were directly related to the University's inability to keep house. The pay scale makes it difficult to fill jobs with good people, he said.
But there are two sides to this story, too. The state must have priorities in its budget.
Harry Buchholz, director of the physical plant, Harry Buchholz, directors no longer just work on room and a bed.
Buckholz said that custodians must also know about the different types of floors, walls and equipment. Maintenance is much more technical, he said, and low salaries make it hard to hire people who can be trained to handle technical equipment.
The personnel deficiency is made worse, he said, by the fact that employees of a company may remodeling jobs in department offices and in classrooms. He said buildings and grounds could do the work at a lower cost than private construction alone for maintenance.
There are some good people working in buildings and grounds, he said, but they are not necessarily good people.
Buckholz said there had been very little increase in personnel for buildings and facilities.
An inadequate staff leaves no time for a training program, which is a necessity because maintenance is becoming more technological, Buckhohlzol said. The minimum number of personnel means that there often is only one supervisor for 30 men, he said.
The sophisticated equipment in newer buildings requires more training on the factory level, not just on the local level, but there is not enough money to send maintenance men to factory training schools, Buckholz said.
"The chancellor is already interested in making improvements in audio-visual imagery."
"It won't be too hard to sell the other top administrators on the idea either."
Conrad said Nichols would probably use the committee's reports as a basis for a presentation to the Kansas Board of Recents and the Kansas Legislature.
Linton said he hoped the committee's reports would help to create some coordination in the acquisition of new equipment, especially television equipment.
"It is simply a problem of keeping abreast of what is happening in the industry," Linton said, and lines of communication must be opened. He said that while there are many people on campus who need a need but do not know what can be done.
"It seems to me that there are pieces of equipment both in one department and another that be used."
Linton said that in phase two of the study the committee would make specific recommendations to the chancellor that she add a focus on university budget requests for fiscal 1974.
Sunflower Cablevision and the Shooting Gallery, a local photography studio, are sponsoring a film contest that is open to anyone in the Lawrence area. The film submission will be shown on the local television show "Are We On It?" From March 26-31.
Film Contest Sponsored By Cablevision
The entries can use photographic animation or other techniques and can be with or without sound. The films should be recorded on sound on both the film reel and the leader.
The deadline for the film entries is midnight, March 23. The films can be either 8mm, super or 16 mm, and can be color or black and white.
The winning film and its maker will be shown on the show March 31.
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Clinton Coalition to Hold Hearings
The steering committee of the Citizens Coalition for Clinton set up agendas Wednesday night for a series of public hearings on the Clinton Lake project.
the coalition is made up of representatives from county, city and community organizations concerned about the use of the lake.
The committee, which met for three hours, discussed development of public and private lands, water recreation and supply, and general land development.
The committee decided that the agenda of the first public hearing, which will be at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Lawrence Public Library.
Dan Palmquist, chairman of the committee, said that a consensus vote would be taken at the beginning of the meeting to determine opinions on whether the lake would have multiple or restricted use. Aftertha, he said, anyone wishing to speak on specific topics would be allowed to do so within certain time limits.
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Thursday, February 22, 1973
University Daily Kansan
'Slade' Declares War On Rock, Language
By VINTON SUPLEF
By VENTON JEWELER
Kansan Reviewer
Slade has no respect. Certainly not for the English language. Witness such song titles as “Guduyn T. Jane” and “Snow Day at West Wee All Craze.” And the name of the album itself.
Nor do they have any respect for the technically perfect vacuity of the art-rock coterie. If anything, Slade is the antithesis of that genteel breed. Neither are they nouveau decadent, although at times they may possess a certain warped sartorial
Slade is none of the above. They are the raucous English equivalent of the Grand Funk boogie to the masses syndrome with one important difference. Slade is much
Typically, an English band has taken an American musical idiom, in this case elementary Detroit metal alloy, and improved it vastly by avoiding indulgence common among the originators. The music is volume and raw kinetic energy barely contained within the
Winter Concert Will Feature KU Voice Prof
Perez, a popular studio teacher and concert artist perform Norman Dello Joio's "Songs of Abelard," an instrumental work based on a dance course entitled "Tire of Snow."
Antonio Perez, assistant professor of voice, will be the featured guest soloist with the University of Kansas Symphonic Band at 3:00 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre.
Perez will also perform the "Largo al Factotem" from Gioacchino Rossini's "Barber of Sevilla." Better known as the ballet master, he is a popular song in the baritone repertoire.
The text for the vocal solos is based on medieval poetry that concerns an early 12th century romance between a clerical woman and a monk, piece of a canon of Notre Dame Cathedral.
Perez, has performed with the Dallas Civic Opera, the Houston Grand Opera and the New Orleans Opera. He also has performed at the Philadelphia Orchestra and the New Orleans Philarmonica Orchestra.
confines of a tight framework. Their formula for success is simply enough: turn all numbers into integers.
The 71-member Symphonic Band will be conducted by Robert Foster, director of bands at KU. Also on the program will be: Gustav Holst's "Moorside March," the "Overture" to Samuel Barber's "The School for Scandal," "The White Peacock," and "The Mystery of the Rainbow" from Hindemith's "Nobilissima Vision," the "Prologue" from Bernstein's "West Side Story," and John Philip Sousa's "Nobles of the Mystic Shrine."
Graduate of '52 Pleased to Play At Alma Mater
The Winter Concert is the second of nine concerts on the band's 1973 Concert Tour. The tour opens Thursday evening in Paula, New York; the concert will begin Wednesday, the band will perform in Kingman, Anthony, Independence, Pittsburg and F. Scott. On Tuesday the band will venture into Oklahoma for concerts at Cityville and the KU territory at Bartlesville.
Delores Wunsch Stevens, a 1962 graduate of the University of Kansas, returned to KU Wednesday to perform as pianist with the Montagnana Trio before an audience of friends, relatives and former instructors in Swarthout Recital Hall.
None of the people in this band are particularly good musicians. The rhythm section is in the traditional British mold of a 1960s prog rock band, centuitation upon the deeper notes' resonant ability to be felt as well as heard. Lacking instrumental virtuosity, Slade gets by on the force of brute amplification, Noddy Jones's guitar sounds Hill's ransoming guitar, in that order.
Stevens and her family now live in Pacific Palisades, Calif.
"Slayed?" is formula music at its best, variations on a single voice. Slade's good thing is crush rock and roll delivered with all the arrogant self-assurance of a proletarian Jumpin' Jack Flash. The majority of the songs begin with either a strong twitching bass or a powerful full force with the addition of Noddy's singing and an engaging chord progression or riffs from Hill. Guitar leads are brief but furious, with the whole production wrapped up in under four minutes, or a little longer at most.
Stevens, daughter of Paul Wunsch, member of the Kansas Board of Regents, said she was happy to be able to perform at KU after being away for several years.
The other two members of the trio are John Gates, clarinetist and his wife, Caroline Ward.
The trio will perform for the Wichita State University Guest Artist Series tonight.
The group completed a 10-week tour of Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, Scotland and England last December.
It's a toss-up-as to who has the most pregame litters at Reynolds Coliseum.
The tour, funded by a grant from the American-Scandinavian Foundation for the Arts, was a highly successful tour, Stevens said.
RALEIGH, N.C. AP—Basketball is a family affair for Norman and Jo Ann Boon. He's coach of the second-ranked, undefeated North Carolina State basketball team. She sings at the Wolfpack's home games.
The trio performed Beetowns "Trio,
Op. 11," Brahms "Trio, Op. 114" and "Soil III," a contemporary piece composed for the trio by Ellsworth Milburn.
"It was great to play before friends and relatives," she said. "It seemed so natural."
Already the number one band in Europe, Slade has yet to storm our shores. Any of "Slayed" tracks takes you inside a world beyond them; they are the maximum in power rock and roll expressed within a minimum of form and duration. Given half a chance, Slade can bury the whispering emperor that constitutes Top 40 rock in this country under an avalanche of berserk white noise. With some decent air pressure, we can also endure the epidemic of Slade fever could easily break out among the southern teenage hordes of America. And you know what that means.
"He never let's on how nervous he is." Jo Ann, a 5 foot 4 foot-soared sano, says.
'Dirty Little Billy' Is Believable Western
"I guess both of us try to convince the other we're not nervous," added Norman.
By BOB GILLUM Kansan Reviewer
How do you make a believable western in 1973? You go to extremes in dealing with setting, gunfights and makeup. You follow the lead of such directors as Sam Peckman ("The Wild Bunch") and Arthur Penn ("Little Big Man") in his thriller, which creates a real villain, Stan Dragott did these in his "Dirty Little Billy." and succeeded.
Michael J. Pollard, whose puffy cheeks and bulbous nose were made famous in the role of C. W. Moss, is Billy the Kid. He makes a great dirty little villain.
The story deals with young Billy's start on the wrong trail. His immigrant family moves from New York to a farm near Coffeyville, Kan. Billy's dad is upset by his sack of amusement, and kicks him out. In a cool, collar style, he stumbles into an upright.
From there, it's all down hill. Billy joins up with Goldie and Badie, a gumman and his prostitute friend, and learns the trade that made him infamous.
What's striking about the trio is its similarity to the Beatty-Dunaway-Pollard team in "Bonne and Clyde." Pollard plays as a vocalist. He has slurred speech and stumbling actions are the same, but he's more lethargic. He says very little. Although he has the lead time, the others outshine him. Richard Lee and LepurCell, the couple, are great.
Dragoit'i's effects are certainly realistic, but they often suffer from overwork. He has an acute memory.
Nevertheless, the faces are just too dirty,
makeup is caked on. Pollard's speech is
blunderingly slow. Also, there are no
mountains near anywhere (coffeeville.)
shoot out, but an actual fight for life. The set is complete in every detail, mudholes are everywhere. Even the music seems dirty and rusty.
The simplicity of "Dirty Little Billy" is what makes it good. It is an elemental, realistic western put together with conscientious effort to achieve realism. You can look forward to more. Hopefully, unbelievable horseback melodrama has been laid to rest.
Saturday Fare Includes Concert
Tickets on sale: 1st floor Kansas Union and at door Friday night.
The internationally known Oklahoma City Symphony, conducted by Gus Fraser Harrison, will appear here Saturday as part of the University of Kansas Concert Series.
Harrison, now in his 20th season as music director and conductor of the symphony, will begin the concert with the "Star-Spangled Banner," followed by "Variations on a Theme of Haydn" by Brahms; "Symphony No. 4 in F Minor, Op. 36" by Peter Tchaikovsky; and "Second Symphony" by John Pozdro.
Podroz's "Third Symphony" was premiered by Harrison in 1960 after Harrison commissioned Podroz to write the Ford Foundation Comparison Series.
NICARAGUAN BENEFIT DANCE
Donation $1.50 per person
Fri., Feb. 23
7:30-11:30 p.m.
Ballroom—Kansas Union
FEATURING
Sponsored by the Ananda Marga Yoga Society
CHET NICHOLS and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
DON'T FORGET! DON'T FORGET!
CLEARANCE SALE
1/2 OFF
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DRESSES
SPORTSWEAR
All Sales Final
Entire Stock Not Included
And More!
the VILLAGE SET
922 Mass.
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
presents
THE
MATCHMAKER
by
Thornton Wilder
February 23, 24, 1973
8:00 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: UN 4-3982
Box Office: Murphy Hall
K. U. students will receive free
reserve seat ticket with
Certificate of Registration
2
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 22, 1973
9
KU Offers Stutterers Help
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
In our highly verbal society, the average person often takes speech for granted. Conversation can be carried on with minimal concentration. But for a certain group of people, stutterers, speech does not flow automatically.
"Stuttering remains a mystifying disorder for which no single cause has been found." James Lingwang, associate professor of speech pathology at the University of Kansas, said recently.
Speech pathologists have been working on the problem of stuttering for 40 years, Lingwail said. In this time period, many theories of the causes of stuttering have been formed and many different treatments are available, more of which is a cure-all treatment.
Some theories say stuttering is a neurological or physiological problem. Other theories say stuttering is a symptom of a deeper psychological problem, such as difficulty remembering, or lack of faulty learning, such as accidental reinforcement of stuttering. Lingwal said.
HE SAID PATHOLOGISTS had been looking too long for a single answer to the problem when it was highly possible that a patient had misdiagnosed disorders caused persons to stutter.
The speech and audiology department at KU takes a very simple approach in helping the stutter become linguistically fluent, Linzwall said.
Climicians at KU begin therapy with a stutterer under the assumption that he can overcome his handicap and then challenge him by changing his speech behavior, I now said.
The person who attends clinics at KU is taught to analyze his own speech behavior and the attitudes he has toward that behavior, Lingwall said. After he has adequately analyzed his speech, he is taught to modify his speech.
Five years ago, few clinicians would have been able to use such therapy because there was a general assumption that "once a stutterer, always a stutterer." For example, if you had a stutterer could become fluent, and once nonsevere none did, Lingwall said.
HE HEAED THAT until recently pathologists thought treatment for a stutterer first involved informal psychotherapy that dealt with what the stutterer thought about his condition. The pathologist then tried to make the stuttering less noticeable.
In the last five years, pathologists who have had background in behavior modification or operant conditioning have been teaching that learning is a modifiable behavior. Lingwall said.
Such pathologists found that a stutterer could become fluent by the use of negative reinforcement in therapy, he said. If the person began to stutter during therapy, he noted that it often happened when that was particularly unpleasant for him and would discourage his stuttering.
The day clinic for stutterers at KU offers services to children, adolescents, University students and adults free of charge, Lingwall said. It is a training clinic for students in speech pathology and audiology. Under the supervision of the professional staff, graduate students work with the stutterers, he said.
A night clinic is offered for persons 16 years old and over. The night session, which meets every Tuesday, is for those persons who are sick or ill during the session because of school and jobs, he said.
Clinicians at KU currently are working with children as young as three or four, Lingwall said. The most dramatic and the least successful were achieved with younger glutteers, he said.
Each stutterer who attends a clinic receives individual and group therapy that relates to his own problem, Lingwall said. Data are carefully gathered to determine which therapy is or is not working for each person.
Two recent developments have been widely accepted in treating the stutterer Paciente Pascal.
The KU clinics do not use either of these therapy methods because clinicians here have found that the stutter develops a behavior, if he modifies his own behavior, he said.
One hundred thirty-five University of Kansas faculty members will be asked to contribute to a fund drive by the KU branch Museum, a community Museum fund-raising committee.
The fund campaign has been divided into small groups to better reach different sections of the community, he said. Special fundraising groups have been created for retail businessmen, various clubs and organizations, city schools and government employees.
Thirteen members of the KU faculty will help with the drive fund. They are: Russell N. Bradt, professor of mathematics; Dr James Campbell, health services; Clark Coan, dean of foreign students; Frank C. Foley, professor of geology; Robert J. Friauf, professor of physics; Robert Glmore, professor of history; and Robert
slower pace until he overcomes the problem. Delayed auditory feedback records the stutterers' voice and plays it out with an effort to control him speak more fluently. Lowell said,
W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history and chairman of the campus campaign, said that Robinson explained the formation that explained the museum's operation. Robinson said that an appeal would not be made to student organizations because he said that any contributions would be welcomed.
135 Profs to Be Asked To Contribute to Museum
He said an individual's stuttering behavior was often inconsistent from day to day and from hour to hour. The stutterer does not always falter over the same words or under the same conditions and some have even had a spontaneous recovery.
WHEN THE STUTTERER is given therapy involving pacing or delayed auditory feedback, he may develop fluency in the clinic but will often be faced with the problem again when he has interpersonal contacts outside the clinic. Linwail said.
The museum will be housed in the old Watkins Bank Building at 11th and Massachusetts streets. The building also was once the Lawrence City Hall.
Robinson said the museum would ultimately provide an interpretation of the diverse social and cultural elements of Lawrence.
Hoffman, curator at the Museum of Natural History and professor of systematics and biology.
French Prof To Discuss Course Flaws
Robert J. Nelson, one of the foremost proponents of teaching "things French," will speak with students at the University of Kansas Thursday and Friday to give them a chance to discuss what types of courses they would like.
The second phase of the campaign, he said, is to provide funds for an elevator and landscaping for the park's restoration was assured when the first phase of the drive garnered over $240,000.
Also, on the committee are Donald Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering; Harold Orel, professor of English; Calder Pickett, professor of journalism; Anthony Smith, professor of psychology; Joseph J. Wilson, director of University housing; and Paul Wilson, professor of law.
The fund drive in the University community last until late March, McLaren said.
"Suttering is an intermittent problem that doesn't follow any rhyme or reason," Lauer wrote.
Nelson, professor of French literature at the University of Illinois, will discuss “What's Wrong with French Studies—Too Much Literature?” at 4 p.m. Thursday in the council Room of the Kansas Union. He will address any interested undergraduates topic at an open forum from 11:30 to 12:20 p.m. In Woodford Auditorium.
Sponsored by the department of French and Italian, Nelson will talk to students about the most useful role of modern foreign departments at colleges and universities.
Nelson will discuss the ways in which language departments can be more useful to undergraduate and prospective students. The nature is stressed too much. Freeman said.
He said students participating in the forum would be encouraged to voice their opinions about the amount of emphasis on literature in the language departments.
Nelson received his doctorate in French at Columbia University and is the author of three books on 17th century French literature.
248 Candidates . . .
The Student Executive Committee heard three requests for line item allocation changes Wednesday night and recom-mended all for approval by the Student Senate.
Patsy Johannsen, Winnemucca, ill. Il.
Dani Minnyak, Winnemucca, ill. Ill.
Jordan Smith, Kailua City, Maui.
Mattie Leporin, Kailua City, Maui.
Brittany Sullivan, Kansas City, Mo.
Aaron Bockman, Kansas City, Mo.
(Continued from page 1)
StudEx Approves Funding Changes
Nunauerer (G); (Q) T. Koubens, El Dioro
W. Cisterna Hirschfeld, I. Sognderson, Richard
W. Cisterna Hirschfeld, I. Sognderson, Richard
W. Cisterna Hirschfeld, I. Sognderson, Richard
Bafrahes, Typha, sophomore, William Holden
K., sophomore, Typha, sophomore, William Holden
K., sophomore, Warde Lords, Typha, sophomore
K., sophomore, Warde Lords, Typha, sophomore
Miller, Elder freshman, Freuah Prec, Humblot K.
Miller, Elder freshman, Freuah Prec, Humblot K.
Brian Rumelau, Upaske, K., freshman, Keval W,
Brian Rumelau, Upaske, K., freshman, Keval W.
**Education (13).** Clark Anderson, Western Springs, III.
Hawkins, Katherine. Western Springs, III.
Lawrence student, Robert H. Savitt, Shawn Mason
Lawrence student, Mark D. Ridgway, Kansas City, KS, Kan. Junior, See Hoonan, Lawrence student,
McCain, Shawn Mason, Lawrence student, Rick E. McKenzie,
McCain, Shawn Mason, Lawrence student, Rick E. McKenzie,
Lawrence student, Clark Rolfa, Junction City
Retired. Lock is senior. Clark Rolfa, Junction City
Retired. Lock is senior. Clark Rolfa, Junction City
Retired. Lock is senior. Clark Rolfa, Junction City
The Campus Veterans requested transfer $115 from office supplies to telephone offices.
**Pharmacy** (3); Cateye Cochran, Hutchinson Jr. **Pharmacy** (4); Robert Lodenburger, Grainfield K., junior, Craig H. **Pharmacy** (5); William Grosse, Selma Weilfer (2); Steve Allanne, Topka justice, Patty Evans, Great bend Student, Skip Klineman, Prairie Tucker
LAKE (14) Larry Auberman, Wichita junior; Stephen McClendon, Iowa senior; John Brown, Toyota junior; Theodore Burk, Missouri junior; Alex Riordan, Kansas junior; Michael Schmidt, Philadelphia junior; Chris Dawes, Lowland junior; Tucker Durham, Philadelphia junior; Farman, Lincoln junior; Tuck Danielson, Philadelphia junior; St. John junior; Stool Junior; S坐下ow Junior; Farmersville junior; South St. John junior; Ran Junior; Robert R. Kupfer, Great Bend junior; Michael Riordan, Kansas junior; Brian Schaefer, Lowland junior; Rike McGrade, Lawrence junior; Bruce Miles, Lawrence junior; Rike McGrade, Lawrence junior; Paul Nelson, Lawrence junior; Rike McGrade, Lawrence junior; Bill Q'Niel, Mo. Junior; ISA, Evan Galloway, Salina junior; Bill Q'Niel, Mo. Junior; ISA, Evan Galloway, Salina junior; Bill Q'Niel, Mo. Junior; Rike McGrade, Lawrence junior; J. Reinkes, Paul Ratkin
North (4): Hardy Bell, Hutchison sophomore, David A. Lindsey, Bell sophomore, David D. Sobin sophomore,莎莫恩 sophomore,莎莫恩 sophomore,Harry Cummani, Mulane sophomore,Scott Freshwater, Hawkins sophomore,Lewis Grayley, Wiklah sophomore,Wilkens freshman,Lewis Grayley, Wiklah sophomore,Oklaoma City sophomore,Mary Mahony, Overland sophomore,McCurrick,McCurrick sophomore,I&A; Gail sophomore,Bosek sophomore,Don Pesek, Liberal sophomore,Bogue, Kai sophomore,Den Press, Liberal sophomore,Salina sophomore,Tona Winton
**Oliver 43:** Stephan Bailow, Northrock, II. **oliphage**, Johannes Krupp, Northrock, II. **John Kelleher**, Salina Johnson, Jake Nuttall, **oliphage**, Johannes Krupp, Northrock, II. **Ethanah Elizabeth Hoekin, Wichita** **oliphage**, Robert Jarvard, **oliphage**, George Keohue, Topaka **oliphage**, SSOM, Linda **oliphage**
The Association for Computing Machinery asked for transfer of $8 from office supply to library.
**PERSUANCE (4)** Rick Bales, Shawne Mason freshman, Virginia. He played on the varsity basketball team, Veronica. He, Veronica, independent Student Council, Brown. White Clay Kip, freshman, Person interested in basketball. White Clay Kip, freshman, Person interested in basketball. Mike Glue, Overland Park sophomore, Merle Warner, Michigan. Mike Glue, Overland Park sophomore, Merle Warner, Michigan. Oakland hoosier (susanb). Jon Jonserand, Johnson. Michigan. PIMP A - B'Archer, Ronner, Senior Pimp, PIMP A - B'Archer, Ronner, Senior Pimp, PIMP A - B'Archer, Ronner, Senior Pimp
matth. Steven Matherfield, III. university of california, melbourne; Sven Wiegandt, III. university of california, melbourne; Klaus Fischer, Ph.D. university of california, melbourne; Fabian Reineck, Ph.D. parkinson's disease center, Miami; Owen Parkinson, parkinson's disease center, Miami
Censalem II (4) Greg Kingston, Salmah freshman; Katie Beth, Wellington, Kan. sophomore; Katherine Smith, Freshman; Lachlan Freshman, London; Lachlan Freshman, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; Scott Freeman, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore; Mark McCaughay, Rick Lind, Kansas City, Kan.; Mark McCaughay, Prairie Village sophomore; Rick Mickahla, Prairie Village sophomore; Kevin Shawen, Sophomore; Kevin White, Shawnee High sophomore;
Sophomore vice president; Sherry Bauer, St. Louis, Mo.
Freshman, Skipper of Wild Card in the NCAA
Freshman, Skipper of Wild Card in the NCAA
Bruce Eastman, Forest Park freshman (St. Louis Grip)
Eastern, Forest Park freshman (St. Louis Grip)
Freshman, Sophomore Utility; Leila Sarapac, Longmeadow,
Freshman, Sophomore Utility; Leila Sarapac, Longmeadow,
travel insurance. Barbette, Prairie Village,
Sauk River. Becky Bester, Prairie Village,
Sauk River. Jennifer, Kansas City, Kan., freshman,
Sac, Lakeside, Jones, Kansas City, Kan., freshman,
mari; Mel Sparrow, Park, freshman, SAP, Pat,
Temple, Tempel, Park, freshman, SAP, Pat,
Turner, Turner
The Women's Coalition requested that $100 be transferred from their birth control and abortion referral line item to their advertising expense allocation.
Junior president: Randy McLatter, Salma naphera,
Unified Alliance (USA), 17387-6055; Charles Rheed,
Salma naphera, Juniper Express Coiffion (JEC); Whitney, Prairie Village naphera, Coiffion of In
Jason shep his president. Lewis Greagy, Webbia
Steele, David Stuart, William R. Spencer,
C Steve Leaver, Leavewashnip our "Oceanic
Society."
David Muffin, Weight trainer, Sense Organized for Services (SOS); Paul Newtown, Senior Lawyer; Jules Lewen, Junior Lawyer.
baker taurer (Little Ritcher) Olsen, Susan Hilton (Sister Susan) Seymour, Stephen D. Schwartz (Sister Schwartz) sophomore (Sophomore) Riordan, Wesley Wagner (UCLA) senior (Senior)
A request from the Music Therapy Student Organization for $4,382.10 was referred to the Finance and Auditing Committee for study.
Debbie McAdams, Kirkwild, Mo., Junior.
Senior Secretary, Semi Formal Judicial, Junior. Mary
Walsh, Sons of Robert Walsh, Sons of.
SONS.
Sophomore president: Terry Cobb, Palmway freshman,
Sophomore midshipman, Thundey Korken, Arkansas City freshman,
For Active Class (SAC) David Murray, Glen Elayne Jr.
Dale Duke, Sacramento freshman, Mura Griffin, Dale
Kuah, Santa Barbara freshman, Spiritual J. Justine Terne.
sopponemus. JFC, Linda Leakey, Prairie Village sopponemus.
sopponemus. US; Beverly Saker, Derby sopponemus. UA
sopponemus. US; Beverly Saker, Derby sopponemus. UA
**Sephraea secretaria:** Triclab St. Marys frehman.
**Sephraea secunda:** St. Marys frehman.
**Flammeaterl:** Leeward frehman, 76 of Dene Goodrich.
**Morton frehman:** Sophiew near NY.
**NY Mason:** New York City, NY.
**Judy Woodson:** Shawney Maston frehman.
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chers
4-Channel stereo store system, AM/FM
player, player BIS 600 600, AIS speakers, for
laptop.
Lawrence, Kansas 60044
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
FOR SALE—88 Dodge Charger-318-2 Barrel
88 Dodge Charger-318-2 Barrel
88-647 8597 (Keep trying)
Intercept 84-647 8597
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
1966 CIDVX II 327.4 speed, S131, Lakewood.
This is the first of two units, and much more.
Will trade or best offer
tune-ups starting service
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
BEAT THE SPRING RUSH (Ausch) 25% in 10-16 months.
I will teach you how to create a contiguous cache with point-curit pairings. I miss more than 30 minutes a week. Send me an email.
RIP ME OFF - Must sell to finance Florida Hip
Hop University
DRAGON-PLAYER JACE - H帜 CASS HOW
2-28
Hairy Service
SPORTS CAR=196-106 Subie Alpine, Roll bar,
Roll bar, Roll bar, Roll bar, Roll bar,
Lever groundslide Diane Gibson, 841-239穿过
Lever groundslide Diane Gibson, 841-239穿过
Such a deal! Used fute (Artagno) in good condition with sig-zig $20.00. Call Susan evenings at 544-871-3000.
DISCOUNT FURNITURE We sell quality, name brand furnishings at DISCOUNT. You can save a new row of furniture. You can save a lot. Armorville Furniture Co. Inc. Kansas Ave. Arlington, MO 64018 direction and directions, call 841-3169 between 6:45 and 7:30.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall opening times vary; see www.countryclub.com/event/quik-quiet-ban location; Pool and gas-lighted, landpaced - 1407-8235; Library池地, 2000 W-22-3
FOR RENT
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe. Snow trees Must Sell.
Economical operation. Call 841-5270.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
For the year to date in rental gold lawRENTAL Exchange,
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Lawrence Auction House
442 MASS.
Red Dog Building
Sale every Monday Nite
Sale every Monday Nite 7 p.m.
Furniture, Antiques, Miscellaneous
For consignment information call
842-7098 anytime.
Let Us Sell It For You
now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRSED OF STEEPS
1. Try a 2 bedroom apartment, directly across Masp.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking parked. Free. Cab
suitable for guests. Room with rateable
rates. furniture available. ideal roommates.
Sports facilities. Buffalo Academy. 1823 Ibis. Apt. 9 t
643-821-261
PEUGEC
Those beautiful apartment surround a Quiet
Three. Beautiful apartments around a Quiet
Fragrant Flower only in 10 blocks—the town.
The Fragrant Flower is just to the west of the town.
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
Come by and see our apartments. Renew your lease today. Water bills are water bills. Water bills are water bills. Leases of various lengths are available.
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the MALL.
MALLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
ADAPTMENTS
Eventings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
Sleeping rooms, angle and double furnished for
children up to age 12, and 1 and 2 blocks from Union. Phone 845-757-6701.
available.
Evenings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. New leasing is available at the Spring, or for the Spring semester, Central heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities are provided. Call 843-8250 or see if it will wbr. 19th, bsp. 18t.
rougeot PX-10-E $225.00
GREAT FOR Kids and couples, this over-and-over block away from home is a Nathalm Park in extra-quiet neighborhood (study) large closets, an all-weather kitchen with utility hook-up, sweep and large attached garages $10/month, available February 4 to date or 843-8200 evening. 2-23
For rent. Clean. Quick apts. with carpeting, dish-
ware. Refundable. $249. Campus. Enquiry:
1025. Mossmani 842-8007. 1025. Mossmani 842-8007.
For Nest 2 br. apt, AC, w/carpet. $130, 1214
Tennn, 843-5486. 2-22
Nice studio apt. Close to campus. Off-street parking.
1422 Abbott, 841-213-12.
2-26
Hilibay Apartments- 1745. W 24th St. Ona and two bedroom apts $99 and Call 862-443-3-5
https://www.hilibayapartments.com
Ant. for sub-lease. Clean, furnished, wall-to-wall
inside. Inspection required from Union,
Union, no pets. 843-5767 - $25
COUNTRYLIVING 4 - ml to K.U. = puscuum furion.
kit, bath, kit C.A., washer, dress, prt, pumice,
kib, bath, kit C.A., washer, dress, prt, pumice,
Sleeping rooms with Kitchen privileges $5. Call 842-9098.
2-28
2 bedroom house unfurnished $100. Call 842-
6008 2-28
If you call us, we have a 1 and 2 bedroom
room. (904) 758-1348
WOOD APARTMENTS: 843-116-1
2-28
Large unfurnished apt. utilities stored—sieve and
refrig $150.00. Call 842-608-6.
2-25
ATTENTION RENTERS
RIDE ON BICYCLES
401 Mass. 843-848
NOTICE
Very small house - furnished and utilities paid.
530. Call 824-6908.
2-28
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
attention to detail. Home Honors.
caterers 311
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. B-Ware-QuB in an
L-shaped apartment at Bar-B-Q. Large rib
albany. A stab to abe in large 42-inch
bowl of beef sandwich, $6.50. Found of beef $3.15; chicken
plate $3.50; pasta $3.50; wine $3.50; Phone VI-921-5105. Mile St. If
No charge, list your houses, apartments, duplexes,
commercial properties, and more for info local Home Locator.
Lawrence Auction House. Sell your household
or office equipment for conglomeration call 863-740-
9251 or email auctionhouse@lawrenceauction.com
Discount prices with savings up to 40% on some tagged items. Save up to 25% on Shop 707 N 2nd North. 2nd 9-7, days.
Why buy a landlord's form for him with your own documents? With his diploma'36 to 36 you can rent along with your diploma'36 to 36 you must rent again. Why not check into a way to save money on the cost of housing? Nothing to learn from the detail '618-407-222'. What to do if you can't find a place?
Oread Quaker Meeting wants more Friends. We want to make it easier for them to attend. Please inform Anne Moore, Forte Home, for more information.
(Earn $50-1500) This spring, as campus coordi-
tors to P.O. Box 2158, Shawan, Jas-
2-28
JAYHAWK KHAIRA TOURNAMENT *exiting*
*Community Building 11th & Vermont*
*Community Building 11th & Vermont*
for birth control information and abortion counseling and referral to the Information Center 14-18
like swimming, bicycling or a good talk with a
dog. Call me. Michele H. at airplane, humble person.
Call me. Michele H. at airplane, humble person.
FUN FACTS about VENERAL DISEASE
please visit GAY. LIBRARIES-business
welcome to GAY. LIBRARIES-business
day, 843-5778 for details for details COUN-
TORY, 843-5778 for details for details BOX,
101 Box, 101 Box, 101 Box
Union Box, 102 Lawrence, 102 Lawrence,
102 Lawrence
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
antiques, 842-7098
Wanted: Female Roommate to live in house:
1200 S. 75th St., new rent; campus;
month call 842-631-5322
*2-25
Wanted: 1 or 3 female roommates to share a room.
Next next next year in Jayeshaw, 2-26
Call 843-1531.
Wanted: Date for Rock Chalk Revive. Must make a deposit of $500 in advance. All abilities desired. Call Borne Schwartz at (316) 274-9111.
Need 1 or 2 roommates. 4 bdm, modern duplex
Rent $150 + utm. Call 843-664-264.
Commuting with wives ride from 32nd Street.
6:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M., or later. Call 541-642-7100,
6:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M., or later. Call 541-642-7100,
Desperately need rife from Kansas Clip to K.U.
to assist with treatment of cancer. If infected
with M. bovis b483-0049 or M. bovis b485-
0049, if infected with M. bovis b483-0049 or M. bovis b485-
0049, if infected with M. bovis b483-0049 or M. bovis b485-
LOST
LOST—Black leather key case. Lost Tops, on 2nd floor Strong. If found please call 86312-325.
Moved from country. Have 1 yr. old pore-born
child. Will have to wash skin (until august). Will supply food. Call 843-565-9482.
One brown wallet vicinity McColum Hall. In-
timate location. Please reward me call 862-7594
time. Genuine receipt.
Levaltette's Day, in Snoutte Place area, our friend Lautentchelle visited a pregnant and were very worried about the pregnancy. They were able to give us advice.
REWARD Lost necklace with a diamond on
SENTIMENTAL VALUE Please return if found
Lost necklace with a diamond on
REWARD Lost necklace with a diamond on
HELP WANTED
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 843-656-
0789 Weekend and weekend hours. Phone 843-656-
0789
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent intervented in part-time commercial work for TV-radio. Age range 18-40 Interviews Thursday and Saturday 12-5pm 842-388 (Please bring pictures) 2-22
*JOBS IN ALASKA* Available now. This hand-
book provides a thorough plan for YOUR JOBS in Alas-
kaw, Plan YOUR VOORN $200 JAX, Boat &
Travel $450. 800-691-7850. www.jobs-
alaska.com
SERVICES OFFERED
For fast, dependable Volkwag repains; Don
phone 641-832-1084; Ein Strom, Lawersee,
phone 641-832-1084; 2-22
Bearing and altering for the college girl Pick up the backpack, put on a thick woolen wear, coat hems and rillemed "8-5 daily."
math tutoring- for Math 2, Kc and 65. Requires:
Rates. Call 841-2193 and ask for Gk: 2-26
Employment Opportunities
Concord College Men interested in part-time
work. Send resume to W. Bernett, 4629 West Hill
evening; Write O. H. Brennett, 8023 West Hill
evening.
Counselor--Resident Summer Camp counselor needed for all girls' camp. For further information contact: Resident Camp Director, Sunflower C/F.C.G., Inc., 1014 Armstrong Road, Kan. 60120
TYPING
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica typos. Accurate and prompt service. Proof reading, spelled correcting. Phd or related.
FOUND
Young female cat Tux. Night (2/13)—must identify Call Kathy. 864-6371. 2-2
DATSUN IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S 500 E.23rd
IMPORTS-
DATSUN
842-0444
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pickup a budget request form from 1048 Kanes Union, 8:40-3:40 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearing this spring.
10
Thursday, February 22, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KSU Students Take More Than Ag
Ask a Kansas State University student what classes he has enrolled in this semester and you might be surprised at the answer. Classes such as auto repair and wine-tasting are offered through K-State's University for Man (UFM) program.
UFM was started in 1967 by Len Epstein as a free university with seven classes and an enrollment of 150 people. Today the enrolment has increased to approximately 2,000 and a wide variety of classes are offered.
New courses are added by request. If a student is interested in a particular subject, he can call the UFM office and ask if such a course is offered. If it isn't, the UFM staff will try to find someone capable of teaching it. If they can also add the course in their program.
"We don't turn down anything unless it's against the law," Sue Mae, director of UFM said Monday. "I doubt if we teach a class on breaking and entering."
The classes are divided into divisions such as politics, environment, spiritual awareness, foods and sports. Maes said the sports division, which offers sports like hiking and camping, attracted the most people.
The largest division is the arts and crafts program. This division provides an arts and crafts week which features a different set of decoupage or macrame, each week.
UFM classes are open to anyone. Maes said that college and high school students, townpeople and men from Fort Riley were enrolled. The classes are not credited, no grades are given and it costs nothing to enroll in them.
"Students have to pay for their own supplies but that's all." Maes said.
Enrolment has been held at the Student Union, the Manhattan Public Library, high schools, the Black Community Center and the UFM office. In this way, the UFM staff hoped to encourage people other than just students to enroll in the classes, she said.
Mae said that they were trying to steer away from a campus orientation. Houses, churches and community centers are used as classrooms instead of campus buildings.
"We don't use campus buildings because they're too sterile for a good open space."
Massa said that the project had been successful so far and that the majority of K-12 teachers were satisfied.
free school, films on community education, work with the School of Education and the 400 brochures that are sent out by UFM each year.
"The people who teach at UFM come from a wide cross-section." Maes said. "It's a good school."
"The enrollment proves that more people are becoming interested in our program."
The center would take advantage of existing community social services, which the study said, represent "a large number of alternatives for a community our size." The study said that "most of these (service organizations) indicated willingness to undertake加拿� work with offenders if their resources were adequate."
BRECKENRIDGE
March 18-24
$106.
Hurry! Spaces still left!
$50. deposit
Deadline: Feb. 23 SUA office
UFM is funded by the department of continuing education at K-State and the student government to treat the programs but this also includes UFM's work with a
Arnold said the study sub-committee had nearly completed its task. The committee now awaits feedback on the report from the National Clearinghouse for Correctional Programming and Architecture at the University of Illinois.
NEW MANAGEMENT
Ele and Milt (Uncle Milly) Collins are new
operating Brooks Tavern & Lunch.
Lunch Special
10 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Hamburger and 12 oz. BUD — 50c
"Happy Hour 1 p.m. - 1 p.m."
"Pool Tournament every two Eve."
"Every Weekend at Brooks Tavern 11:00"
"Midnight - 8 pm."
Brooks Tavern and Lunch
1307 W. 7th
842-9429
The proposed center represents an original approach in that part of its purpose would be "to negotiate conflicts before they escalate" due to tension and violence," the report said.
An innovative Community Diagnostic, Guidance and Negotiation Center is among the tentative suggestions proposed by a board of directors that completed a study of Douglas County Jails.
Forrest Swall, lecturer in the department
William R. Arnold, associate professor of sociology at the University of Kansas and director of the study subcommittee, presented selected portions of the report Wednesday night at a meeting of the Correctional Services and Jail Facilities.
Jail Report Proposes Reconciliation Center
E. I. DuPont de Neumans & Co. recently announced two grants totalling $12,500 for the University of Kansas in 1973. A DuPont Science and Engineering Grant in chemistry of $7,500 goes to the department of biology at the university research. The other grant of $5,000 is for a program of recruiting, motivating and educating black engineers at KU.
In the interim period, the committee will try to work out a trip with members of the commission to visit a recently remodeled jail in Johnson County.
of social welfare at KU and chairman of the overall committee, said he hoped the clearhouse would have the material processed by March 15.
Swall said that although the clearing-house would interpret the data and perhaps provide advice, ultimately the county would have to decide for itself what action would be taken when his group reached its final conclusions.
"We have projected a target date of April 15, 2004 for our final report to the County Commission."
students, townpeople and men from Fort Riley as well as some of K-State's own faculty members. These people have favored their salaries and they are not paid a salary.
Swall's committee will assess the feedback from the cleanroom. It tentatively has scheduled a visit to Lawrence for clearinghouse personnel April 10 and 11.
PLAYBOY'S DELIGHT
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHT 12:15
UNITED PRODUCERS PRESENT
SWEDISH
WIFE
EXCHANGE
CLUB
UNITED PRODUCERS PRESENT
SWEDISH
WIFE
EXCHANGE
CLUB
YOU MAY BE ASKED TO SIGN
THE SEX TEST
1. TOGETHER, AS MAN AND WIFE,
WOULD YOU ENGLISH IN MAN AND SINGLE
IN MARRIED COUPLE?
2. DO YOU UNDERSTAND IN FRONT
OF ITS LANGUAGE?
3. DO YOU KNOW A MAN WITH A
WIFE?
4. DO YOU KNOW A WIFE
KNIGHTING?
5. DO YOU KNOW A WIFE
KNIGHTING?
No one under 18 yrs. admitted
Proof of age required
Adm. $1.50—No refunds
No beverage outsides
2 MARRIED COURTESY!
3 YOU UNDERSTAND IN FRONT
4 STRAIGHTEN LANGUAGE
5 WORK WITH A MAN WITH A
6 MAKE MAN WITH A MAN
7 MAKE MAN WITH A MAN
8 MAKE MAN WITH A MAN
Hillcrest
Assistant Resident Director,
Resident Assistant,
For 1973-74 School Year.
Applications Available For Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Dr.
BILLY JACK WAS TOUGH.
WAIT ALL THEY MEET
TOM BLACK BULL
When The Legends Die
PG
Eve. 12, 5; 15
Matthews Sat-Sun: 3:00; 3:15
Twilight Friee good: 1:55 More
The Hillierer
SHAWN KLEIN
Commonwealth Theatres
NOW SHOWING
MOVIE INFORMATION
842-4000
BILLY JACK WAS TOUGH...
WAIT 'LL THEY MEET
TOM BLACK BULL
When The Legends Die
PG
Rive. 7:15, 9:13
Matthews Sat./Sun. 3:15
Twilight Price good 3:15 show
Hillcrest
"One of the ten best pictures of the year!" — PETER TRAVERS, Reader's Digest
R BARBRA STREET SAND
Evenings 7:30 & 8:30
Mat. Sat/Sun. 3:15 & 5:125
Granada
NEW Haven (Foxhouse) 1-318
Nominated 5
ACADEMY
AWARD
BEST
ACTRESS
DIANA ROSS
Lady
SINGS
BLUES
Rive. 7:15, 9:14, 7:45 R=Adult 1:36
Matthews Sat./Sun. 1:30 & 1:25
Twilight Price Good 1:25
The Hillcrest
DIRTY LITTLE BILLY
R
MICHAEL J POLLARD
Rive. 7:15, 9:15
Mat. Sat/Sun. 2:15, 4:05
Hillcrest
Hell Upside Down!
THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE
THE POSEIDON ESCAPE ADVENTURE YET!
Weekdays $2.50, 7:30, 9:40
Sat/Sun. 3:00, 1:40, 7:30, 9:40
Varsity
HELLO! FOXHOUND 12-16
BILLY JACK WAS TOUGH...
WAIT LTLL THEY MEET
TOM BLACK BULL
When The Legends Die
Eve. 7:15, 8:25
Matthew L. 7:15, 8:25
Twilight Price good 3:15 show
Hillcrest
"One of the ten best pictures of the year!" ...PETER TRAVERS, Reader's Digest
Granada
THEATRE - Telephone V13-5284
ED
ACADEMY AWARDS
BEST
ACTRESS
LADY
SINGS
IN THE
BLUES
DIANA
ROSS
Eve. 7,118,9,45-Adult 1:50
Mathews Sat. 1:50 & 1:25
Twilight Price Good 1:15 Hour
DIRTY
LITTLE BILLY
MICHAEL J.POLLARD
Eve. 7,118,9,10
Mat. Sat.Sun. 2,115,4,05
Hell Upside Down!
THE POSIDON ADVENTURE
THE GREATEST ESCAPE ADVENTURE YET!
Weekdays 7,130,7,130,7,140
Sat.Sun 7,130,7,140,7,130
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
Varsity
Heartbreak VHS ONLINE
R
MOVE INFORMATION
842-4000
"One of the best pictures of the year!" - PETER TRAVERS, Headier Digress
UP HERE
BARBRA STREISAND
Evenings 7:30 & 9:30
Box
Maf. Sat-Sun 3:35 & 5:25
Granada
TALKABOUT • Phonebook V1-3665
Hell Upside Down!
THE POSIDON ADVENTURE
THE DUBLE TERRACE
ESCAPE ADVENTURE YET!
Weeksdays 1:30, 7:30, 9:40
Sat/Sun 1:30, 4:15, 7:30, 9:40
Navity
DialERE • Phonebook V1-3665
---
Hall Upgrade Down!
THE POSITION ADVENTURE
THE GREATEST
ESCAPE (HEY)
Wednesday, 3:10, 7:10, 9:40
Sat Sunday, 3:10, 4:50, 7:30, 9:40
Varsity
THURSDAY ... Telephone 82 5063
Why shouldn't you miss . . .
... ask a friend on Monday, the 5th he'll be glad to tell you.
'73 ROCK CHALK REVUE
HOCH AUDITORIUM March 2 and 3,1973 8:00 p.m.
Tickets NOW on sale:
Town Crier, downtown
Town Crier, the Malls Shopping Center.
SUA ticket office, in the Union. (8:30-noon and
1:00-5:00)
Friday night $2.00 & $2.50
Saturday night $2.25 & $2.75
MOTHER MARY'S, 2406 IOWA is giving a FREE BEER to all Friday night ticketholders.
SPRING RECORD SALE February 19 - February 23
HUNDREDS OF LABELS & ARTISTS INCLUDING
LIST OF LABELS: ABC • Atlantic • MGM • Nonesuch • Cadet • Blue Note • Janus • Pacific Jazz • Reprise • Warner Brothers • Elektra • Columbia • Immediate • Angel • Capitol • Uni • Turnabout • Soul • Tamla • Vanguard • Soul City • Stax • Atco • Mace • Everest • Liberty • Blue Note • Music Guild • Westminster • Command • Checker • RCA • Chess • Verve • World Pacific • Dunhill • Westminster Gold • impulse • and many others.
LIST OF ARTISTS: Thelonius Monk • Cream • B. J. Thomas • Otis Rush* • Mamas & Papas • John Mayall • Amboy Dukes • Laurino Almeida • Sabicas • Eric Clapton • The Doors • Joan Beaz • Alae Franklin • Odetta • John Coltrane • Louis Armstrong • Fifth Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick • Ramsey Lewis • M C 5 • London Symphony • Julian Bream • Wes Montgomery • Moby Grape • New York Pro Musica • Tim Buckley • Vanilla Fudge • The Rascals • William Steinberg • Jose Krips • Otis Spann • Eddie Harris • Tom Paxton • Al Hirt • and many others.
NOW ONLY
$1.98
Schwann
Cat. List
4.98 to 6.98
MANUFACTURERS
OVERSTOCKS
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES
WHILE THE LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION
WASHINGTON
QUARTER DOLLAR
BETHLOYEN
THE NINE AMPHONIES
FOR LIPS
and the FIVE CONSOLES FOR RICO.
BRETHENTHE NINE SYMPHONIES
7 Record Set
Value to $35.00
898
BILL GKINGER
WILLIAM SPENNING
The Piccadilly Symphony Orchestra
BRUCKNER - SYMPHONY NO. 7
2 Record Set
Value to $10.00
298
THE CLASSICAL GUILD
CHRISTOPHER MILLER
AN AUDITORIUM OF
THE CLASSICAL GUILD
IN THE 19TH CENTURY
WITH REFERENCE TO
LITERATURE AND ART
FROM THE FRENCH
AND ENGLISH WORKS
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
5 Record Set
Value to $25.00
698
BLACK AFRICA
ANTHOLY OF MUSIC
OF BLACK AFRICA
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00
498
PANORAMA
SANTA MARIA
CINEMAS
JULIAN BREAM
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00
498
An Anthology of Folk Music
Various artists
Vicki Smith
Ruth Willis
Robbie Cox
Ronnie Scott
Larry Wilson
Fatou Djamaa
Bob Dylan
Michael Jackson
Kanye West
Taylor Swift
James Taylor
Johnny Cash
Frank Sinatra
Songbook and music melodies
Fred Meese
Jimmy Johnson
Elvis Presley
Billie Holiday
Walter Davis
Marylin McCormack
Dennis Hopkins
Little Richard
Jimmy Johnson
Bob Dylan
Michael Jackson
Taylor Swift
James Taylor
Johnny Cash
Frank Sinatra
Walter Davis
Marylin McCormack
Dennis Hopkins
Little Richard
Jimmy Johnson
Bob Dylan
AN ANTHOLOGY OF FOLK MUSIC
5 Record Set
Value to $25.00
698
(1)
MOZART
COMPLETE WIND CONCERTI
4 Record Set
Value to $20.00
2. 98 to 9.98
Schwarin Cat; List
$9.98 to $44.50
RAMPAL - ART OF THE FLUTE
7 Record Set
Value to $35.00 898
THE ART OF THE BLUE
RAMPAL
The Boller
PHC
THE BALLET
3 Record Set
Value to $15.00 498
kansas BOOKSTORE union
BEAUTIFUL!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No.97
Prof Urges Research On Acupuncture
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Friday, February 23, 1973
See Story Page 8
Peacemakers Investigating 'CopterCrash
SAIGON (AP) — The four-nation International Commission of Control and Supervision began an investigation today into an incident last week in which an officer fatally burned a man who was also fatally burning one American crew member and wounding four others.
The commission's investigation was announced at about the same time that one of the crash's victims, Spec. 5 James L. Scroggins, 25, of Mulberry Grove, III, died at an Army hospital in Okinawa early Friday.
In another development, top representatives in the four-party Joint Military Commission were expected to discuss today the reasons of American prisoner of repatriation.
BROOKLYN
Kansan Photo by CARL G. DAVAZ.JR
The bellcopter had landed at An Loc to drop off supplies for a new fieldsite being built for the Joint Military Commission and was returning to its base when it was hit.
The U.S. Command said that although the helicopter was supporting the commission, it did not carry the neutral orange markings and its crew was assigned to the peacekeeping commission.
Scroogins was the flight engineer aboard the CH4N Helix helicopter shot down Feb. 16 near An Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon, where aircraft was on a peacekeeping mission.
The CH4H had been requested by a civilian contracting firm which was building commission field sites, a command spokesman said.
A spokesman for the international commission here said the peacekeeping group had turned the investigation of the attack to Blen Hea, 15 miles northeast of Saigon.
Hilltoppers
find a number of new things to look at, listen to and eat on their days away from home. The center, which opened last fall, is named for Jerry. Building at 1314 Ordeal. See story page sk:
Children at the Hilltop Childrens Center
Arabs Urge Vengeance
By the Associated Press
Arab spokesmen called Thursday for retaliation against Israel for the downing of a Libyan airliner which resulted in the death of more than 100 persons.
Western officials expressed fear that the incident would hurt chances for an Arab-Israeli settlement. Official Soviet news reports said that the plane down for that very purpose.
In Tel Aviv, Israel's air force chief and the fighter pilots who shot down a Libyan airliner said Thursday that the pilots were only trying to force the plane to land, but that it resisted and seemed to be trying to escape.
Defense Minister Mose Dayan told newsmen that the Israeli decisions in the incident were taken through normal military channels below the government
level and that they had "no political significance whatsoever."
Apparently 105 persons died Wednesday in the crash of the Libyan Airlines Boeing 737-800, where Libyan officials said the three jet plane had 112 persons aboard. Israel reported that nine survivors were pulled from the plane, two of these, both women, died later.
"We tried desperately to force it down, not to shoot it down," air force chief, Maj. Gen. Mordechal Hod, told reporters. "The more the pilot objected and the more he tried to get away, the more suspect he became."
Israeli pilots said that before firing they confronted the French captain of the airline face-to-face from less than 10 feet above the cockpit and wing-wagging to get him to land.
But in Cairo, the plane's intended destination, officials said that a recording of the pilot's last conversation with Egyptian controllers showed he had lost course, was unaware he was over hostile territory and had failed to recognize fighters were friendly Egyptian MIGs.
AURH Asks Refund For 'Misused' Money
Cairo officials told the pilo's last words were: "We are now shot. We are shot by a gun."
Hod most said the plane was flying over "one of the most restricted and delicate areas of the Egyptian-israeli frontline, an area where he and his crew because of its sensitive installations."
By CAROLYN OLSON Kansan Staff Writer
The Residents' Assembly of the Association of University Residence Halls (AUHR) passed a resolution Thursday that would allow the University residence hall funds which the Assembly
Lawrence Assistant City Manager Dennis Kallsen said Thursday that City Commission candidate Gene Miller did not meet residency requirements for holding city
But Klassen said that city government officials had checked with the Kansas Secretary of State's office and had been given the Miller should not yet be taken off the ballot.
If Miller wins the primary election March 6, he will also be put on the general election ballot, Kalsen said. He also said that only if Miller won the general election would charges be filed against him in District court to remove him from office.
Kansas Statutes require that a candidate for city office reside for three years inside Kansas.
Miller, who is running on the Support
ticket, ticked it, could not be
reached for compens.
Kallsen said that Miller, 305 Arrowhead Drive, had lived outside city limits before moving into Lawrence in July 1972 and was thus ineligible.
Hod declined to speculate whether the ietler was carrying spies.
AURH alleged that the money was taken from a residence hall library fund financed by a 5 per cent rebate from vending machine profits in the five residence halls under the jurisdiction of Emily Taylor, dean of women.
said was used to establish a career library in the dean of women's office.
Miller Ineligible City Staff Savs
The resolution requested a refund from the dean of women's office of all funds not used to purchase books, magazines and library materials directly for residence hall
Alex Thomas, AURH president and Addis Abba, Ethiopia, senior, said that if no reply or refusal was issued by Taylor, the republic would be punished by the University Judiciary for a hearing.
The Residents' Assembly resolution requested a refund by Feb. 9 accompanied by an explanation of all expenditures made from the residence hall account.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, at the United Nations, urged "the most thorough investigation of the circumstances" surrounding what he termed "one of the most shocking incidents in the history of civil aviation."
"This is a clear-case case for students to stand up for their rights," Thomas said. "AURH must assert itself to determine how the money is used."
John Beisner, AURH treasurer and Salina sophomore, said AURH had never been asked to donate money for the establishment and left library in the dean of women's office.
peers presented to the assembly a report listing expenditures from the residence hall library account. He said that all of the expenditures was "questionable."
"AURH feels that money in the residence or library fund hasn't been used in the spirit of giving."
A Lebanese newspaper said the Libyan leader, Kadafi, now must "put up or shut up" and "his retaliation should match his declared enthusiasm for the battle."
"Many of the items just weren't ap-
Britain also called for an inquiry.
See AURH Page 5
U.S.-China Relations Another Step Ahead
WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States and China Thursday took a major step toward full diplomatic relations by sending lawton offices on each nation's capital.
The development was announced in a communique released simultaneously in Washington and Peking to reflect "the progress that has been made" since President Nixon visited Red China a year ago.
Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger told newsmen that the agreement reached in his recent trip to Peking is an important step toward normal relations with the Com-
The President's China trip started the two nations toward a better understanding, he said.
"After the end of the war in Vietnam, and in these discussions in Peking, we were able to begin to travel some of these roads, and to move from the attempt to eliminate the obstructions and the mistrust to some more positive achievements," he said.
Kissinger said his discussions with Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Premier Chou En-lai in Peking this week had covered four major areas:
The desirability of normalization of relations:
—The desirability of reducing the danger of military conflict;
—And each of them opposed the attempt of anyone else to achieve it, and that the relations between China and the United States never be directed against any third country.
—The affirmation by both sides that neither would seek hegemony in the Pacific
This office falls short of embassy or mission status, but its personnel will have diplomatic immunity and privileges, in addition to the rights owed private messages to its government.
Because of the progress toward better relations, Kissinger said, it was decided "that the existing channel in Paris, the designated contact point for previous relations, should be established each side would establish a liaison office in the capital of the other."
Kissinger said the offices "would handle trade as well as all other matters, except the strictly formal diplomatic aspects of the relationship."
Kennedy said progress was being hampered by the "biblical fiction we continue to maintain, that somehow the government of China is so powerful that the government of China on the mainland."
The announcement was hailed by Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, D-Mont., as "an accomplishment which really astounds me."
However, Ed. Sened M. Kennedy, D-Mass., asked, "Why must we be content with progress that is too little and too slow?"
As a sign of the good will generated by Kissinger's nearly 20 hours of talks with Chinese leaders in Peking, the mainland government agreed to release within the
next two months two U.S. military
aircraft Air Force M1, Air Force JF-79m
Air Force Mai, Pilot K Ripley
Smith was shot down in 1965 while flying a veteran-raised mission, and Fyr was, from then on, an experienced pilot.
Kissinger also indicated that a third American held by the Chinese, CIA agent John Downey, might be freed in the second half of 1973.
Downey was captured during the Korean war on a dandelistine flight over the Chinese mainland and was sentenced to 30 years in prison. He also was sentenced to a five-year period that would end in 1978.
Kissinger reaffirmed the diplomatic alliance maintained with the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan and he said the "level of our troops on Taiwan is not the subject of negotiation. There exists no immediate plan for any withdrawal."
However, there will be 8,000 periodic review of the status of the 8,000 U.S. troops on the island, he said, and their ultimate disposition "will be governed by the general considerations of the Nixon Doctrine with respect to danger in the area."
He said the aid that would be funneled to North Vietnam "is not a kind of ransom.
Kissinger also discussed his visit to Hanoi. He said the major point of his stop in North Vietnam had not been to discuss reconstruction aid but "to establish contact with the leadership of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam."
★ ★ ★
"It is rather a long-term investment in a structure of peace and in turning people whose experience has been with conflict toward the outside world into pursuits with which they are essentially unfamiliar."
Formal Ties Distant, U.S. Interpreter Says
By ANN McFERREN Kansan Staff Writer
The establishment of liaison offices in Washington and Peking, announced on Tuesday by the adviser, is a major breakthrough in U.S.-China relations, according to Charles W. Freeman, the principal American interim envoy, President Nixon's trip to the last year.
But he said he could not foresee the establishment of diplomatic relations with China in the near future because of the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan.
Freeman predicted that the United States and China would not establish diplomatic ties.
The United States and China also have agreed to refrain from seeking control or dominant influence in the East Asian areas, Freeman said.
Freeman speak to students in the Forum room of the Kansas University Thursday about 10 a.m.
The liaison offices are the first of their kind, he said. There is no precedent for the role they will play in the developing relations between the two countries. He said the offices were expected to carry out some previous U.S.-Chinese agreements.
Both countries have agreed to establish the liaison offices in their capital cities to serve as an intergovernmental diplomatic relations have been created, Freeman said. The offices will not have embassy or mission status, but their personnel will have diplomatic immunity and security.
"As long as there is no solution to the Taiwan situation, I see no foreseeable future for the establishment of diplomatic relations." be said.
To maintain the balance of power, the two countries have agreed to oppose any third
Kenan Photo by MIKE FORSYTH
BAR OPEN
NO PARKING
EXCEPT WITH GIRLS
Mayor John Emick Looks Over Stock at John's Novelty Shop
Also owns pool tables, pinball machines and football tables.
country, specifically the Soviet Union or Japan, might try to take control of the area, he said.
Freeman said these agreements did not mean that the countries would not supply arms to the area. However, he said, there was a lack of equipment such as the presence of troops, in East Asia.
Trade with China has increased significantly since 1971, Freeman said, and the United States is working to establish a program of orderly market exchange with countries that must now work to establish a more permanent cultural exchange, he said.
Recent steps, including the visits of Chinese doctors, scientists and ping-pong players to the United States and short trips to China by several Americans, have improved the cultural exchange, he said, but improvements have not been long range.
The only permanent cultural exchange, he said, were the Chinese gift of two pandas and the two musk oxen given to China by the United States.
Freeman said the United States would be to make more permanent exchanges in the US.
The liaison offices can help solve these problems and produce a steady rather than a dramatic growth in cultural exchange, he said.
Mayor Owns Pool, Pinball Dealership
By MARILYN GIBSON
John Emick, Lawrence manager and owner of John's Novelty Shop, is a pool shark.
He began his career as a pool player during high school. Since then, he has become the leading dealer of pool tables, machines and football tables in Lawrence.
Ten years ago Emick became interested in a pool table investment. He bought three coin-operated machines and distributed them. When they did not pull in much business, he sold them to a recreation center.
Four years later, Emick found that interest in pool tables had grown, and he purchased one table. Emick now owns 80 of them in Lawrence.
Galen Patterson, general manager of John's Novelty Shop, said that Emick owns approximately 40 of the foobus table in Lawrence and that he owns over 150 pinball
He leases the machines to 66 local taverns, providing upkeep and servicing. The profit is split equally between John's and Drew's investment in the machine is located.
About six sororites, fraternities and residence halls have invested in pool tables and football teams. They rent a table for their games. Enick's shop services these machines too.
"Air hockey is the new thing." Erickm said, but it hasn't taken the place of table tennis.
Air hockey, he said, is a physical game. The table is about the size of a pool table and the ball is about the size released from holes placed at 1¼ inch intervals along the sides, causing the puck to
See MAYOR Page 12
1
2
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
School Bill Fails
TOPEKA (AP)—Tempers of Democrats flipped Tuesday when the GOP dominated House Education Committee sent Democratic Gov. Robert Docking's recommended stool finance bill out of the committee with "no recommendation."
The action had the effect of leaving the bill entirely in the hands of the House Assessment and Taxation Committee. The measure had been referred to both commissoirs.
Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan, said there had been no hearing, no discussion and no opportunity to present amendments to the bill.
Carlin said he was concerned that the Republican action would hurt any chance of winning in this election.
the Republicans that they would need Democratic help to get a school finance law
Democrats had sought unsuccessfully to get the Republicans to defer any action on legislation.
Consideration of the governor's school finance bill was not listed among the items due for consideration Thursday, according to published notices of the meeting.
But Rep. Harold Dyck, R-Hesson, waited until other business had been completed and announced, "I'm going to recommend that we move our recommendation to the House floor."
The bill had been referred separately to the Assessment and Taxation Committee, and passed.
U.S.S.R. May Become Most Favored Nation
WASHINGTON - The package of trade legislation President Nixon will send to Congress is expected to contain a provision allowing the military to move nobilly (MNF) status in tariff matters.
Extension of this status is part of the agreement initiated by the United States and the U.S.S.R. on trade and lend-lease matters.
Prosecution In Ellsberg Case Rests
LOS ANGELES (AP)—The government conditionally rested its case against Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo Thursday, but said it would present last-minute testimony next Tuesday about fingerprints flown here from Saipan.
U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne
lessed the unusual move to reserve last
lesson.
He told the jurors, "Other than the reservation just stated, the government has
The government called only 10 witnesses in four weeks of testimony. The government was to prove espionage, conspiracy and theft charges against Ellsberg and Russo in connection with a leak of the data from their study, known as the Pentagon Papers.
Their witnesses included high-ranking generals who claimed the Pentagon study could have aided an enemy if released publicly.
However, throughout the entire case the prosecutor never sought to show that either defendant had intended any harm to the witness when they copied the Pentaudi study.
The judge indicated in pretrial remarks the question of "intent" was an important factor.
The government has disagreed with this, saying it need not show such intentions. The government's case is considered a unique circumstance and should specifically state the "intent" requirement.
A country with most favored nation status is automatically entitled to all the trade rights that it has in other countries and other country. The practical effect is that imports from these countries into the United States enjoy the lower tariff rates negotiated over the years under the multilateral treaties.
The MFN concept goes back to a policy, established in 1922, to treat all countries alike in trade matters. Later it was written into the Reciprocal Trade Act.
The act provided, however, that MFN was not to go to countries under Communist domination. Exceptions were made to grant MFN to Uzgoslavia and later to Poland.
Discretionary authority the President had at one time to extend MFN to selected Communist countries in the national interest has been revoked, so a change in the status of the U.S.S.R. would require congressional action.
Various bills have been introduced to extend MEN to Romania, but no action has been taken.
There is no intermediate status between countries that enjoy MFN and those that do not. The tariff schedules carry two tables of figures, one applying to MFN countries and the other, higher one to those without this status.
Almost all countries with which the United States deals now enjoy MFN rates.
Those excluded, as a result of successive changes in the law, modified by presidential actions, are the Communist countries of Europe, other than Yugoslavia and Poland; the Communist countries of Aska; and Cuba.
Rep. Roger Robertson, D-Hutchinson, objected strongly.
Education Committee action would get the measure to the floor of the house.
"You come at 5:10 p.m. without notice and to try in to get us to dispense of this,"
1st Test
He had made a motion to defer action until Monday.
Earlier Thursday, major action in the Kansas Legislature came on the house side of the rotunda as the lower chamber killed Gov. Robert Docking's "circuit breaker" to allow the Senate a bill to enable state takeover of the entire Kansas welfare system.
The House also gave preliminary approval to a bill designed to pump more than $10 million additional state aid to the state's community junior colleges.
The House action on the circuit-breaker plan came on a motion by Rep. Richard Schultz, D-N.C., in the House.
In a preliminary move, Louis aimed for a two-thirds majority needed to force the House Assessment and Taxation Committee to approve legislation to the House Ways and Means Committee.
The circuit-breaker plan would make families with total incomes of less than $20,000 eligible for refunds on property taxes paid the state range from $50 to
The circuit-breaker plan had been killed in the assessment and taxation committee
Even though the circuit-breaker plan was killed in the House, it is still alive because a similar bill is currently under consideration for State Assessment and Taxation Committee.
Laos Strife Unchanged By Cease-Fire
VIENTIANA, Laos (AP)—War-torn laos officially entered a declared cease-fire Thursday, but reliable sources reported what appeared to be a general offensive spearheaded by about 65,000 North Vietnamese troops.
The North Vietnamese shellied towns and government positions in northern and southern Laos, the sources said, and moved their bases to the areas they allied, the Patao Lao guerrilla forces.
Two government towns fell to the enemy and another, Khonh Sedone in the south, was threatened. Government troops were retreating in several areas.
In Vientiane, Premier Souvanna Phouma charged Friday that the Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese had committed 29 major violations of the cease-fire.
He said he would ask for renewed U.S. air cover if the violations continued. U.S. air strikes ended at midday Thursday when the truce officially took effect.
"We have been tricked," Prince Souravna said at a news conference. "We knew of the possibility of this happening, had faith in the good will of the other side."
By terms of Wednesday's accord, the Vientiane regime and the Pattet Lac will form a new coalition government made up of equal numbers from each faction plus the northeast. Prince Souvanna Phoma, a declared neutralist, is expected to remain as premier.
Nixon Informs Congress Of 1973 Tax Reform Plan
WASHINGTON — President Nixon told Congress Thursday that he would submit a tax reform bill this year, ending doubt about who he was planning a new tax proposal.
In his State of the Union message on the economy, Nixon dealt with the subject in only one sentence: "I shall recommend a new tax code to Congress on those we achieved in 1969 and 1971.
His administration has been studying tax reform legislation intensively in recent months but, up to now, it never been able to determine would offer its own recommendations.
Rockefeller, Ex-Governor Of Arkansas, Dies at 60
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)—Wintrop Rockefeller, former Arkansas governor and one of six children of multimillionaire John D. Rockefeller Jr., died Thursday of cancer at Desert Hospital, a family spokesman said. He was 60.
Rockefeller was admitted to the hospital a week ago with a chest ailment. Doctors said that the cancer may have been related to a previous infection that was removed from his back last year.
In 1966, after one unsuccessful race for governor, Rockefeller became the first
After leaving the governorship,
after having served primarily to
extensive internets in Asia, he
Republican elected governor of Arkansas since Reconstruction,
In both 1989 and 1971, Congress approved reform legislation that cut taxes substantially. Now, the focus in Congress is on closing so-called loopholes in the tax code.
Survivors include his only son, Winthrop Paul Rockefeller.
In 1972, a cyst removed from Rockefeller's back proved to be malignant. He entered a New York hospital on Sept. 24 for exploratory surgery. On Oct. 23, thin and wan, he returned to Arkansas to begin chemotherapy treatment.
Nixon also said he would send bills to provide property tax relief for the elderly, to provide an income tax credit for tuition paid to private elementary and secondary schools and to give him more power to change tariffs.
Vern Issues Subpoena For Magazine Sales
Bill Ward, assistant attorney general in the consumer protection division of Kansas Atty, Gen. Vern Miller's office, said Thursday that Public Circulation Service, Inc., had been issued a subpoena requesting that representatives of the magazine sales corporation give extensive information about its operations and its personnel.
Ward said that several weeks' time would pass before Kansas would receive a reply to the subpoena, and that in past years PUBLis, PUBLIC, and VOLUNTARY were very cooperative to out-of-state requests.
He said bills would be submitted to improve the nation's private pension system, the unemployment compensation law, minimum wage laws and "the manner in which we deal with our transportation system."
The subpoena is the result of a complaint filed with the Attorney General's Office by the Justice Department.
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In each instance Nixon held back details. But he was expansive on a key recommendation holding back growth of the federal budget. He urged adoption of an annual spending ceiling by Congress $285 million in fiscal 1974 and $288 million in fiscal 1975.
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Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
Kansan Photo by BILL JONES
Spinning
from the department of Health, Education and Welfare. According to Bob St. John, Salina senior, five more studio rooms and a master control room are to be constructed at KANU. St. John said that each of the studio rooms would contain both taping and broadcasting equipment. He said that completion was a news, taping and broadcasting room. This room will be completed in about 3 weeks.
John Zimbrick, assistant professor of radiation biophysics, spends part of his day cuing up records in the new studio at KANU. The equipment in the studio, which was purchased for $18,000, cost at $18,000. The money for the new equipment came from a federal grant of $11,000.
Former City Employe Gets 3-Year Probation
Robert L. Beech, convicted Feb. 9 of misusing public funds, was sentenced to spend three years on probation and be released. Douglas County District Court Thursday.
Beech, former Lawrence city water department collection supervisor, had pleaded nolo contendre (no contest) to the charges.
Judge Frank Gray of Division I said he probated a mandatory one-to-10-year sentence for Beech because he had no prior knowledge of the crime, chose not to impose a prohibitive $1.50 fee.
Before the sentence was passed, Beech's lawyer, Robert Oyley, told the judge that statements made Tuesday by city commission candidate Gene Miller were "not authorized" and were "definitely denied" by the defendant.
Miller had charged that Beech was used as a "scapegoat" and was "railroaded" out of office to cover up a disappearance of $2,640.73 in city funds. Miller also said that Beech had acted under orders of the government when he "was making loans," with this money.
MILLER ALLEGED that Beech had received threatening phone calls and had not been defended adequately in court. He urged the City Commission to use its influence to initiate a grand jury investigation of the charges.
"We did not authorize Mr. Miller to make these statements," Oyler said. "We deny that we ever did ask for a grand jury investigation."
"Mr. Beech," he said, "has never accused any of his superiors" of threatening him or missing funds. "We don't see any need for a grand jury on this case.
"The defender doesn't even know Mr Miller," Oyler said.
Oyler said Beeched nolo contendere because he and his wife had been ill and
could not afford a costly defense. Beech suffered a heart attack several months ago and his wife has been a semi-invalid since she had a stroke about five years ago.
Discrimination Is Topic At Haskell Assembly
OYLER SAID his client chose to make his statement so that the statements from Miller would not adversely affect his sense and so that public records would be accurate.
By PAT BREITENSTEIN Kansan Staff Writer
A new method for combating discrimination against Indians was outlined before an assembly of more than 100 Junior College students Monday afternoon.
Speaking to the students in the Haskell Auditorium, Carl Johnson, assistant director of the Lawrence Department on Human Resources, explained the function of his department and enumerated some of the events encountered by Indians in Lawrence.
"I feel that the white public does not see that Indians live in Lawrence, Kansas," said Sue St. John.
He said that Haskell was like a glorified reservation in which the Indians were separated from the town. The college and town were divided, and the people made known to the townspeople, he said.
When confronted with discrimination, Indian students should report it to their student senate, Johnson advised. The student senate will then refer the matter to the Lawrence Human Resources Department.
Johnson told the students not to be cautious about reporting these problems.
People are hesitant about being spec. when reporting discrimination because they do not want to get involved, Johnson said. He explained that he spoke out about these problems, he said.
When people in Lawrence see an Indian they say things and react in a particular way which, Johnson said, would make him feel unwelcome.
"We will have to sacrifice ourselves in dealing with problems of discrimination," he said. "It is our duty to deal with these problems."
"Because you live in Lawrence, you become a part of this city," he said.
Johnson explained the relationship between his human resources department, an official branch of the city government, and the city police force. He advised a advisory board to the city commission.
Johnson said that human relations commissions have been in use in the United States for the last 10 or 15 years. One of the problems they have customarily faced is having little real power. They are designed as a means of communications between the city government and some of its minority constituents.
With the establishment of a human resources department in Lawrence, the city has become more effective in opposing discrimination, he said. The department is an administrative and investigatory agency for the Human Rights Commission.
Johnson criticized the recent women's rights movement and the Nixon administration for adding to the problems of racial minorities.
"I don't think that all women should be lummed in one class." Johnson said.
Some firms justify their hiring practices by biring white women instead of members of the workforce.
He noted a distinction between the problem faces by white women and those by black women.
Many white Americans feel that minority groups should be happy with the results of the civil rights movement of the past 10 years, he said. But the first budget cuts Washington decreased funds for those programs designed to help minority groups.
Johnson said that minority groups must stick together now to fight the problems of disaffiliation.
31 Contracts For Funding Not Finished
Thirty-one student Senate fund groups still have not completed Capital Disposition Contracts in the senate treasurer's office. The group has managed funds frozen, according to Student records.
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS
Expenditures by groups that have not completed contracts will not be approved or paid until the contracts are on file in the treasurer's office.
Groups that have not completed contracts are the following: American Students Undergraduate Association, Student bar Graduate Students, Committee On Indian Affairs, Concert Course, Draft Help, Education School Council, Student Employment Referral Service, Fine Arts Group, Graduate Students, Department of Headquarters Drug Abuse, Hilltop Child Care, Graduate Association of History Students, Journalism School Council, Kansas Engineer, Karate Club, Law School Council, Law Students Social Action Group, Law Students Environmental National Environment Law Society, American Pharmaceutical Association, Pharmacy School Council, Amateur Radio Club, Rugby team, Sailing Club, Scuba Club, Suren Club, Student Voice Association, Support Educational Services.
According to a Traffic and Security report, Koin Keith, Topeka freshman, was studying on a bed in a fifth-floor Oliver Hall room at about 10:30 Wednesday evening when she heard something break.
Antenna Prods Investigation
The lower, which gives the dark interior space, has a stairway leading to the third floor. At Aloft, there are several private bathrooms used during the summer months. The bathroom with special window seats on the third floor is also custom-made.
If you have never been inside the Castle Two Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in Lawrence with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really enjoy it is by staying at one of its many bedrooms.
There are five beautiful interiors in the house, each with a unique design with various colored walls. The first one is a white room with glittered glass window and door of my house. A retreat cluster of mirrors and stained glass window above the glowing windows gives an elegant effect.
She said she looked up but did not see anything, so he got up to look around and discovered 5 inches of a car antenna sticking through the window. She then notified Traffic and Security, who investigated the incident.
Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly finished in birch, cherry, oak, walnut and sycamore and pine. The wood carving was all tilted by hand by Sobey Endacott of England, a brother of Frank Witherington. He used an artist's sculptor and artist and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Holmfield Hall.
Summer of '42 A novel by Herman Raucher
The Castle Tea Room
3
The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a central Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from patients on wooden containers carved in the shape of castles.
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1
4
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
To Each His Own
The following story is fictitious. The formation of a new campus organization to deal with the problems of sex roles was announced recently. The new group, the Commission on the Status of Men, will attempt to inform the public about the problems of males in society.
The leaders of the commission said they would pursue many methods of delivering their message to the public. Their program will include a series of "Human Virility Seminars." These seminars will feature visual aids and speakers on the entire spectrum of male problems.
Commission leaders also said they would approach University officials concerning the establishment of a centralized library containing information about men. Included in the library's collection will be copies of a pre-law handbook, a premedical school handbook and graduate information.
"Men have many problems adjusting to the socio-economic situation of the University," commented one leader.
"It is our desire to bring all elements of the male population together to concern themselves with the problems men must cope with," he said.
This leader said he hoped the March Brothers here would
cooperate with the Commission on the Status of Men.
The commission will offer counseling for men about various subjects, including the male sex role, birth control, rape, self-defense and divorce. Men experienced in self-defense will offer classes every Thursday night.
The commission hopes to have a "Male Awareness" week late this spring. The week will incorporate a series of speakers, seminars, dissemination of materials about coping with male problems in a bisexual world and a career day conference.
"It is sad but true," said one commission organizer, "but the advent of affirmative action has yielded preferential treatment for women.
"We want to stress that affirmative action means equal rights for all based upon a merit system, regardless of race, color, creed or sex. Men, too, have day-care problems. Men, too, are misunderstood in their sex role. Men, too, are humans and must cope with the difficulties of our society and life."
A handbook developed for the commission, "Him." explains the central function of the group and all it hopes to accomplish. Copies of the handbook can be found on campus.
R. E.Duncan
Report Urges Reassessment Of World Resource Policies
By STAN BENJAMIN Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON—A report from researchers and businessmen says the United States must reduce its consumption of certain raw materials to help avert a global crisis in natural resources.
The report said the industrialized world in general and the United States in particular should begin to slow consumption of highly processed food to move forward greater use of abundant materials.
It mentioned forest products, which are renewable, and also said offshore and deep sea waters should be looked to as an abundant source of materials.
The report was issued by the National Commission on Materials Policy, and was based on a series of discussions held last year among representatives of industry, government, universities and private research groups.
"As projected demand curves push up against known reserves, a global crisis may
It said that U.S. resource needs were virtually certain to increase and that imports would continue to rise. The developed nations, the report said, are becoming increasingly dependent on the mineral reserves of developing countries.
occur if there is not a movement toward cohesion and distribution of world resources," the reason was.
Experts on the panel said that any natural resources policy must include measures to equalize the incomes of those nations and individuals now classified as rich and poor.
The coming resource pinch, they suggested,
will require deep changes in the market system
and in manufacturing designs and methods to
recycle those that are used.
Other points, summarized by the commission included:
"The changes most required seem to come down to two: one, a substantial intervention in the market economy to provide needed public goods; and, two, a substantial shift in the distribution of income toward greater equalization."
"The idea of a no-government economic policy in the immediate future was rejected out of hand. Zero population growth, however, was very strongly supported. . . ."
—On energy, "The pursuit of great inefficiency in conversion, transmission, and end use—neglected in the past—was cited as perhaps offering the greatest opportunity for fusion to bring the spinning demand for energy into a better cost-benefit balance with supply."
James J. Kilpatrick
groundhole hole in the budget.
Like smart foxes, they can wade upstream; they can leap from tree to tree; they can run across plougged ground. Every time the House votes against the Speaker Carl Albert sees John Ehrlichman snickering in a hollow log.
WASHINGTON - If you have formed an impression in recent weeks that official Washington is running in circles, your imprint has been on the first of the year, Congress has been baying like a pack of hounds on this matter of "impoundment." At this writing, the House and Senate are dizzy; even begun to work up a sweat.
Executive Foxes Vex Congress
President Nixon will win this contest. His people know every fence row, briar patch and
The question ought not to be who will win, but who ought to win. Here one runs in circles, too. The President is at once both right and wrong; and 27 is the Congress.
The President is right in trying to keep a lid on federal spending. He is right politically, and he is right as a matter of public policy. The president has control over the people, fighting off the reckless money-singers on the Hill, Nick is playing the part of Matt Dillon. This is the good news; Mr. Obama can snuffer all night without a rude handshake the villain.
EQUAL RIGHTS AMMORT.
On a more serious note, the President again is plainly right in terms of fiscal policy. As last
week's devaluation of the dollar made clear (if it hadn't been clear before), our nation is in danger of losing its currency was brought on by forces beyond the President's control, but that is beside the point. Federal spending has to be controlled because it's right in trying to sum upress it.
On the constitutional issue, the President is just as plainly wrong. In his news conference on Jan. 31, Nixon, who happened to be full of vinegar that day, flarly asserted that "the constitutional principle allows the United States to impound funds is absolutely clear." Nonsense! The right, if it exists at all, is exceedingly obscure. What the President is demanding—and getting—is a power of item veto. This the Constitution denies him, and so has been rightly outraged at Nixon's Olympian disdain for congressional powers.
But what is the Congress to do? Critics in the house could introduce a resolution of impeachment, but so feeble a gesture would be universally regarded as absurd. There was talk of delaying confirmation of his cabinet, but this was idle talk. Mr. Trump made new appropriation bills, inviting a veto, but such a course merely takes the chase once more around the barn.
The unpalatable and disturbing truth is that Congress is just about helpless. It could double
the debt limit, thus deying Nikon the convenient excuse that any particular expenditure would carry the Treasury past the statutory limitation, the President has other excuses. His constitutional duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed has been buttressed in times past by laws directing a government to save money whenever savings are possible, and to see that funds are spent in the most effective and economical fashion.
In its present condition of baffled anger, the Congress cannot even pick a nice strategic field for battle. On Feb. 7, the House voted 821 to 142 to reinstate the American education program, which the President in December had marked for extinction. If the Senate concurs, Nixon surely will veto the bill, and the votes to override are not in sight. Rural subsidies, amounting to a proposed $225 billion, would be mildly useful but very nitial. The money ought to be saved.
Conservatives, watching this chase, are likely to find their sympathies divided. They resent the abdication of a senator that effectively could nullify the most important function of the legislative branch. They equally resent the abdication of fiscal responsibility on the Hill. Right is wrong, and wrong is right, but if, in fact, betting on the executive foxes.
(C) The Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Green Beret 'KISS' Is Dynamite
Jack Anderson
WASHINGTON—Sheepish executive of American Telephone and Telegraph would rather not talk about the KISS incident. But October, they thought their vital transcontinental microwave station outside Flagstaff, Ariz, was going to receive an explosive
A communications craftsmans discovered five mysteries notes, signed KISS, indicating that bombs had been planted to blow up the station. The notes were discovered inside the sensitive installation. In a panic, he turned in an alarm and ran for cover.
Faster than you can say boom, telephone security men were alerted, the county sheriff was called to the rescue. The alarm was also flashed over the bell system all the way to New York City. This threw M.Bell into a telephone machine began scurrying.
About this time, the sheriff remembered that a Green Beret unit had been operating in the area, testing security. A call to the unit commander, Col. W. R. Smith, established that the notes were written by bomber calling himself KISS but by Special Forces team K155.
"Do you really think he can end this war, too?"
POVERTY
KING RICHARD
THE LIONHERRIES
The commandos had crept into the microwave station the previous night, and had left the notes where dynamite might have been planted. The exercise proved, as the enterprising
colonel suspected, that the microwave system is dangerously vulnerable. Among other things, this carries the
circuit that Washington uses to keep in voice contact with military installations throughout the country.
Grain Drain Aids Nation's Taxpayers
By DON KENDALL
WASHINGTON-High farm prices and huge export orders, for the first time in 25 years, are clearing government cupboards of grain surpluses, a once bothersome mountain of wheat and corn that has cost taxpayers $1 million a day to store.
Only a year ago, the Nixon administration faced the prospect of a growing grain surplus and nursed worries that a president could be sensitive in a presidential campaign, would plummet by half.
But the now famous sale of 400 million bushels of wheat last summer to the Soviet Union changed it all. Additional orders for wheat and feed grain came in other countries, and prices jumped.
Wheat rose from $1.32 a bushel last July to $2.38 in January, the highest price farmers have received since 1947. Corn and wheat have gone up. Soybeans, the hottest items, have out of sight.
A year ago the Commodity Credit Corp. (CCC) in the country owned outright some 372 million bushels of wheat and 144 million of corn, a relatively small amount by standards of a decade.
Grain stock holdings are on the verge of being liquidated entirely first time in 1940s when United States was helping feed war-torn nations.
"if it wasn't for the transportation situation, we would have gone into a grain, I'm sure," Glenn A. Weir, associate administrator of the Agricultural Stabilization and Service, said recently.
The CCC wheat supply was down to 728 million bushels by last Jan. 1 and corn holdings were cut to 140 million bushels. But Agriculture officials say the figures do not tell the full story.
"Even if it eases this spring, we would soon be out of business. As it stands, I don't know. But we should be gone because we be gone quickly." We said.
The CCC is the buying and selling arm of the Department of Agriculture. When market prices are low, farmers take out price support loans on grain. If prices do not increase in due course, farmers can let the government take over the grain and thus satisfy the loan.
That is how the taxpayer, through CCC, became owner of 1.1 billion bushels of wheat and 1.4 billion of corn in the early 1960s. It seemed that surpluses would never end.
But tighter acreage controls, a mini-boom in the mid-1960s and rising exports, mainly for wheat, help dissolve the surpluses. Consumers began eating more meat, and extra corn was needed.
Now, it appears to Weir an other Agriculture experts, the demand for more wheat and feed grain is on such a solid footing that all stocks held by the amount soon will be depleted.
As a result, Secretary of Agriculture Earl L. Butz has ordered more land back into production this year. In all, off-agricultural land in California in 1873 will be idle under the 'set-aside' programs.
Last year, when it appeared the surplus problem was getting out of hand again, farmers idored more than 60 million acres.
Agricultural programs have been adjusted to save taxpayers $1 billion in direct crop payments, estimated at around $2.5 billion for this year compared with $2.5 billion in 1972.
If farmers plant as much corn as they may under the relaxed acreage-control program, department experts think a record crop will be harvested next fall.
That will not add to the surplus, the department says. Exports and U.S. feeders will need that amount of grain a year from now. Measured there is no shortage of grain but only a light supply situation.
More wheat also is needed and farmers are expected to boost spring plantings sharply. Winter wheat growers, who planted fields last fall, also have increased acreages.
Part of the reason that the administration released more meat and poultry to relieve rise food prices. By producing more wheat and feed grain, the White House hopes that it will increase the meat animals, milk and poultry.
Soybeans are another reason for expanding crop program acres. Prices for beans have been high for months as the result of export and domestic demand for meal food produced from them.
The Department of Agriculture predicts that farmers will plant *more soybeans on acres made available under the 1973 feed program, perhaps a record 1.5 billion bushels.
Despite widespread weather problems during the harvest last fall, government experts do not think crop production was cut so severely as to have a big impact on supplies. Soybeans, for which any loss is sensitive in the market, are the exception.
But Bell's district manager. D.J. Lysons, was more indignant over the prank the Green Berets had played on him than he was to be punished for his security. He sent a bristling letter demanding reparations.
"It is estimated," he wrote,
"that the following costs were
incurred as a direct result of this
unannounced intrusion of our
property; Craft wages, $132;
immediate supervisor direct
involvement, $65; other long lines
management directly involved in
their work; information to those people
having a need to know, $150; and
Mountain Bell Security office,
$75."
There was one other thing; he also wanted to be notified before any military unit entered Bell property in the future. This is a formally, of course, that a real saboteur crew might overlook.
Thai Connection
A report now in preparation will charge that the United States is really trying to cut off drug trafficking because Thai leaders are too leeply implicated and might detain by closing U.S. military bases.
The report will be submitted to the House Foreign Affairs Committee by Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N.Y., who has been investigating the drug problem in Southeast Asia.
He came back from an inspection tour last year to report that some Top officials were moving the tanks and the moving tons upon tons of
1
opium to Hong Kong for shipment to American addicts.
He is now back from another tour of Southeast Asia, where he found the Thai smugglings operation relatively unchanged. The Thai opium, he will charge, is handled by dealers who are virtually immune from legal threats in the country of the most powerful men in the country, whom the United States doesn't wish to offend.
that illegal drug labs are still operating in the state, despite his report on State Department's report will also be critical of the government's strategy of buying up opium crops. The practice does little to stop drug smugglers from lavishly expensive, he will charge.
Woff will point out, for instance, that the United States is still fighting the military men in Thailand, but can't scrape up enough money to hire more than 35 narcotics agents to protect this nation from drug traffickers.
The report will claim that most of the money allocated for the war on drugs has gone into cutting off the Turkish opium supply, with little left to fight smuggling in other areas. The report also says the Connection "blossoms like a poppy in the sun."
Finally, the report will recommend that American aid to Thailand be shut off unless the drug smuggler, snashing the drug smugglers.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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Published at the University of Kansas during the academic year except holidays and examination periods prescribed by the university. Licensed to Lawrence, Kan. 60444. Accommodations, goods, services and national advertisement offered to all students without regard to color, creed or national orientation. Opinions expressed are not necessarily intended as an offer of employment.
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1
Friday, February 23,1973
5
University Daily Kansan
No Political Slogans to Be Allowed During International Club Exhibition
This year's International Club Exhibition will not feature any political slogans or attacks on any national groups, according to Mona Hammam, Potsdam, N.Y.
Representatives from the member nation
groups met Wednesday to begin planning the annual exhibition which will open April
AURH Asks...
The club was recently criticized by Hillel Unz, professor of electrical engineering, and his wife, Linda.
(Continued from Page 1)
propriate for residence halls," he said. "Many of the magazines and periodicals were mailed directly to the dean of women's office, and some concerned the administration of certain programs that wouldn't be applicable to residence halls."
In a letter to Thomas last week, Taylor said that many of the questioned books were placed in the much used central library," known as Mom's resource Library or library.
Thomas said funds designated for improving residence hall libraries apparently had been "donated" to the Women's Resource Library in the form of book
"This, to the best of our knowledge, was apparently done without consultation with any recognized residence hall governing Thomas said in a prepared statement."
Thomas said he would request a meeting sometime next week at which Taylor and members of the AURH executive board would request and the board would expend the additional expenditures.
Beisner said many of the questioned expenditures had been checked and could be verified. He spent 10 at the libraries in the five residence halls administered by Taylor revealed that most of the books and magazines purchased with him could not be found in the hall libraries.
Walter Smith, associate dean of women, said Thursday night that some of the "questioned" books and periodicals could be found in the Women's Resource Library.
Money taken from vending machines in
Beisner said the administration of vending machine rebates was handled differently by the dean of men's office. McColum, Templin, Ellsworth, and Joseph R. Pearson halls have 5 per cent of the vending machine rebate returned to funds at the University business office. The money is not used for the dean of men's office," Beisner said.
the five halls administered by Taylor is put into a community account under her jurisdiction. Requests for expenditures in the account must be cleared by her office.
Beisner said a proposal was introduced Jan. 20 to the University Housing Committee to establish identical policies at the offices of the dean of women and the dean of administration of relations to the halls. The proposal has not been voted on, yet he said.
Swim Meet Tickets Are Available Now
Tickets for the Big Eight Conference swimming and diving championships, to be held March 1 at the University of Kansas natatorium in Robinson Gym, are now on sale at the KU athletic ticket office in Allen Field House.
Prices for the afternoon session, which start at 1 p.m. on March 1 and 2 at noon on March 3, are 75 cents for KU students and $1.50 for adults.
The evening sessions start at 7:30. Tickets are $1 for students and $2 for adults.
The KU swimming team will be gunning for the six consecutive conference championship.
Unz wrote to Cindy Stineinger, Kansas City, Kan., junior and chairman of the Student Executive Committee, and protested the club's political activities.
Unz requested that the Student Senate, which funds the club, rule that funds be given to the club for its exhibition under the condition that all exhibition booths and evening performances of a political nature be prohibited.
are also requested that the Student
Committee enforce the non-
political rule.
Une's letter states that the International Club's exhibition last year included at least one booth with numerous anti-USA and anti-alteration slugs and political propaganda.
The letter states that in previous years when funds for the club were allocated by the University administration there was a general rule that neither the exhibition nor the student Senate was anything of a political nature. There is no similar rule by the Student Senate, Un said.
Abdullah Al-Awdawi, Kuwait junior and International Club president, said that he had been surprised by Uzn's letter. He said all exhibits and programs for the exhibition had to be approved by members of all the exhibitors, comprising the International Club.
"We are not going to lead massive propaganda against anyone in the world," he said. "Our real business is to work together."
Steiner said she would sit in on the planning of the exhibition although she wanted to see it.
"Right now they specify that no member can attack another," she said. "Any club that does not adhere to that rule will not get their money."
"It doesn't look like they need a hand in it right now."
Steiniger said that even if some action
he didn't take, she wasn't sure what the senate could do.
The representatives who met Wednesday set the guidelines of no political slogans and no attacks on other nations, Hammam said. They also organized two committees to handle arrangements for food, programs and exhibits at the exhibition.
Search Group Will Hash Out Interview Results
"The traveling committee will report to the full committee their impressions, on a comparative basis, of all the people they have interviewed so far." Von Ende said.
The Campus Advisory Committee for the selection of a new chancellor will hear a report Sunday on the results of candidate interviews, according to Richard Von Ende, executive secretary and secretary of the committee.
"This meeting will effectively decide who will be seen in the intensive secondary stage." Von Ense said. "The five finalists will come out of this group."
The meeting Sunday, which will last all day, will be extremely crucial, Von Ende said. The interviewers will present their views about which candidates should be invited back for the second round of interviewing, he said. There were 30 candidates being considered when the initial phase began earlier this month.
Once the full committee has decided which candidates will be invited back, they will set up a schedule for the second round of interviewing, he said. The schedule will be based on the availability of candidates and some concern will be given to time limits. He said the second round of interviewing would fast through most of March.
"We would like to move faster, but the transportation of committee members and their families is not a priority."
Malott Phones Used For Brooklyn Calls
The department of chemistry reported to Traffic and Security Wednesday that between Nov. 18 and Jan. 3, six unauthorized phone calls had been placed from four phones in four-floor rooms of Malott Hall.
The report said that $8.95 worth of directal nocturnal phone calls had been placed to Brooklyn, N.Y., 212-443-0749. The湖西 Bell Telephone Co.
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The program is organized by the foreign study office at KU and involves study visits from abroad in the international understanding. The students receive academic credit for such study, which ranges from 30 credits for a one-year program to six credits for a short summer program.
A group of 16 students arrived in Lawrence Wednesday for a two-day orientation at the University of Kansas and visited Costa Rica on a study abroad program.
Students Stop Here on Way To Costa Rica
The 12 women and four men who comprise the group leaving for Costa Rica attended talks yesterday at the Kansas Union State University that might arise in a different culture.
"Students are our best export commodity. They can do a lot to change the negative image of the American abroad," Anita Herzfeld, foreign study adviser, said.
The group leaves for San Jose on Saturday and will spend the next 10 months in Hawaii.
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Use Kansan Classifieds
6
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
AUGUSTINE
Top: Children exhibit their rhythm and moves to the fast fiddlin' tunes of Billy Spears. Bottom: Kevin Polcyn enjoys a refreshing yawn after a strenuous work-out on the playroom floor.
Photos by Carl G. Davaz Jr.
1988
Adele Johnson
Carolina Lang gleems with an expression of satisfaction.
Enter the World of Child's Play
By KEVIN SHAFER Kanson Staff Writer
The world of a child, if it could be described at all in words, might be summed up as simplistic and beautiful. To the four-year-old children at Hilltop Day Care Center, the world is not only simplistic and beautiful, but also fun.
The setting was a dreary, damp Wednesday—a day which might have appeared to the average adult as one that could only produce problems and gloomy feelings. But the only complaint that children could sense was the fact that all their friends, could reister was that they had to stay inside.
Kelly shily admitted that she had stayed inside all day and played. From left, Andrea and Sarah were proud when the teacher asked them to answer the question, "What is your favorite activity?"
The answer was simple—"blocks." Her reason showed that society had not discouraged her talent when she explained. "To
The future is a hard concept to grasp for a four-year-old. Today-
kids begin to plan for the next day after reaching the point of the child's life.
"Do you hope that it's sunny tomorrow so that you can go outside and play?" she was asked.
"Oh, I'll play inside," she said.
"Would you rather play inside than outside," was the next pressing question.
"No, I can do both," said the young architect with a tactful air of confidence.
Besides the building blocks, other foundations of fun can be experienced at the center. Bouncing balls, miniature fire engines and even a tiny car are fun games of fun for the four-year-old packages of energy.
Assistants and directors lose their images of teachers in the eyes of the children and become friends and playmates. But as is easily demonstrated by games like chess, checkers or even just a romp around the room, playmates can teach their friends.
The center itself was designed and constructed so that the children would be able to play in a "honey atmosphere." The result, of course, was a home where children could play without having to but after visiting Hilton, one would have to admit
At a certain time during the day, even the children shed their roles as playmates as they are each given an opportunity to mingle with children of other ages. At this time, many of the children can participate in activities that help their expert advisors on the hazards of life with the "younger set."
that Old Mother Hubbard certainly had it made in the shade.
The center is divided into different levels for the different age groups. One age group, for instance the four-year-olds, meets together on one floor of the building and other groups meet on other floors.
THE WORLD IS A WARM PLACE
One unidentified young lad expounded that the children were going to have a valentine party. He was asked when the party
Judy Bencivengo, director of Hilltop Day Care Center.
Entertainment is obviously not lacking in the center. Sometimes the inhabitants of the center enjoy such treats as impromptu musical concerts which turn the ordinary Hilltop into a miniature Woodtop.
The project of one particular day was making valentines. One little girl appeared as if someone had used her for a model because she had every color imaginable artistically smeared over the front of her cotton shirt.
He slyly answered, "Because I did it," which seemed the appropriate answer to such a provocative question.
Spoken like a true leader of tomorrow.
'I don't know," he admitted.
Leslie was busy shaping up a purple valentine that he explained would be given to his mother. He was asked why he chose the color
Projects seem to occupy the children on days in which the weather does not permit playing outside. To the observer, these projects can be considered to be educational.
1976
PARKING LOT
MARK HARRIS
Top Right: Teacher-aid Mark Winkler and Tracy Mengel tackle the challenges of chess. Top left and bottom: Volunteer Phil Klever explains the finer points of Dr. Suess.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 23,1973
7
Earth in Cooling Period, Prof Says
By DANGEORGE
Kansan Staff Writer
There's another ice Age coming, a noted University of Kansas geologist said recently, but there's no need to bundle up and throw another log on the fire just yet.
"The earth is in a cooling period just now, that's true." Wakefield Dort, professor of geology, said recently. "But it's only a minor fluctuation, in comparison, but it will be at least 10,000 years before we enter another full glacial period."
Dort, who specializes in the study of glacial geology and the history of the Pleitecum Age, responded to a view in the February issue of Science Digest Magazine that another Ice Age could be as near as 200 years away.
That opinion was expressed by Cesare Emiliani, a University of Miami geologist, who reached his conclusion by studying cores of sediment from the bottoms of the Caribbean Sea, and the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
IT HAS LONG BEEN accepted by geological experts that the Ice Age began approximately one million 100,000-year periods of warmth. The last of these glacial periods
supposedly ended between 10,000 and 12,000 years ago.
Emilianti's core samples, however, have thrown a wrench into the works. From his studies, which were begun in 1955, Emilianti concluded that there were seven, not four, glacial periods and that each was much shorter than 100,000 years in length.
As is usually the case with new ideas,
Emiliam's claim has been greeted with
something less than enthusiasm by others in his field.
"EMILIANA HAS BEEN a throne in the "sides of Pleistocene geologists for 15 years," Dort said. "I don't mean to imply he's wrong. He's a hard worker and I've never heard anyone discredit him personal information that doesn't fit that of others.
"But he's also looking at different evidence that are others, so maybe he's got it."
Dort said that Emilian differed in that he chose his samples from underwater, whereas others took samples from dry land. Dort might be more reliable, since there was less chance of them having been disturbed.
THE BIGGEST question concerning Emilian's conclusions, Dort said, is dif-
Judge Rules on Motions In Recent Gould Hearing
District court Judge James W. Paddock filed decisions on two motions by the attorneys of Randolph E. Gould, 23, Overland II and Division II, Douglas County District Court.
In the first decision, Judge Paddock denied a statement by Gould's attorneys that the acts Gould is charged with could not have injured persons according to testimony given during a preliminary hearing.
Gould is charged with attempted property destruction and with endangering the lives of two individuals during a bomb throwing incident May 14, 1970, at the home of Daniel Young, who was Douglas county attorney, at that time.
"The last glacial period left most of the evidence of what they were like," Dort said. "And it was known long ago that there were variations within the periods."
The other decision concerned whether to suppress evidence of two prior actions concerning Gould. In one case, Gould and seven other persons were named in a suit which ordered them not to create distrust. This case resulted from actions occurring in April 1969, in which an Army ROTC review was canceled and campus disturb-
Dort said these variations were simply cooling or warming trends that interrupted the gradual rise or decline of a glacial lake. These lasted from 50 to 200 years, he said.
ficuly in matching Emiliantl's chart of the glacial periods with the former chart. Emiliantl has said that he believes the periods he's charted occurred over the last million years. Dert said that he thought they might just be fluctuations that have "occurred in the glacial period" or 300,000 years," instead of major glacial periods themselves.
WHEREAS MANY geologists believe the earth is now in an interglacial period of warmth, Dort said he thought the earth was still in the declining stages of a glacial period. Although some experts have seen the gradual cooling of the earth's temperature since the turn of the century as a sign of an impending Ice Age, Dort says it is not necessary to anticipate that it's likely to get much warmer before the ice starts spreading from the poles.
bances were created, Judge Paddock ruled that this defense used in the current attack against Gogol.
Judge Paddock ruled to allow no evidence from the other conviction against Gould, which resulted from a rock throwing incident on May 6, 1971, at the KU Military Science building, because the present case against Gould occurred between the time of the rock throwing incident and Gould's arrest.
A jury trial is set for March 14.
"When early pioneers went out to the Rockies in the 1800s, it was much more expensive than it is now," he said. "And in a real interglacial period, it would still be much warmer that it is now. In past periods, there was no evidence of the frost-action that we see today."
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AMONG GEOLOGICAL theories that are open to conjecture, Dort said, the figure attributed to the beginning of the Ice Age was certainly one.
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"From what I've heard," he said, "the one million year figure was just picked out
of the air in a beer hall in Australia when someone pushed a professor to make a complaint.
"But it's in all the books now and everyone's grown to accept it. That why it's so hard for many geologists to take action," Ms. Aiola said, but out something they've grown up with."
Another misconception that many people have, said Dort, concerns what exactly will take place when the next major glacial period occurs. Contrary to the belief of many, he said, the entire world will not be covered with a sheet of ice.
"THE WHOLE WILD doesn't undergo a change," he said. "We can expect the ice to reach as far as Cincinnati, Ohio, because that's about as far as it got before. In this area, it did reach Lawrence and, in fact, ended close to the Wakarua River."
Dort said that even with ice in Kansas temperature would not be farther south would not be more affected.
"Oklahoma would be cooler, of course, but southern Texas would still be warm and it still be warmer in Mexico than it is here now. And, as far as any one can tell," he said, "it's still going to be hot, humid and terrible near the equator."
Correction
The Student Senate compilation of candidates who filed for office incorrectly listed John Briley, Burlingame, Calif., freshman, as a candidate for sophomore class treasurer. Briley is a candidate for sophomore class vice president.
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Film and Talk on Venereal Disease by Mr. Lockhart (state dept. of Epidemiology)
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Use Kansan Classifieds
8
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Prof Urges Acupuncture Research
James Hellesheim, professor of education at the University of Kansas, told the Faculty Forum Thursday that the United States should embrace research on acupuncture with gusto rather than continued snubbing of the oriental technique.
"It sets us back scientifically not to study it," he said. "Other countries are far ahead of us."
Hillesheim has been acquainted with the techniques for over 10 years through study and personal treatment. He put together a 30 minute television special on acupuncture
"I'm not completely sure what therapeutic value it has," he said, "but there is enough evidence to show that it causes physiological changes."
Hillesheim said that although there was no conclusive evidence to substantiate the causal effects which acupuncture is alleged to have on certain medical problems, he had seen enough studies with sufficient procedural control to give him a positive
attitude toward some of the therapeutic claims.
HE SAID he would like to see many studies replicated in the United States so that definite conclusions about the effectiveness of acupuncture could be drawn.
According to Hilleheim, there is a minimal amount of research on acupuncture in the United States and several states in China. Together because of humidity toward it.
He said that many other states, including Kansas, had laws that restricted the use of acupuncture to medical doctors. This had virtually eliminated the practice because there were few doctors who knew the technique now he said.
Interest in acupuncture in the United States focuses on its use as "a handmaid for surgery," in the form of anesthesia, according to Hillsheim. The Chinese had been using it in other ways for several thousand years before they discovered that it could be used as such a "handmaid," he said.
One of the most dramatic reasons for the cynicism of American scientists and the American Medical Association is the fact that acupuncture, in its basic form, is based upon an oriental cosmology which is known to Western man, Hillesheim said.
The underlying assumption in acupuncture is that the body and its organs, as well as the nervous system, must balance between two diametrically opposed forces, Hillesheim said. These forces, the Yin and the Yang, are supposedly brought into balance through the acupuncture points.
HILLESHEM SAID these ideas are threatening to the western doctor who has been brought up to look at the universe and man's relationship to it in another way.
"If you buy 'traditional acupuncture calls the whole thing' (Western cosmology)
Along with the balancing principle of the Yin and the Yang, Hilleheim said, an important element in his own work.
are certain channels, or meridians, of energy flow in the body. The placing of needles is by a map that marks off the points where blood where these channels flow, he said.
"It's based on the theory that there are meridians that connect the external parts of the body to the internal organs," Hillsheim said, "As the theory goes, you can influence the function of the internal organs by inserting needles into the skin."
According to Hillsheim, the insertion depth of the thin steel needles, which are seldom sterilized, depends upon the amount of fat at the point of insertion.
He said the needles can be inserted as deeply as two inches or as shallow as a skin prick, and can remain there from a fraction of a second to 30 minutes.
While emphasis in the U.S. is on the anesthetic aspect of acupuncture, Hillshee测, the Chinese use it as a method of pre-surgery pain management, and health and not solely as a cure for problems.
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The Lawrence Lettuce Boycott Committee is planning to picket and distribute lettuce from the Kansas State University, 711 W. 23rd St., from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. People needing rides are asked to meet at the Kansas Union by 10 a.m. daily. For more information call 841-5374.
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Burris said the Park Resources Authority was not concentrating on enforcement of theft or vandalism.
Sale Ends Wednesday, Feb. 28
Park Officials Favor Leniency In Permit Action
State park officials favor modification and enforcement of existing regulations instead of a bill now before the Kansas Senate that would eliminate park visitors' permits that are now required, Iyun Burri Hammond said. "We Park Resources Authority, said recently.
One of the recent innovations in state park law enforcement is a Rangerette program, be said. Rangerettes are girls who check permits at gates of state parks and are hostesses, thus freeing park law officers to participate inandalism and other unlawful activities.
Burris said that the bill before the Senate would open state parks to any moving or parked vehicle, and that a permit would pollener be required.
Burris said there was also a less expensive permit available that allowed a car to drive through state parks as long as the car's occupants did not stop to picnic.
WERE $37.95
The existing permit, which costs $5, is a windshield sticker that allows all occupants to drive on the road without having to wear it.
Revenue from sticker sales was approximately $350,000 last year, Burris said. More than 1,400,000 cars toured Kansas and 27,700 cars were turned away.
"We've eliminated vandalism to a degree that provide better law enforcement," Bureau of Justice said.
Campus Briefs
Bike Club Race
The Mt. Onetw Bicycle Club will sponsor the first race in its Intramural Racing Series at 12:48 p.m. Sunday. The race will be held on Saturday, March 6, and consist of racing in four categories: women, intermediate (ages 12-14), novice and advanced. The course will be a six mile circuit with two turns, including a longer course for advanced riders. For further information, call 841-2466.
Jewish Spaghetti
The KU Hilbul Club will sponsor a $1 spaghetti dinner at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Jewish Community Center, 9th and Highland St. The dinner is open to the public and is free to members. After the dinner, Students for Israel will show a film.
Application forms for persons seeking positions as SUA officers and board members are available in the SUA office in Cincinnati, OH or in Boston, MA, turned in by p. 5.mon. March 2. Interviews for the positions will take place the first week of March. The executive committee of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation will interview applicants who are available as the following: president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, Festival of the Arts Director and board members in range of films, fine arts, forums, public recreation, recreation special events and travel.
SUA Positions
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University Daily Kansan
Friday. February 23.1973
9
KANSAS
Kansan Photo by CHRIS CANNELLA
Dale Haase Prepares for 'Huske
the Hamas Requires for Huskers
Oklahoma senior a member of the "Bombers"
By STAN WILSON Kansan Sports Writer
KU Tries to End 'Husker Jinx
Everybody wants to play Nebraska for
music. Then they want body but the
international basketball team has a black back.
Although Nebraska has had their troubles winning, in two meetings so far this season the Jayhawks have been unable to beat the Cornushkus, a feat which other Big Eight teams have had little trouble accomplishing.
In the rematch at Allen Field House, the Jayhawks received a blow that would be felt for the rest of the season. At the time they were much in contention for the Big Eight title.
"We didn't respond from the Kansas State loss over in the tournament," KU Coach Ted Owens said. "I think they shot the ball and call it and we turned the ball over too much."
In the first clash between the two teams in the second round of the Big Eight Pre-Session Tournament, the 'Huskers took a close one from the 'Hawks, 74-72. The loss came less than 24 hours after KU had been in the opening round by Kansas State.
rs
Nebraska, however, put a damper on the title hops. They came out hot and played what was perhaps their best game of the season, but they were not in the game, playing perhaps their worst.
"Over here," Owens said. "They played extremely well and we played very poorly." Needless to say, revenge is in order when KU travels to Lincoln Saturday.
The game will be televised regionally over the TVS network at 2:10 p.m. The game also will be broadcast over the college basketball Network, WIBW and WREN in Toekee.
Seniors Disillusioned with Season
On paper, KU has the better team.
At the ripe age of 22, University of Kansas basketball players Wilson Barrow and Dale Hase are learning what it's like to be over the hill. Hase faces the situation with resignation. Barrow, the team's coach, is dislaughtered and even a little bitter.
By PAULSTEVENS Kansan Sports Writer
"Never trust anyone over 20" has become the tacit sign of the youth movement that led to a surge in college program. With the hopes for a Big Eight title dashed by five conference losses, the Jayhawks have switched their focus to next year. The team's seniors, are not part of these future plans.
This is not to say that the two 6-4 forwards have been permanent fixtures on the bench. Both are members of the Bombers," a former coach of the team, KU Coach Ted Owens inserts when his starters become sluggish. But as soon as the Bombers reestablish the Jayhawks' momentum, they are returned to the bench after the sophomores and a junior—take the floor.
Being relegated to a second line of defense because of age or ability is a fact of life in sports. It eventually happens to every player. But it is never easy to take.
BARROW AND HAASE were starters throughout their basketball careers before coming from junior colleges to Kansas last season. Barrow started in 12 of 26 games last year and 11 of 21 this season. Haase has four starts and四席 four starts last year and one this season.
"I never sit on the bench until I came here," Haase said. "I guess it's just something you have to adjust to. But you always want to get in there and play, score or win." He said it could be a lot of times when you feel you could play better than the man that's in there."
When he does get to play, Haase is one of the hardest working players on the floor. He epitomizes the Bombers' mission, which is to increase momentum to the Jayhawks. The strategy worked against Oklahoma State last week and resulted in a KU victory. In Monday's game against Colorado, the Bombers won by one point, but the Buffaloes revealed and won.
"Substituting for the entire first string is a psychological thing—it's trying to prove something to the first team," Barrow said. "But why don't they leave the second team behind? Because they're playing with him, tell who's playing hard and who isn't." A lot of people are sacrificing out there who don't.
really get a chance. Then, who am I to decide??
Barrow is disillusioned with the season but says that when he plays, "I just play hard because there's nothing I can do about it.
After the season started, things weren't clicking off for us as the coaches figured. I guess they thought they might as well do nothing but put this year and worry about next year."
On a broader scale, Barrow's disillusionment extends to the entire style of play in the Big Eight conference, which he beams "a blub man's world."
THE JAYHAWK captain, whose floor dues are performed by guard Tom Kivisto, is a graduate of the run-and-shool classroom of junior college basketball. Zone courts for both games are rure in junior college ball. Thirty-seconds clock are not necessary.
"In junior college, ball, only the strong survive," Barrow, who played for two years at Cisco, Tex., junior college, said. "It's a more domestic type of basketball in the Big Eight—a whole bunch of strategy based on high school numbers." The second clock hasn't speeded up the game—now they just figure out plays to beat the clock. You've got to shoot the ball.
"Forwards aren't supposed to dribble the ball here—just the guards. So when a forward gets out front on a fast break, he isn't used to handling the ball. They don't like anything fancy, like dribbling behind your back—everything is basic fundamentals, things I learned in high school and junior college.
"The whole thing has been a big disappointment to me. I thought when I came here that the Big Eight would be great. I had to adjust to its style and I just don't fit in."
Haase, too, said that the adjustment from senior to junior college basketball was difficult.
'MY CONFIDENCE was really built up in junior college,' he said. 'But when I got the ball, it went down to tempo down, I ended basketball, though, and it's hard to face the end of my career.'
Barrow hops his basketball career will not end this season. He said that two professional teams had expressed interest in him, so that he would attend tryouts this summer.
"If I was that, people wouldn't be going to me," he said, with a trace of hurt.
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Elected captain by a consensus vote of his teammates, Barrow is well-liked and generally soft-soken. But he feels that he has been wronged—by a stress on the future of the company. He is not pleased. Play whether his complaints are justified or not, it is a sad way to make an exit.
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Physically, Nebraska just does not match up. But, it remains to be proved on the ground.
Looking at this content, Owena said that the important thing for the Hawks would be to play.
The KU coach plans to start the game with a man-to-man full court defense Saturday. At KU, the 'Hawks started with a zone and fell prey to some dead-eye outside shooting by freshman Jerry Fort and junior Tom Bauer. Fort is a 6-4 guard and Harris a 6-2 forward.
"We're going to have to play aggressive on defense," Owens said. "We're going to have to keep pressure on by pressing and with fast breaking."
KU may go into the contest under full strength. For沃瑞唐Smith, a starter in the tournament, KU was 2-1.
The Jayhawks will have a distinct height advantage over the Cornshuskers. NU coach Joe Cipriano will use a front line of the 6-2 Harris and 6-4 Steve Erwin at forwards and 6-7 Don Jackson at the post. Fort, 6-3, and Tony Riehl. B4, will be at guards.
brushed hip. Hewens expects Smith to be able to play at肝. he but the 8-4 jumping jack with his left hand.
KU stands 4-5 in conference play, and although they are not yet mathematically eliminated from the title, in all probability they are out of the race.
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'73 ROCK CHALK REVUE
HOCH AUDITORIUM March 2 and 3,1973 8:00 p.m.
Tickets NOW on sale:
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Saturday night $2.25 & $2.75
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MOTHER MARY'S, 2406 IOWA is giving a FREE BEER to all Friday night ticketholders.
10
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kansan
'Up the Sandbox' Bites the Dust
By ROBERT MILLER
Kansan Reviewer
If you've been to the movies in Lawrence latex, you're no doubt noticed that the theaters have raised the price of admission. The explanation given is that the increase is unavoidable because the film distributors have raised the flat rate and percentage rentals being asked for such widely publicized and successful recent releases as *The Shape of Water* and *Coraline*. In count for why it's taken so long to get here). Perhaps paying more to see a truly great film can be justified on the basis of receiving greater value for a greater investment. However, the across-the-board price hike also means that in the future you will be paying more to see all of Hollywood's latest blooms, flops, turkey and disap-
With this in mind, Barba Streisand's new film, "Up the Sandbox," becomes an even more intriguing story.
the old admission price.
The film's director, Irvin Kersher, has previously dealt with stories of individuals who create fantasy lives for themselves as substitutes for a dull existence "The Lack of anger in the world," he wrote, to that theme here, but with an important switch. Streisand, playing the Upper West Side housewife of a professor at New York's Columbia University, acts on her fantasies on the screen, instead of only telling the story, as Kersher's earlier protagonists did.
The transition from objective to subjective presentation of a character's fantasizing is quite appropriate for the move to farce, but Paul Zindel's script is just too weak to support its dramatic elements in a mélange of outlandish skits and confused meanings.
Blowing up the Statue of Liberty, joining the Sanibaru tribe of Kenya, or discovering an abandoned mine, is one of the greatest historical mysteries.
anatomy may have at first seemed like marvelous ideas for a woman to toy with while considering the abortion of her third child—but it won't out work that in the finished picture.
Streisand continues to shine amid this matter as a gifted comedienne with star presence, and her director does succeed in creating a comedy within the part (quite a feat in itself).
It's just too bad that their combined efforts yielded so little of value. When she first read the script she was quoted as having exclaimed: "Yeecchhh!" One wonders how she must have greeted the finished product.
KANSAN reviews
TOMMY MURPHY
Kansas Photo by CHRIS MeCLENAGHAN
Commander Cody Pours It On
Rockin' country sound moves crowd
'Commander Cody' Genuine Country
By TIM BRADLEY Kansan Reviewer
The side of their 1966 Greyhound Scenicruiser said "Country & Western Swing Band" and that's exactly what Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen are. They don't play country rock or rockabilly or any of those other hokey hybrids, but genuine country-western, real as rubarb.
The audience at the Red Dog Inn last night watched the Commander and his crew of crazies excel at all the various aspects of aerial traps, sniper rifles, tragedies or zipping through quickie highway tunes. George Fraye, alias Commander Cody, kninked and boogied on the piano, Billy C. Farlow played an unplugged number from the score with Bobby "Blue" Black pedaled the steel.
Andy Stine fiddled and played sax and was backed up by John Tichy on rhythm guitar (he's a Ph.D. in Engineering, too), Lance Dickson on drums, and on bass, Buffalo Bruce Barlow provided the best bottom since Thumper the Rabbit.
The band seems to prefer performing to recording and have been playing the boozehall circuits individually and as a group since the early 60's. Last night, the band performed without being good-time and projected an exuberance and sense of humor that many bands have forgotten the importance of. The Red Dog audience was right with them and added to the performance by creating a very lively atmosphere, whoop up atmosphere. A great show.
Upcoming at the Red Dog Inn are
Weekend Scene
MUSIC
Black Theatre Premiers; 'Matchmaker' Winds Up
SANCTUARY: Oat Willie tonight and Saturday.
ORLAHAM CITY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Presented by the University of Kansas Concert Series at 8:20 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
REED BARON. Humming Bird, formerly
the Chessman square, tonight and Satur-
day.
MOVIES
WHEN THE LEGENDS DIE: 7:25 p.m.
and 9:25 p.m. at Hillcrest I Theater.
LADY SINGS THE BLUES: 7:15 p.m. and
9:45 p.m. at Hillcrest 2 Theater.
DIRTY LITTLE BILLY: 7:30 p.m. and
9:10 p.m. at Hircestrion 3 Theater.
POSEIDEN ADVENTURE: 7:30 p.m.
and 9:40 p.m. at the Varsity Theatre.
UP THE SAND BOX: 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at the Granada Theater.
SUMMER OF 42: 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.
in Woodruff Auditorium.
THEATER
A SOUL, GONE HOME AND WE OWN
A EXPERIMENTAL THEATER at the Experimental Theatre.
THE MATCHMAKER: 8:00 p.m. at the University Theatre.
ART
THE NINETEENTH ANNUAL KANSAS DESIGNER-CRAFTSMAN EXHIBITION:
Now through March 13 in the Student Union Building, sponsored by the department of design.
THIS COULD BE
THE START OF A
NEW WAY OF LIFE!
THIS COULD
THE START
NEW WAY
INTERNATIONAL
SCOUT
BEST BUILDER IN THE WORLD
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1. 如图所示,当物体以 $40\text{ km/h}$ 的速度沿水平方向运动,物体受到的摩擦力大小为多少?
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Here's everything a man must know about outdoor transportation—rugged outdoor power for a weekend car, comfortable smooth handling and easy parking for shopping duty around them. Four 345-micr inch V-8. Automatic transmission air conditioning wheel drive control wheel drive control is as easy as turning on the headlights.
Fleetwood Mac and Joe Hiserman's Tempest, with Captain Beeheart and Spooky
TRADE UP! TRADE IN! GET 'EM UP, SCOUT!
KUHN TRUCK & TRACTOR CO., INC.
1548 E. 23rd 843-2440
YOU MAY BE ASKED TO SIGN
PLAYBOY'S DELIGHT
FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY NIGHT 12:15
UNITED PRODUCERS PRESENT
SWEDISH
WIFE
EXCHANGE
CLUB
THE SEX TEST
1 TOO HUNGRY, AS MAN AND WIFE,
WOULD YOU BE THERE?
2 EVENAKING WITH THE R SINGLE
MEN IN FRONT OF YOUR LOVE?
3 TOULED YOU LIKELY UP IN FRONT
OF YOUR WIFE?
4 LANGUAGE
5 TOULED MAN WITH A
SHEET OF CALCULATIONS
6 TOULED MAN WITH A
SHEET OF CALCULATIONS
7 TOULED MAN WITH A
SHEET OF CALCULATIONS
8 TOULED MAN WITH A
SHEET OF CALCULATIONS
*No one under 18 yrs. admitted*
*Proof of age required*
*Adm. $1.50 - No refunds*
*No outside beaveraes*
I suppose you can take the film as a bungled defense of motherhood and the American family, or you can suspect that it protests badly and a bit too much, thereby causing dissatisfaction. You can tract in favor of their destruction. Taken either way it falls as good entertainment.
Hillcrest
BLACK THEATRE
ENSEMBLE IN BLACK
K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982
Feb. 25-Mar. 6
Use Kansan Classifieds
The Junior Sandee (Double cheeseburger with lettuce and sauce)
SPECIAL
3 for $1.00 A $1.50 Value
Sandy's
Across from Hillcrest
Friday, Saturday and Sunday Only
Sat. Feb. 24 8:20 Hoch
The KU Concert Series
presents
THE OKLAHOMA CITY SYMPHONY
A FINE AMERICAN ORCHESTRA WHICH IS FREE WITH STUDENT I.D.
LIMITED NUMBER OF RESERVED SEATS AVAILABLE AT MURPHY BOX OFFICE
Non-Students
3.00, 3.50, 4.00
TANDBERG
TANDBERG 9000X
TANDBERG
"The Norwegian Products with a World-Wide Reputation"
Today's youthful search for a better quality of life—for credibility, reliability, integrity—for pleasure and enjoyment—harmonizes with Tandberg's own goal: to build these same qualities into each of our products and into the life of those who make and use them.
Tandberg products—receivers, amplifiers, radios, speakers, tape machines—are dynamic, active entities. They provide communication; they establish contact, disseminate information, and create inspiration through the gift of sound.
If better quality is to be achieved, the process of that achievement should be enjoyed as much as the end result. When it comes to products there must be much pleasure in producing the best product; it is the best producer and owner must share in the enthusiasm of the search for quality.
Tandberg does not make products for their own sake. Tandberg produces instruments to generate pleasure, enthusiasm and inspiration—instruments for enrichment, instruments for enjoyment.
TANDBERG
Exclusively at RMS Electronics
724 Mass.
10-6 M-S
841-2672
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 23, 1973
11
Summer Fete Of 'The Bard' Brings Talent
A guest performer and a guest director will help the University Theatre celebrate its fifteenth anniversary this summer by hosting an annual second annual Shakespeare Festival.
The guest director, Jerome Killy, will direct "The Taming of the Srew," Tom Sawyer, who attended KU intermittently between 1949 and 1959, will perform "The State of Man," a one-man play by Shakespeare's tragedies, histories, comedies and sonets.
The festival, which will begin June 4, also will consist of a major production chosen from among "Julius Caesar," "Rome and Juliet" or "Othello." Other major production recreating the world of Shakespeare's women characters, will also be presented.
Kilty has been involved in KU theatre productions before. When the University Theatre celebrated its move to Kilty, it performed a performance played 'Flaistaff in' H. Henry IV, Part 2.'
Kilty has written six plays. Among them are "Dear Liar," based on the correspondence between playwright George Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell, and "Dear Love," by the author, told through their letters to each other.
in 1960 Kilty directed Katherine Cornell and Brian Aherne in the premiere production of "Dear Liar," and he appeared with Mvrna Rose in "Dear Love" in 1970.
Sawyer, the guest performer, performed "Hamlet" in a command performance at the White House in commemoration of the anniversary of the birth of Shakespeare.
He graduated summa cum laude from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London and has degrees in entemology, speech, tournism and English.
Sawyer has performed in many companies including the Old Vic, the Royal Court, the Memorial Theatre Stratford-on-Avon, the Phoenix Theatre, the New York Shakespeare Festival and the American Shakespeare Festival.
Heading this month's nonfiction paperbacks in a superlative collection by young photographers entitled INNER WHITE, and White, edited by Joanna Maturtri and Hy Dales (Pocket, 95 cents). Many of the photographs were exhibited at the Newark, N.J., Museum and at the Museum of Natural History, where they were done by a teenage community group.
PhotoCollection Leads Parade Of Nonfiction
Of considerable topical importance is Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's in CRITICAL CONDITION: THE CRISIS IN AMERICA'S HEALTH CARE (Pocket, $1.50). Kennedy charges that the health care than any other industrialized nation but gets less out of it, that health charges have soared even higher than inflation rates, that this country is 17th in infant mortality, and that one out of five health insurance and can't afford any.
Antony Jay's CORPORATION MAN (Pocket, $1.50) is an examination of information that he wrote for Jay, it Jay wrote a book called Management and Machiabella" that attracted much attention, and his new one should be of interest to people in business, industry, advertising.
Dennis Smith's **REPORT FROM ENGINE CO.** 82 ($.Pocket, $1.50) is about movie Smith describes the work he did for the Bronx South Bronx area, an impoverished neighborhood where crime and drugs are present. The Club already has made this a selection.
IN TWO WORLDS OF CHILDHOOD: U.S. AND U.S. SIZED. (Pocket, $150), Urize Brofrenbrenner contends that American children are more inclined to engage in anticlerical behavior than Russian children. Soviet Union, because of the different patterns of child-rearing in the two cultures.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Graham Green's A SORT OF LIFE (Pocket, $1.25) is one of the best autobiographies in many years. Greene, famous as a novelist, author of "mommy," "Daddy," and "children" childhood, his years at Oxford, his work with the Secret Service, his journalistic days, his early years as a writer. Those who have read "The Power and the Glory," will find "the Matter." The "Commedians" or any other Greene books should enjoy this one.
Arnold Schulman's BАВА (Pocket, $1.25) is about Sathya Sai Bai, spiritual leader of millions in India. Schulman tells how he invites make pilgrimages each year to the holy man. He tells the story without the phoniness that marks some books of this type.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDPOINT
THE CREWBOARD
CUPBOARD
10-5 Monday-Saturday
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
KANSAN WANT ADS
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks, $387 inclus. London depar-
sion campground group campa-
旅 travel (ages 18-35) Africa. India. 3-11 weeks. Write. White
Lift truck. Travel Lid. Box 1497, K.C. Mo,
Maryland.
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Three Days
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE CINDER Shop-3 blks. No. of Kaw. Wood River Beverage Co. gas heating & wood burning, used furniture furnishings, gas heating & wood burning, and stoneware $55, gal steel drum, new bushel and 1/2 ballet basket & wooden crates. Fireplace and 1/2 ballet basket & wooden crates. price charge. Ballet aida cloth, brome & wheat straw. Open to 8 days. 8-32-19; Herb Allenfield, tfr Open to 8 days. 8-32-19; Herb Allenfield, tfr
CARS BOUGH AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vermont, 842-600-9000
G.I. Joe's Used Car
Vermont, 842-600-9000
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAKEHOUSE - The finest
RAY AUDIO STEREO WAKEHOUSE - The finest
work of ours to work in your home.
Kam. 6004-8247, 924-2917,
835-7818, 843-7091.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't,
you're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing-over break MINI-BIKK like, POABLE
over break MINI-BIKK like, POABLE
844-5299 HAUPER CASE IHS bits 2-528
844-5299 HAUPER CASE IHS bits 2-528
"New Analysis of Civilian Civilization"
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier,
4520 W. 38th St.
Fisher 202 Receiver Amp. 28 watts IMS per
Fisher 202 Receiver Amp. 28 watts IMS per
$99.00 Call. 842-7236
For sale. 65 Ford Custom, very dependable, $250
price. 11x47 with window, 12x9 rear door,
before 2 years. 84-125, 84-120 after 10, p.m.
and 3-7pm. Call 312-550-4700.
Dynatek Stereo 70 watt and prep-and amp. Works
good. Must sell $113.00. Call 845-1846-286.
Zenith Stereo for sale with AM-FM Stereo radio,
works well. 190 watts power peak. Power
Art. 845-1846-286.
69 Chev Plexton, top condition, low mileage,
746-843-6653 1:00 p.m. 2-23
846-843-6653 1:30 p.m.
MARTIN D-18 d-guitar with hard shell case.
months old. Ask for Clark. 842-579. 2-27
1988 GTO 2-DR JET, yellow with black vinyl top.
1989 GTO 3-DR JET, yellow with black vinyl top.
1990 GTO 4-DR JET, 841-388-2500 at 5:30 p.m.
PHILIPS GA123 furnatable with Shure V-SC-air can be used in any condition. Paid $22 will sacrifice $16 for a condition. Paid $22 will sacrifice $16 for a condition.
97 Barracuda, 50,000 miles. Good condition. Ra-
dios Park. $19,995 for best offer. Call 843-884-3001, 5-220 or
mail resume to: Ray Sawyer, Reilly Ranch.
MINOLTA SRT for sale. Several lenses also. Call 840-566 to see.
FLAT 124 SPORT COUPE-5-suped, radial air,
airframe, starts early in winter, runs all day at
90 on 28MPC. Reeling seat, radio. Blue-Book.
INTERESTED? Call Chip Leibman. 2:28
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all in the hoover, Eureka, Electrolite, etc. 2-25
918 Mac
Sierra component package-AM/PM Stereo re-
ceiver with 16-channel BCH change headphones and 10 blink
buttons.
FOR SALE - 828 Charger-318-2 Barrel
FOR SALE - 828 Charger-318-2 Barrel
845-2927 (Keep crying)
2-26
4-Channel Stereo component system, AM/FM receiver, PS1800 6-channel changer, AMPS speaker, Stereo speaker 24V
1966 CHEYK II 272. 4, spaced 5,313. Lakewood,
NC. $38.00. Chewy's offers a wider range and
much more. Will trade or offer best **$25**
for CHEYK II 272. 4, spaced 5,313. Lakewood,
NC.
BREAT THE BIRMING AMAZH - April 24, 19th to
June 7, 2015
BREAT THE BIRMING AMAZH - April 24, 19th to
June 7, 2015
Two-week center-pull brake, 8-inch wide,
two-way drive, with optional reverse.
BOOT-UP REINFORCEMENT WHEELS
BOOT-UP REINFORCEMENT WHEELS
SPORTS CAR-1986 Southern Alpine. Roll barn.
Passenger luggage belt throughout. Glass Dilmeir 841-309-2599
and Glenn Carr 841-309-2590.
Such a deal. Used tufe (Arumtong) in good condition with alg-rig $20.00 *Can Suian even charge*
DECOUNT FURNITURE We sell quality, name brand furniture for a variety of sizes. A few extra miles, you can save a lot! Know your furniture! Kansas Avenue. Karachi. Punjab. KSA. Nationation and directions, call 841-3616 between 6-9am.
For sale 65 Glynnshire Sport Spar, automatic transporter, post tree. Good tires. Disableable transport system.
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
HOLIDAY CAMPUS
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
WHY RENT?
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 591)
PEUGECT
65 Built Special 4 drs. 8 cylinders, excellent
travel mileage from call. $900 (to) 205-227
205-227
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe. Snow树. Must Sell.
Econical operation. Call 841-3527. 2-56
Give a tea party with a tea set from the HODGE
PODGE I5 W. 9th.
2-1
For sale by the owner. Small business currently
operating in the area. One day a week, one
day a week, 1 day per week. Priced for quick and
convenient delivery. Call (805) 269-1333.
Super B movie projector $175 now. *No* $100.
Super A movie projector Worth over $200. *No* $100.
Super C movie projector Worth over $200. *No* $100.
FOR RENT
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall retreats, 2 bedrooms w/Study, Quilt quiet barn location; Pool and gas-light, landedpea management, 2500 West 6th Avenue - 843-753-8128, Libby Co.
Pougeot uo.s $117.50
For the latest up to the minute listing in rental
offering, go to www.kentuckyhousing.com/
250. 801 Kentucky.
TOF CARP from CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP
PARKING in FAR-FLORG LOTS?
The 2 best locations from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking parked lot. Free Campus parking rates. Available on rates. furniture available. ideal roomates. Saturdays Apts. 123rd. Avt. 9 - 11am or 8:31-21:36.
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet courtyard. You can walk to schools and shopping areas, or watch sports games or play basketball, use the indoor game rooms, or just relax by your fireplace. These apartments are rented at $1,300/month.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
Come by and see these apartment apartments. Rent
will be $125/month. Water bills will be paid. Lesses of various lengths are
available. Call (800) 479-3965.
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
Evenings call 842-7831
2411 Louisiana
MALLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
Sleeping room, single and double, furnished for
15 and 2 blocks. Phone: 843-767-8171,
15 and 2 blocks from Union. Phone: 843-767-8171
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and unfurnished. All bathrooms heated, heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities included. Call 643-8229 or see at 171 W. 19th st., abd. 91p.
RIDE ON BICYCLES
Ant for sublease. Clean furnished, wall-to-wall
furniture. 32'x16' unit. 2-wall
From Union, no pet. Phone # 8457 7677
From Union, no pet. Phone # 8457 7677
842-5552
For rent. Clam, quiet apts, with carpeting, dishwashers, laundry room, campus. K宴 Apts. 1025 Minneapolis. 842-967-8888.
Hillview Apartments—1745 W. 24th St. One and two bedroom apartments $99 and up. 842-446-318.
Nice studio apt. Close to campus. Off-street parking.
1422 Albany 841-213-12
2-26
**COUNTYLIVING** - 4 ml to K-U. *Sapienza furn.* room, bed, chair. **C., C., C.,
2-bedroom apartment-885 -unfurnished
Clean and
modern, 106th St. 843 -front Street Terrace
916 -10th St. 843 -828-Space
2. bedroom house unfurnished $100. Call 842-
6908
Sleeping rooms with Kitchen privileges 55. Call 842-6098.
2-28
If you call us, we have a. 1 and 2 bedroom
Wood APARTMENTS: 843-116
WOOD APARTMENTS: 843-116
2-28
Large unfulfilled apt_ utilities paid—dove and
refrig. 1500. Call: 842-698-00
2-28
Very small house—furnished and utilities pal-
$83.50, Call 824-6080.
2.28
843-8484
Nicely furnished apt for 1 or 2 students. Close
to campus and a walk to the main street.
Gallant stair access to campus. Phone 943-854-381
and call to arrange.
Ant for Rent, 1022 Ohio ST. NO CONTACT Antp, electric telephone See anytime Call 817-349-3655
NEEDED A SUMMER PLACE! Meadowbrook has it. Studs, 1 and 2床room, great recreational facilities—fairy loft, basketball and tennis courts, barbecue grill, kitchen, gym. Come to our Open House, Sunday, March 11.
Parmished apartment for rent. Single bedroom at
19.W.14th. Call Steve in 1.n.m.843-B21-63.
Alexander's
NOTICE
-Wide selection of gifts
-Cash & carry flowers every day
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms, all areas,
all prices, no attraction fees. Home Loans.
www.marvelhouse.com
1515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q. We Bar-B-Q in Quean on 24th Street, 112-609-3850. A stab at a店 beetle. 1200 large lb plate (18 oz.) $3. The sandwich is beef sand ice. $5ound of beef $3. 1 chicken plate (18 oz.) $3. The sandwich is Phone VI-2-819-3158. Michigan St. bar-b-Q.
Cash & carry flowers every day
824 Iowa 842-1320
No charge, list your houses, apartments, duplexes,
families, schools, businesses, and fortnights. For more info call Home Locator.
Discount prices with savings up to 40 off an ample range of new and pre-owned furniture. Country Store, 707 North 2nd, open 9-7 days.
Ovad Quaker Meeting wants new Friends. We need you!
Please contact Olivia at Ovad Quaker Place. Poor information will affect Auction.
Thank you!
(Kern 500-1508) This spring, as campus coordi-
tials Write to P.O. Box 2108, San Jose 94103
JAYHAWK KARATE TOURNAMENT
*existing*
*Community Building, Title & Vermont*
*Community Building, Title & Vermont*
For birth control information and abortion coun-
sell and referral call the Information Center,
800-271-3500.
FUN FACTS ABOUT VEMERALI DIESEASE
Monday, 7:00 p.m. Union: SOCIALIZING-PITCH,
MIDWEST USA; for referral to office.
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. Box 424; for referral to office.
WORK ARROAD! International Jobs -Eureka in all fields-Social Sciences, Business Sciences, Science, Education, Travel, Infrastructure, Nurses, travel. Include Student Summer Job Job Opportunities. Work on site and construction work. Ideas for part- or full-time area and construction work. Pay only $4.00. Money back guarantee. Apply early. Apply to the International Employment Box K12-K25. Browse My Resume.
Why buy a landlord's property for him with your own? We can help you do it, along with your diploma to 36 or 48 rent. rent can be made on the same basis again. Why not check into a way to save money by learning to not teach your children nothing to learn the detail's C Wheel or H wheel as a way to learn them.
FOLK DANCE at 123 Robinson Gym Friday, Tues.
Wednesday for 9am and 10am, and request dancing "Your student activity"
for Sunday. Call (617) 554-3888.
FLY TO EUROPE HALF PRICE. Save up to $400 on special round-trip charter flights departing & returning this summer. Write: Del菲 & Hilton Travels Utah #8109 Drive 2-23
25% off all clothing at the HODGE PODGE, 1.5
W, 9th.
Just arrived new shipment of earrings at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 3-1
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
tablets, 842-7098.
tt
Wanted: Date for Rock Chalk Claim. Must make a deposit of $10,000 to assist with duties. Selected. Cancel. Bernie Schwartz, at 625-874-9288.
Computing. wife needs ride. From 31st Street.
Telephone: (212) 870-9564
8-20 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. or late.
Phone: (817) 641-8441
Tony's 66 Service
Be Prepared!
tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
SPECIAL
Fender MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Sold EXCLUSIVELY
is Date Nite
Friday Nite
You and Your Date
X
Guitars
Acoustics
Recorders
Accessories
Rise
Keyboard Studios
1903 W. 645-3007
1903 E. 645-3007
Open Evening
3 games each
$2.00
3 games for $1.00
Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
WEST CAMBRIDGE
KANSAS UNION
Jay Boul
8 8 8 8
DISCOUNT PRICES WITH PERSONALIZED SERVICE
Mass
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
...
843
8500
Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates to share a
kitchen. Req. new year in Jayhawker.
Call 843-760-2266
2-26
Wanted: Female Roommate to live in house;
large private room; near campus; rent $2.25
-$3.25 per month
D desperately need rider from Kansas City to KU. I don't know how to get me there. If interested I contact 843-904 or 852-6735.
Need 1 n roommates. 4 bdmn, modern duplex
Rent $100 + utl. phone 842-6644. 2-27
Wanted Experienced grower who really grows
Vaccines. Requires 4 years of experience.
HONALEY A. HOPPE, Harper Warr. Id # 13068
942-785-2400 www.hoppe.com
Moved from country. Have 1 year. Old parede-hired.
Fully qualified. Will work (from 8 August). Will supply food. Call 842-588-2588.
Cocktail waitresses waited affectiona & ev-
ections. Call 843-9800. The Flamingo班
2-27
Pinkiehorses for our picnic baskets. HODGE PODGES, 15 W. 9th. 3-1
Ts sell Gibson EK-2 hollow bass guitar or bass
guitar for a 16-speed bicycle. Call 843-6825
or visit www.gibson.com.
Wanted: GHI to educe my part of Jajahawk
roommate, to be going to a roommate
roommate to be waiting to be with husband.
The job is to keep up with the needs.
Wanted: Furniture refrinter to share Mass. Aveyard with related business. 842-708-9, 2-27
LOST
One brown wallet vicinity McColum Hall Im-
pregnant 864-237-1599 anytime. Give me a reward. call 864-237-1599
Last Valentine's Day, in Bouillet Area place area, a man and woman met by mistake. The pregnant and were very worried about her pregnancy. A young woman, visiting the area,
HEWAID *Loc.* workstation with a diamond on
SENTIMENTAL WORD *Hooded Word* found in
Phoenix, AZ.
LOSST: Intelligent, sensitive cat, blood results. LOST: Intelligent, sensitive cat, blood results. MIS: Intelligent, sensitive cat, blood results. My friend by bi phone. Please call 842-729-1289
Lead Tuesday near Gliese's friendly tail-wagging
cat, the Tiger. We'll meet him at Tinker Tap.
Please bring your Tinker Tap to class.
Employment Opportunities
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
11. Miles North of the
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu Shrimp, Chicken, Hemp Shrimp, to K.C. Shakes Our menu is and has always been so versatile in our quality list.
Phone
843-1431
Consider College Men interested in part time
work. Send resume to W. O. Brennell 620 West Hills
Boulevard, Suite 813.
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
Due to our expanded business we are in need of both male and female jobs. Apply in person, online or by phone.
HELP WANTED
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitresses
Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Weeknight and weekend hours. Phone 843-656-1001.
FOUND
SERVICES OFFERED
**JOBS IN ALARSA** Available now. This hand-
book offers the following:
• Plan YOUR ORD-WARRANT $2,00 JA.
• Use your ORD-WARRANT to save money.
Open 24 hrs.
Young female cat Tail. Night (2/13) -must identify.
Call Kathe. 864-6371. 2-23
Slide rule in O none on 2-19. Describe it and its yours.
Call 843-1379, 5-p.m.
OVENSESS JOBS—summer or permanent. Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa, etc. all professions. Job code 12503. Free intro. write—TWK Co. Dept. 82, 22500 Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704 - 82, 22500 Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, CA 94704
Swinging and altering for the college girl. Pick up old shirts, new ones, lingerie, wear them, coal beams and refined - 8-4 days per week.
Handcrafted belts, purses and sandals from the leather of feathers mounted at the HODGE PUDGE 34-14
TYPING
DRIVE IN
AND COOP IN
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
CHEAPER HIER EVERYDAY $1.00 pibber and
HAMMERS HIER $1.50 pibber. HAMMERS HIER
120, HAMMERS 120, Play House Football,
Pibber!
NORTH SIDE
24 HOUR
KWIKI
CAR WASH
Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
math-tutorial for 2. Math 2, 2c and 65, Requiem
Rate. Call 841-2915 and nik for Grace. 2-26
Independent
Coin-Op
2 BLKS NORTH of KAW BRIDGE
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pen type. Accurate and prompt. Excellent spelling and corrected writing. Phd: 843-9554. Mrs. Wright.
Plenty of Pressure Soap and Heat
Coin-Op Laundry & Dry Cleaners 19th & La. 843-9631
If You're Planning on FLYING,
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
Let Maupinup
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airplane tickets)
Make Your Spring Break
Make Your Spring Break
Reservations Early
Reservations Early
Maupintour travel service
PHONE 843-1211
Bicycling
KU Union-The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pick a budget request form from 1048 Kanson Union, 8:30-4:30 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearing this spring.
12
Friday, February 23, 1973
University Daily Kausan
1. 657.381.040
2. 927.400.012
OLE EARTH
The Last Whole Earth Catalog
Kansan Photo by MIKE FORSYTH
Books May Offer Key to Successful Living
Rex Morris, Salina senior, with Whole Earth Catalog
(Coninued from Page 1)
float. During the game the pack can reach speeds of 80 to 90 miles an hour.
Mayor...
Three area establishments have air hockey tables, he said.
Emmick said his shop was in the process of planning a city-wide pool and football tournament. Although the date had not yet been determined, it would be in the near future, he said.
The tournaments will be set up for ten consecutive weeks, Edmick said. During the first eight weeks, contestants will play in a local establishment. During the ninth week, the eight weekly winners will play for the championship of their area.
Eagles Lodge will host the finals during the tenth week. The champions from each location will compete for $2,000 in prizes. The first place winner receives $300 and the second place winner receives $200. Trophies will also be presented. Emick said.
The two tournaments will be run simultaneously. John's Novelty Shop will supply refreshments for the spectators and stationation set up and the event, Emuck said.
Emick said he came into the novelty business by accident. When he was 20, he worked for a wholesale paper company. One day he was in Brick Tavern, now the location of the company, that mentioned the faulty service and upkeep he was getting from his pinball distributor.
That same day, Emick met a man in Lawrence who owned three pinball machines. Two of them were in use, but Emick was told that he could lease the third and that the tv crew would split the profit. He agreed. He rented a distributor in Kansas City, Mo., and bought his first machine for $23.50. He leased it to Brick Tavern and began his business.
Array of 'How To' Books Tells All
At one time, it was possible for a person to live a whole and productive life based solely on the Douy Bible One could set up housekeeping with the help of "The Betty Crocker Cookbook" and raise a family with a paperback copy of Dr. Spock. But since the publication of the "Whole Earth Catalog" and "The Greening of America," one seems to need a whole library of books to tell him how to live.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
craftsmans of fine leather goods
812 Massachusetts
By DAVID HEALY
Kansan Staff Writer
For the finest in lightweight trail boots, see the Alps from Fabiano, a durable wet fabric that features a sturdy midsole for long wear and padded lining for comfort and warmth. It is also grey for men and women. Also red and green for women. $24.
All one needs to do is to visit a local bookstore and he will find that there seems to be a book that explains how to do anything that could ever possibly be done. If this is any indication of our future, then self-discipline must be the coming rule of the day.
Today young couples can take to the wilderness without a worry with a few pointers from "How to Stay Alive in the Woods" and "Home in Your Pack," Should they desire something more permanent, they can resort to "Basic Construction Techniques for Houses and Small Buildings" and "Build a Low-Cost Home" and "Build with Adobe."
If vegetation should start to encroach upon their love nest, they can heat it with a water heater or use a hot dog socket.
Stop by and see our new shipment of tropical green plants:
HIKING BOOTS
there is no vegetation. How can console
them? How to Know the
Minerals and Rocks.
Perhaps some morning you will awake to find yourself on Campidagliola Hill overlooking Rome. A visit to the nearest English bookstore can solve all your problems. A copy of "Italian for Kids" by Michael Dugan will give way from the Colosseum to St. Peter's and the "Harvard Student Guide to Europe" will let you see the most for the least.
When you become hungry, you can stop in
The new how-to books run the gamut from "The Gay Insider," a directory of gay men, to "Think Abroad in Chez," a book for anyone who may run up against Bobby Fischer.
at any taurtory and order with "How to Eat
(and Drink) Your Way Through a French
(或 Italian) Menu." And should you be
picked up by some Italian while you wande-
trtors? The answer is needed is
"The Lover's International Dictionary.
How to Make it in Five Languages."
The only handbooks which one cannot find are those dealing with death. But as more and more people learn to depend on books to run their lives, bookstores will probably make more room on their shelves for "The Home Mortician's Guide."
Fig Trees
Screwpine
Neanthe Belle Palms
Red Nerve Plants
Books such as "Making Do" and "How to Live on Nothing" will see anyone through hard times. If you are poor but seek the good life, there is "How to Live Cheap But Good." A Primer for People with Hard Times offers chapters such as "Home Is Where You Find It" and "Shoveling Out, Fixing Up and Furnishing."
New brides without culinary experience need fear no more. "I Never Cooked Before Cookbook" will get them started, "A Cookbook for Lovers" will keep the honeymoon going and "The Fool Stamp Gourmet" will get them through the worst of times.
Monkey Puzzle Trees Norfolk Island Pine Crotons Marginata
If you need clothes, "The Illustrated Hassle-Free Make Your Own Clothes Book" promises, "Anyone can do it. No more stuffing or sewing. Just patterns, machines, fancy materials."
Open Sunday starting March 4
Apparently there is no more need for doctors. "The Home Health Handbook," "Folk Medicine" and "The People's Handbook of Medical Care" will take care of you. If they don't, "Eating Your Way to Health" will.
THE GARDEN CENTER 15th & New York
PAT READ "The Indian Trader"
We carry the largest stock of Indian Handcraft in the Middle West— Reservation-made jewelry, rugs. Kachinas, pottery, and baskets.
Now in new location Room 203—Second floor ELDRIDGE HOUSE
Should you be born bored while convalescing, "Wanna Make Something Out of It" will tell you "how to turn household junk into beautiful handicrafts."
843-2004
Get A "Little Alfie" Free with any purchase! (Friday & Saturday only)
Be sure and keep him because there's a special coming RESTAURANT OR TAKE OUT
up, and he may help you get in on it!
OUT
THE
Fish&Chips
INVOLUNT OR TAKE OUT
Alfie's
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH
Fish & Chips
6th & Maine
WITH TWAYOU GET EUROPE FOR ALMOST NOTHING, NEXT TO NOTHING, AND ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.
ABOUT $50.
This spring recess TWA has great, inexpensive city packages in London, Paris, Rome, Athens and Amsterdam. For example, for $50 plus airfare you get 7 days in London, including a room with private bath, (based
on double occupancy) Continental breakfast, taxes and service charges. Plus 4 theatre tickets, admission to 6 discotheques, sightseeing, and more. Go before March 31 when prices go up.
$4.30 A NIGHT.
Only TWA gives you Stutelpause*! It's a coupon booklet that gets you a room and Continental breakfast in a guesthouse or student hotel in any of 52 cities for only
$4.30 a night, no reservations needed. Plus tickets good for meals and concerts and lots of things.
FREE.
When you land in London, Paris, Rome,
Madrid, Amsterdam or Frankfurt, just turn
in your boarding pass at the TWA city ticket
office within 24 hours of your arrival and
you'll get a brochure full of discounts up to
LONDON.
Free admission to any ten Greyhound Racing Tracks
Free admission and drink at La Valbonne, one of London's most terrific clubs
Free breakfast at your choice of 10 Quality Inns
Free pint of Watney's Red Barrel in your choice of over 40 London pubs
50% off, as well as absolutely free things. Here, for example, are some of the absolutely free things in London and Paris. (Deals for the other cities will be available starting March 15.)
PARIS.
Free 2 hours of motorcycle rental
Free latest-fad gift from
Aux Escelles de Saint Denis
Free silk tote bag from La Gaminerie
Free drink at Hippopotamus
For more information see your Campus Rep or call TWA
WITH TWA IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG.
"Stutelpass is a service mark owned exclusively by TWA.
Two Sides Reject AURH Intervention in Fund Furor
By CAROLYN OLSON
Kansas Staff Writer
Two parties involved in a controversy involving the alleged misuse of funds by the dean of women's office said Sunday they were rejecting intervention by the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH).
Eminely Taylor, dean of women, said in an interview Friday that she would not reply to the AUHR request issued Thursday for a request to take care of the woman's residence hall library fund.
"I will talk with representatives of AURH concerning allegations that I have misused funds." Taylor said, "But I will not refund $1,000 to them."
Representatives of the five halls under Taylor's jurisdiction for Friday afternoon with Tayler to discuss the refund request and the new financial account 400,000 in the women's residence hall account.
THE ACCOUNT had accumulated from a five-per-cent rebate from vending machines, which was established in the residence halls in the 1854-60 school year,
Greg Brown, Leawood sophomore and an
Oliver Hall representative to Taylor's meeting Friday, said the majority of students in women's residence halls under the guidance of AURH in intervention by AURH in the controversy.
Pam Meador, graduate assistant at Corbin Hall and Hutchinson first-year law student, said the women at Gertlebr Sellards Pearson Hall (GSP) and Corbin seemed to prefer dealing with Taylor rather than taking the act as their mediator in the controversy.
Taylor said she had specifically asked the residence hall representatives to meet with her instead of with the AURH representatives.
"I don't really feel the residence hall library fund is a concern of AURH," she said. "It only concerns the students in the five halls under my jurisdiction."
THE REPRESENTATIVES at Friday's meeting were to explain the library fund to the residents of each hall and then report back to her Thursday, Taylor said.
certain questioned expenditures from the women's residence hall account.
Thomas said Thursday night at the AURH Residents' Assembly meeting that if Taylor ignored the $1,000 refund request, he would complain to the University Judiciary.
Alex Thomas, AURH president and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, senior, said Saturday that he would ask Taylor to meet with the AURH executive board Wednesday night to explain
Brown said most residents of Oliver didn't want Taylor to reward the $1,000 she used to buy her clothes.
Mary Haddican, Satanta junior and the Lewis Hall representative, said she was in favor of Taylor's refunding the $1,000 to the general library account.
"I hate to see Lewis Hall deprived of anything," Haddican said. "Taylor said we librarians representatives wanted her to refund the $1,000. she would."
TAYLOR SAID that the Women's Resource Library was funded by the residence hall rebate and by the Commission on the Status of Women. She said the Women's Condition was considering the relocation of the Women's Resource Library in her office.
She established the Women's Resource Library two years ago when there was just so much money not being used in the residence hall library account. Taylor said.
"But under no circumstances will I break up the second largest career library in the world."
representatives want the $1,000 back that I used to establish the career library then. I used it as a tool for
"I take full responsibility for taking the money from the residence hall account for the career library," Taylor said. "Our main business in the dean of women's office is women. So I decided a women's library was appropriate."
REPRESENTATIVES FROM AURH have accused Taylor of violating students' rights in taking the money from the case hall fund without consulting AURH.
Taylor denied that any students' rights been violated by not asking AURH for permission.
"AURH can't speak for the five hives I have under my jurisdiction," Taylor said. "It also represents halls administered by the dean of men's office."
The students at Friday's meeting didn't think their rights were being infringed upon in the course of their work.
Taylor presented the library representatives two proposals Friday: either let her keep the library rehearsal in a community center, or let the library hire the halls administer the money themselves.
"They didn't seem disissatisfied with the career library at all." Taylor said.
"I THINK the representatives from the balls will tell Taylor Thursday that they would like to administer the funds themselves." Brown said.
Meador will go before the Corbin hall council Wednesday night and ask whether the hall wants the $9,000 rebate money divided equally among the libraries of the halls or given to each hall on a per capita basis.
Meador said that under the per capita system, the residents of Oliver, the largest hall under Taylor, would receive a large comparison to women at GSP or Corbin.
"I don't subscribe to the theory that some residence hall occupants should be deprived of goods and services while others have more than they need by the allocation of funds strictly on a per capita basis," Taylor said.
DONALD ALDERSON, dean of men, said that for each men's hall, regardless of its size, five per cent of its vending machine money was put into a separate account in the student organization section of the controller's office.
Rebates from the men's residence halls—McCollum, Ellsworth, Templin and Joseph R. Pearson—range from $20 to about $100 a month. Alderson said.
Taylor said that she opposed the system of handling the rebates employed by the dean of men's office. She gave the library representatives of the women's residence halls the opportunity to change the system Friday, she said.
One Oliver resident last year voiced objection to having to pay for a fund that bought women's magazines, John Beissner, Maurer and Salina sophomore, said Sunday.
"I'M NOT PERSONALLY upset with men have to provide funds to buy feminist literature. Bolster. Butaylor just have to invest studied data taking the funds for the career library."
WILD WOODS
The library has more than 400 books,
See AURH Page 5
CLOUDY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year. No.98
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, February 26, 1973
French Pilot Unqualified Israel Says
TEL AVIV (AP)—The Israeliis said Sunday that they found the license of the French pilot who飞了Libyan jetliner downed last week in the Sinai Desert, and that the license did not qualify him as a pilot for that type of aircraft.
Rights Proposed For Mental Patients
The government also said it would offer payment to families of victims in the air tragedy—but as a gentence of kindness, not as admission of Israel guilt.
A government press office statement said the pilot, Capt. Jacques Bourges, was qualified only as a coilot for a French Caravelle jetliner and several propeller-
A communique from the weekly Israeli cabinet session said, "In deference to humanitarian considerations, the government resolves its readiness to effect exegiza payments to the families of the victims."
The Libyan craft was a trijet Boeing 727 which, theIsraeli claimed, was not listed in the list.
A spokesman said the word "compensation" was deliberately not used because it would imply "israeli guilt for the terrorists." Ex gratia means "out of kindness."
The Cabinet said that they had received no requests for an international inquiry into the incident, but that they were making available to "competent international factors any information available to Israel concerning the intercession of the plane."
The Cabinet communique said the government "took note" of a military investigation into the crash and Chief of Staff Elazar Elzars's decision to shoot at the airliner.
See Story Page 3
Israeli warplanes fired on the Libyan jetliner last Wednesday, forcing it to crash land after the airliner strayed off course and flew over Israeli military positions along the Suez Canal. Of the 113 persons died. Bourges was among the victims.
1 QT.
BTLS.
29¢
SAFE-
WAY
IN A
SHIELD
NO- NOB
FARMWORKS
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
mitte boycotted the store and distributed leaflets in protest of the sale of non-union lettuce by the store. A boycott against lettuce began Sept. 16, 1970, after California courts ordered striking farm-workers back to the fields to work even though growers refused to sign union contracts.
Boycott
Approximately 25 members of the
Lawrence Lettuce Boycott Committee
picketed for three hours outside the
Stormfront Station on Saturday,
Center Saturday. Members of the com-
POW Release Stalled
SAIGON (AP) —The list of the next group of American prisoners of war to be freed will not be delivered to U.S. representatives today, a fact there will no prison release on Tuesday, the chief North Vietnamese spokesman in Saigon said today.
The United States expected the release of the second group of FOWs on Tuesday because it is the midway point between the signing of the cease-fire on Jan. 28 and the start of the war in Afghanistan. American prisoners and for the withdrawal of all American forces from South Vietnam.
But after morning meetings of the four-party Joint Military Commission and its subcommission on prisoners, the North Vietnamese spokesman, Bül Tin, told
"ON YOUR SIDE, we are all ready for the next release, but we are waiting for the chiefs of delegations to discuss the question. Also, we are waiting for the decision of Hanoi on the exact time and number of POWs to be released."
The Viet Cong, he added, is also waiting for a decision from its Provisional Revolutionary Government on the release of the map of American prisoners in South Vietnam.
"There will definitely not be any POW"
"There will definitely not be Tian."
"There will be no last job."
He added that he hoped to have a decision soon from Hanoi.
The Communists failed on Sunday to submit the list or to fix specific times and places for the releases in North and South Vietnam.
THEY GAVE NO official reason, but they were embittered by attacks by South Vietnamese mobs on two North Vietnamese forces which resulted in injuries to nine persons.
Seven North Vietnamese delegates to the military commission and two South Vietnamese policemen were reported injured. Bui Tin, chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegation, said tour Comisar delegates were seriously wounded at Hue.
Convenience Becomes Way of Life
Editor's Note: This is the first of a three-part series of stories dealing with credit cards and credit, an increasingly important topic in today's financial world. Tomorrow's story will examine the extent
Chancellor Field Narrowed But No Details Announced
of the use of credit cards in Lawrence and among college students.
The Campus Advisory Committee for the selection of a new chancellor met Sunday in a crucial session to narrow the field of candidates for the position, according to Richard Von Ende, acting executive secretary and secretary for the group.
By DAN GEORGE Kansan Staff Writer
Have a tooth that needs to be filled—or
The committee, which is to recommend five finalists to the Board of Regents, started the first phase of interviewing early this month with 25 candidates. A four-man committee of 18 candidates in Washington, D.C., Chicago, Dallas, Kansas City and San Francisco.
Von Ende would not say how many candidates were selected and the information received after the meeting.
Vor Ende said Sunday that the subcommittee members were Jacob Kleinberg.
professor of chemistry and chairman of the committee; Ron Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Roy Edwards Jr., alumni member from Kansas City, and student member Chuck Loveland of the KU Medical School who was later replaced by Clyde Chapman, Lawrence graduate student.
Von Ende said that the subcommittee
informated him one person when it
woke to Kirk City, Ila.
It was reported last week that tgt. recent chairman Jess Stewart, Wamego, said that 10 candidates would be brought to this area in March for interviews with the campus committee and the full board. Stewart said Sunday that the number of candidates the committee was still considering was not known.
"People use our card for everything under the sun," says Alan Collins, assistant director of the division at City National Bank in Kansas City. Mo. Bidant's bills, tax, travel and entertainment or to get cash. They can even use it to rent a diving outfit at Table Rock
Indeed, the use of credit cards is becoming as much a way of life for many people as any of the above items. More and more, people are charging such routine commodities as clothing, gasoline and even food.
drilled? Need shoes for the kids? No cash and the tax deadline coming fast.
All these problems and more, as millions of Americans are discovering, can be swiftly and simply solved with one little item—the credit card.
Although it is only within the last 10 years that the use of credit cards has really mushroomed, credit cards are actually not a new idea. Retail credit has existed in the United States since colonial times and is one of the chains were offering charge cards as early as 1914.
Such a trend, as numerous economic experts believe, may signify the beginning of a recession.
As the cards' popularity increased, other types of businesses began to employ them.
Railroads and airlines began to issue the
cards in 1947, and two years later travel and entertainment cards were begun as the first Diners' Clubs cards were issued. Others included Cards of Origin, Cards Blanche and American Express.
But perhaps the most important development came in 1951 when the Franklin National Bank in Franklin Square, N.Y., initiated the first bank credit-credit
Under this arrangement, the holder of a credit card issued by the bank was billed monthly by the bank for accumulated purchases made with the card. There was no additional charge on the amount owed if it was paid within 30 days of the billing date, but the balance after that date became a monthly service charge of 1¼ percent.
An increasing number of banks saw this as a successful method to draw more money. The Chase Manhattan Bank, bank-credit systems sprang up throughout the country. The Chase Manhattan Bank of New York City developed its own system, and the Bank of America in San Francisco
The Bank of America development was especially important, for only ten years later it evolved into one of the two major banks in the U.S. Through honors affiliated with the Bank of
See CONVENIENCE Page 8
The South Vietnamese delegation to the four-party Joint Military Commission charged at the meeting that North Vietnam moved Soviet-built SAM2 missile batteries into Quang Tri Province after the cause-free violation of the Jan. 22 peace agreement.
The province is just below the
dotted zone that divides the two
Vietnam.
RELIABLE INFORMANTS said the presence of the antiaircraft missiles was detected by U.S. reconnaissance flights and that such operations were continuing in South Vietnam. But the sources said they did not interpret this reconnaissance activity as a violation of the cease-fire agreement.
At the meeting, the South Vietnamese as at this point had been established within the past 40 years.
The U.S. Command announced today that the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam was slightly more than 50 per cent completed at the halfway mark of the 60-day deadline set for withdrawal and prisoner release.
The announcement was an apparent prod at the Communists, who have released only about one-fourth of the American prisoners in Iraq due to the cease-fire agreement was signed.
AS OF MIDNIGHT Sunday, U.S. troops strength in Vietnam stood at 11,724 compared with 23,500 when the pact was signed in Paris.
Tin said, however, that he did not think the demonstrations would affect the American prisoner release, expected Tuesday according to U.S. reckoning.
Although declaring that South Vietnam was now on the verge of a very dangerous situation, Tin said that North Vietnam was under attack and that the peace agreement and the protocols.
He indicated that one major problem still unresolved was a dispute between the Communists and the Saigon government and the release of Vietnamese civilian prisoners.
"WHILE WE SUMPATHEZ with the families of the American POWs, I want to remind you that here in Vietnam there are thousands of families waiting for their kin to receive the attention," Tin said. "We want to satisfy this sentiment and bring them back together."
"We are still expecting the list tomorrow," he said.
Maj. Gen. Daniel James, a top spokesman at the Pentagon, refused to tie the delay in the war to his own plan.
James said he understood that North Vietnamese and Viet Cong representatives in Saigon told Maj. Gen. Gilbert Woodward, the chief U.S. representative on the Joint Military Commission, that they were not a large number of people in the field. Other sources expressed the view that the Communists were "playing games with us."
U. S. SPOKESMEN said that according to the U.S. timetable, a list of about 140 POWs should have been handed over Sunday and the prisoners released on Tuesday. They added, however, that if the United States received the list today and got agreement on times and sites, they probably would still get the prisoners out Tuesday.
"They are trying to humiliate us, making us sweat it out," said one U.S. source. "This is the way they do it, wait until the last minute because they lose leverage on us every time they release more prisoners," he said.
★ ★ ★
Air War Rises Over Cambodia
HONOLULU (AP)—The American air war over Cambodia was stepped up Sunday, and heavy bombers were used for the first bombing a month, U.S. military officials reported.
The Pacific Military Command's daily statement said that U.S. aircraft, including B2Ss, conducted operations over Cambodia at the request of the Cambodian govern-
The B2b2s were last employed over
Coca-Cola on Jan. 29, according to
command report.
Sources at the command said the increased air activity Sunday came in response to "the increase in enemy activity throughout much of Cambodia."
The operations Sunday contrasted with Saturday's activity, which was described as light and involved only tactical aircraft in scattered areas.
There were no U.S. aircraft operations
over Laos Sunday, a command spokesman
Services Planned Today For Prof. William Cape
Services for William H. Cape, S2, professor of political science, were scheduled for 10 a.m. today at the First Methodist Church. Private graveside services were to follow at Memorial Park Cemetery.
Cape died Friday night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where he was taken after he apparently suffered a heart attack earlier in the dav.
Cape was a member of the KU faculty intermittently from 1948 to 1961. He also taught at Wyoming, South Dakota and Iowa. In 1962 he became a full-time staff member at KU.
Cape is survived by his widow, Merceda,
a son, Charles of Kansas City; a daughter,
Evelyn of the home; a sister, Mrs. Edna
Nusbaum of Great Bend; and two brothers,
Everett of Hutchinson and Gerald of Great
Bend.
Cape, a native of Murdock, Kan, was a
resentant in the U.S. Air Corps from 1942 to
1947.
He earned his bachelor's degree at Fort Hays Kansas State College in 1947 and his M.S. in 1948. In 1952 he gained his Ph.D. from KU. At KU he served as director of the U.K. Research Department and worked in the KU city manager program with many of the nation's city managers.
Cape served in a number of capacities with professional and educational programs and had done extensive writing. He was widely known for his research in public administration, in which he emphasized local and state government.
Cape resided at 1940 Emerald Drive. His family has requested that memorials be made to the KU Political Science Memorial Fund.
A
2
Monday, February 26,1973
University Daily Kansan
Peace Rules Accord Near
PARIS (AP)—Foreign ministers, assembled here for a Vietnam peace conference, agreed agreement Sunday on the rules to round out the Washington-action peace deal.
On the eve of the conference that begins today, two developments were reported in
A ‘hands-off-Vietnam’ pledge by the big powers and the international community in general. This is likely to take the form of a conference declaration.
—a formula that would put the chairmanship of the conference into the orbit of the four-nation Commission of Control and Supervision that is to police the peace
settlement. Members are Canada, Poland,
Indonesia and Hungary.
The conference, provided for in the cease-fire pact signed Jan. 28, has brought together foreign ministers of six Communist regimes, six non-Communist regimes and Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim of the United Nations.
Participants in the conference are the Soviet Union, China, Poland, Hungary, North Vietnam, the Viet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Government, the United States, Britain, France, Canada, Indonesia and South Vietnam.
Waldheim is taking part as a symbol of the interest of the international community.
Minorities Included In Shawnee Faculties
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
OVERLAND PARK-Flifteen minority group student teachers will begin classroom work March 12 in the Shawnee Mission school district as part of what could be a model for a national program to promote minority group teacher education.
Dave Westbrook, director of information services for the district, said recently that the program promised to be a great success and that it would generate generated students and the community.
The 15 student teachers arrived in Shawnee Mission Jan. 29 and began work on curriculum.
The program, Suburban Intercultural Teacher Education (SITE), was established after the Shawnee Mission Board of Education passed a resolution in July which recognized education to strengthen its efforts to recruit qualified teachers from minority groups.
Rasalind Autenirie, program director, outlined four areas of training that the
Student teachers will study the sociological characteristics of Johnson County, instructional methods for suburban classrooms, methods of gaining credibility as an authority figure and will student teach. she said.
A rush of consultations among the delegates improved prospects for a compromise over the chairmanship and other procedural arrangements.
The student teachers are out-of-state college seniors from a wide variety of cultural, racial, ethnic and geographic backgrounds. Anutrienth said.
"We're trying to fill a cultural vacuum in Shawnee Mission," she said. "Students
Formal proceedings will begin at 10 a.m. today in the former Hotel Majestic, now a conference center in downtown Paris near Montparnasse. The difference is expected to last less than a week.
News Briefs By the Associated Press WageGuidelines
Tuna Recall
An FDA spokesman cautioned shopper to return any Star Kist tuna cans bearing the letter G on the top line of the can code and DA17, as the last digit on the bottom line.
WASHINGTON - A flexible standard for wage increases in new labor contracts will replace the government's 5.5-per-cent guideline left over from Phase 2 controls, sources say. The move to a flexible standard, described as "very carefully workforced," will be by the White House today. It is seen as a Nixon administration concession to labor since several major labor contracts will be negotiated this year.
Moslem Move
CHICAGO—Several cuts of Star Kist tuna from a shipment which the Food and Drug Administration believes may be contaminated, two retail grocery stores in Bloomington, Ind., an FDA spokesman said Sunday. These were the first to have been found in the retail market. About 400 cases of the tuna were found at a warehouse to warehouse in eight states.
VW Prices
NATORE, Bangladesh—Prime Minister Najib Murah Rahman proposed Sunday that Bangladesh and Pakistan immediately halt the war against civilians. He indicated that if Pakistan did not agree, he might dump 300,000 non-Bengali Muslims in the lap of the world convoy Bangladesh had no room for the members of the Urdu-speaking Bilahian ministry, he said.
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N.J.-Prices for Volkswagen sold in the United States will go up an average of 7.2 per cent as a result of the devaluation of the dollar, Volkswagen of America announced Sunday. The increase will apply to all vehicles unloaded at U.S. ports Sunday. Cars currently in stock will continue to have the old suggested list price of $199,000, but the old price of $2,699 will go up $140 to a new national suggested list price of $2,199. All models in the company's Forshe and Audi lines are also affected by the increase.
Art Thefts
Several countries, including the United States and Britain, had favored Waldheim as the only candidate to be head of the NATO but North Vietnam, the Viet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Government and China objected. All appear to be against any U.N. role in postwar Europe.
ROME—Italian officials are expressing growing concern over the steady loss of the nation's art treasures to thieves. The office of the United States Department of Defense have been stolen in the last 39 years, some of them finding their way to other aids.
need to understand and interact with people in a classroom, eventually come in contact in college work.
"Being able to learn with a black or Chicago student teacher breaks down the mystique. The difference is there, but it's on a personal level, a level that can be un-
Autoren said that SITE would not only provide a broader cultural base for Shawnee Mission students, but would also facilitate the natural transition of the teachers themselves.
"The students participating in SITE come from varied backgrounds," Autenlirle said, "but, just as important, they come from urban areas all over the country. The change from college campus to classroom will be complicated by their move from a rural setting culturally different from their own. SITE will aid in that transition."
Less than 2 per cent of the 44,836 students in the Shawnee Mission district come from minority backgrounds and only 17 of the 2,200 teachers are black, Westbrook said. There are 170 black students in elementary and secondary grades in the district.
Auterriet said the teachers would begin a-week block of concentrate teaching Mary.
"SITE graduates will be given priority consideration for full time teaching positions," she said, "but many are expected to find employment elsewhere because the district has fewer openings that it has student teachers."
She said that although only 15 teachers expected more to be added after this spring,
Other school district officials spoke enthusiastically about the program. Arzell L. Ball, superintendent of schools, called the department of SITE a landmark in education.
"Considering the turmoil in education today," Ball said, "STEEN don't happen any too soon. One program may not solve even a few of the racial and cultural tensions and misunderstandings, but it is definitely a step in the right direction."
Another possibility for chairman that came up for discussion behind the scenes was to select as chairman the foreign minister of France, representing the host country. But this idea was short-lived. South Vietnam obeyed venerably.
It was then that Canada, playing a riddle role in the conference put up the idea of rotating or sharing the chairmanship between the four members of the control
One area under study would have the conference become a continuing structure, complete with a secretariat that could handle all of the issues. The British and Chinese diplomats have reported, however, that they want to provide as little as possible in the way of
Foreign Minister Mitchell Sharp of Canada and China's Chi Panwei had long private sessions during the day with Mr. Obama about these and other conference matters.
Delegates reported the "hands-off-Vietnam" pledge will amount, in effect, to a commitment by outside powers to leave the people of Indochina to sort out their own problems in their own way and in their own time.
As part of the KU design department Hallmark lecture series, Fritz will give a demonstration for the visual arts faculty and their spouses at 7 tonight and a third from 10 am to noon Tuesday at the Chamney glassblowing barn, West 10th Street.
Robert C. Fritz, professor of art at San Jose State College, will demonstrate creative techniques of glassblowing to students in the University of Kansas Monday and Tuesday.
Twenty-five University of Kansas students have enrolled in a life drawing course sponsored by SUA and the Free University, according to Mark Pierce, Seward, Kan., senior and SUA Fine Arts chairman.
The House last week voted to take care of the agencies for the remaining four months of the fiscal year with a stopgap measure which was called a continuing resolution.
This semester a $2 fee is required because SUA had budgeted money for only one semester's funding. The money is used to pay the models who pose for the class, he
A joint committee of Congress is studying the problem of budget control. Under a procedure that is being considered Congress would act in three steps to:
This permits the agencies to spend on the basis of previous actions taken by Congress. The agencies now are operating under such a resolution but it expires Wednesday.
Feedback to Have Rival; Sachem to Publish Guide
Because of space and financial limitations the School of Fine Arts is usually unable to accept students for their drawing courses who are not enrolled in Fine Arts,
The Senate will take up the new resolution Monday.
Pierce said that he was originally apprehensive about the class. He was afraid that some people might enroll in the course only because they would be able to draw modelets. He said he was not sure that students would approach the class seriously.
This is the second semester that the life drawing course has been offered in the Free University. Last semester the course was offered to the students who were offered to the students for no charges.
Perse said people could benefit from a life drawing course, particularly those who have a desire or need for drawing and could benefit from courses through the KU School of Fine Arts.
WASHINGTON (AP)—President must act this week to provide money for agencies covered by two appropriations bills stymied between President Nixon and Congress.
The Curriculum and Instruction Survey, which produces Feedback, will have a rival this year. A new system of class evaluation is being used, as used at Harvard University for 37 years.
SUA,Free U Again Offer Life Drawing
However, the course has been a success, he said. The students approach the class
A 3.6 billion foreign aid bill has been blocked because Congress has not been able to agree with the administration on terms of the basic legislation authorizing this money.
Sachem, the senior men's honor society is working on its own evaluation booklet, according to Ben Mann, Independence, Mo., senior and president of the society.
The situation illustrates one of the many difficulties facing Congress in its struggle to set up machinery to bring the federal budget under control.
Nixon-Congress Feud Creates Funding Group
"We are going to try to do what Feedback does but not in a numerical manner." Mann said. "We're going to use a written feedback system," he will provide more complete evaluations."
1. Fix a spending ceiling for the year at
Glassblower To Give Talk
Mann said the idea for the survey, which will be called "An Unofficial Guide to KU," is that students would
"Walt Stromquist, who graduated from KU and is now at Harvard, came to us with the idea because he liked the booklet being used at Harvard," Mann said.
Drawing the human anatomy is one of the most difficult tasks in art, Pierce said.
"I think everyone works pretty hard,
They are all involved in their own personal
work."
Even though the current fiscal year is two-thirds over, bills covering the labor and health, education and welfare departments and foreign aid have not yet been enacted.
Nixon twice vetoed $30 billion labor--m-
measures last fail. He contended that
He will present a slide show and lecture
for the public at noon p.m. in the Forum
Room on Thursday, Jan. 20th.
the outset of each session;
3. Exact a final clean bill making cuts or other changes necessary to assure that the final spending total stays within the ceiling.
The crucial step in this process would be the third. Obviously it would not work if the White House and the Capitol got into a battle as they did in the current year and some of the money bills were not enacted until eight months or more into the fiscal year.
2. Act on the money bills separately through the session as at present;
Mann said questionnaires were being made up now. Students in fraternities, sororites and residence halls will be asked to fill out the questionnaires, he said.
"The students can write what they want to," Mann said. "The questionnaires will be totally unstructured. The living groups will give us a good cross section of students."
After the questionaires are filled out, Mann said, the answers will be given to a team of 10 to 15 writers. Each writer will cover three departments or schools. He said these writers, who are graduate students and seniors, would condense answers into a one- or two-paragraph evaluation of the course and the course.
Mann said that Feedback was for both faculty and students but that the new publication would be for students because it was written by students.
The group realizes the limitations of such a project, he said.
"We don't expect to cover every course," he said, but Feedback can only cover the two most critical areas.
"We are the manspon source," he said.
If we can't find enough people to work, the company must make a difference.
Mann said that the honor society was backing the project but that it was not too costly.
Mann said that the honor society had been working on the project since the last week in January. The society's budget is apportioned among the items provided by Stromoum, Mann said.
"But we can't publish without ad- vtributing," Mann said. "We have sold some space, but we are not even near the minimum we need."
The group is seeking advertising from local merchants, Mum said, and it needs at least $150 million to fund the project.
Federgereg said he had nothing to do with a possible grand jury investigation of the Beech case, requested Tuesday by city commission candidate Gene Miller.
Mann said the tentative target date for
student access to the booklet was April 15.
Further Study Undertaken In Misuse of City Funds
Miller said at the time that Beech had said that a superior had ordered him to take his place.
Jerry Federede, special agent for the Kansas Attorney General's office, met with Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson and Douglas County investigator Jim Huskey to discuss his investigation. Federede described as accusations made in connection with the Robert Beech case.
"The Beech case is closed as far as I'm concerned," Federgreen said. "We're just checking on certain procedures the city has done, and I can't investigate it. I can't tell you at this time."
Beech, a former city collection office supervisor, pleaded no contest Thursday in Division I of Douglas County District Court to a charge of missing city water department funds. Judge Frank Gray sentenced Beech to three years probation.
"We had some people come into our office earlier in the week and make certain accusations, and all I'm doing is finding out if they're giving us the straight facts."
Federeregard would not say what the accusations specifically were nor would he name the person or persons who made them. He did admit, however, that the accusations were connected with the Beech case.
Federgereen said that he had talked with Ivy Hedges, the city's assistant director of finance; various secretaries who have handled accounts; and Watson. He would not say whether he planned to talk to other city employees.
him a scapopeat. Beech's attorney, Robert Oppich, said he court Thursday that Beech did not make such a statement.
SPECIAL
Mon. Feb. 26 thru Sat. March 3rd
Publication Near For Action Plan
The Affirmative Action Conference Committee completed its review of an Affirmative Action plan Friday, Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Sunday night.
Nichols said the plan was being typed anwould be made available to the public as
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A site visit team of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare will begin an investigation of the University's complication with EW equal opportunity policies today.
Some editorial and minor changes were made in the plan. Nichols said, but he was unable to comment.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 26, 1973
3
We wish to extend
a welcome to all who come
through, not just to patients,
but our visitors too. Look
about, open your eyes, if you
notice, you'll be in for a surprise
we are plain and simple
people, with plans and dreams
and hope were merely here
to take a rest from situations
in our lives with which we
could not cope.
Kansan Staff Photo by ED LALLO
Planning, Dreaming, Hoping for a Future
The University of Kansas has not determined how much federal aid will be lost in the wake of President Nixon's proposed cut of federal funds for colleges and universities, Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Sunday.
Nichols said he was still waiting for the answer from Center and from the suite and office offices.
A report is being prepared by William A. Report the candidate for research and graduate studies.
Aid Loss Unknown, Nichols Says
Nichols said last week that the University would lose $1 million if the President's budget was cut.
Argeringer said last week that KU would suffer significant cuts in research grants and graduate training programs. Funds for the programs would also be cut, he said.
" that figure is an approximation because these things are so difficult to compute," he said. "Some of the programs have been put through a testing program and already and some are in the 'if' stage."
Nikon's budget would phase out the National Direct Student Loan Program and would cut funds from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Health.
It was reported last week that W. Phillip Hefley, regional U.S. education commissioner, said the President's budget contained a rearrangement of funds, not a cut. Hefley's office is a part of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
Nichols said he disagreed with Hefley's view.
"It may be a rearrangement as far as HEW is concerned, but as far as the universities are concerned, they are cuts," he said.
He said KU had always accounted well for its federal funding.
"If any mistake has been made in accrual,
it should have been made by the
increment," he said.
KU committee drafts bill to protect rights of patients in mental institutions .
WE'RE PLANNING AHEAD TO SERVE YOU BEST J.R. Express Coalition
Rights Proposed for Mental Patients
CHARLIE RHOADES—President MARK SCIMARTZ—Vice Pres.
CHARLA MALLORY—Treasurer SUE CASH—Secretary
Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part series of stories examining proposed reforms in the state's mental health care system and deal with problems in mental health care.
By JEANNETTE HARTMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Concern for the 3,500 adults who were committed to the three state hospitals last year has led an informal committee at the University of Kansas to draft a bill that will safeguard the rights of patients in mental institutions.
The council is a loosely-knit group of 15 to 20 KU students, faculty, former mental patients, professionals, paraprofessionals and workers in state supported mental institutions and clinics, according to council Joan Upahwe, Olateh graduate student.
---
The essence of the bill, said Upasha, is to end unnecessary, indefinite and involuntary detention of persons who are considered hostile to the state or confinement to emergency situations in-
The bill is being sponsored in the Kansas Legislature by Sen. Tom West, R-Topke, and was initiated by the Kansas Council for Women, the organization, organized at KU more than a year ago.
This case generated investigations of the laws, involuntary commitment proceedings and interviews with state hospital administrators and probate judges. Such studies have led to the drafting of the bill West is sponsoring in the Kansas Senate.
One case of special interest to the group, said Upshaw, concerned a 19-year-old woman who was involuntarily committed to Osawatime State Hospital by her mother after being threatened with commitment if she didn't stop dating a black man.
' . .mental health depends
on freedom against any coercion or confinement regardless of whether the
coercers mean well or not.'
volving imminent bodily injury. The bill also provides safeguards for individual rights and makes provisions for the prompt removal of a person when human life is endangered, she said.
MOTHER MARY'S—SPECIAL! Pitchers 75c
The bill also would limit involuntary detention to a maximum of 90 days with an opportunity for a court review after 30 days. The existing laws requiring voluntary paolation would be a five-day notice before leaving an institution would be amended to a one-day notice.
Specifically, the bill would grant mental patients the right to be present at judicial hearings in which they face involuntary commitment, the right to uncensored communications with others, the right to nature and to refuse all prescribed inundation and to receive wages for work performed and the right against self-incrimination.
The bill was submitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee Feb. 2. Sometimes in April, an interim committee will be appointed, which will the bill during the summer, Upsaw said.
Every Wednesday 3-5 p.m.
O'Connor, a native of Omaha, Neb., received his bachelor's degree from the University of Omaha and his master's from Washington University in St. Louis.
--mental problems. Although he didn't have the money to pay for private care, he understood that he could commit himself to a state institution.
KU Award to Washburn Prof
Louis Frydman, KU associate professor of social welfare and council member, said that although the bill would not be acted upon until October 2014, allow time for the formation of a statewide coalition of concerned citizens to generate public interest in the need for institutional reforms to provide a variety of community resources for troubled people and to do so.
Under the existing laws, all that is needed to initiate commitment proceedings is a notarized statement by a "reputable" person. If someone believes in a belief that someone is mentally ill.
Since the person has already been hospitalized and the court-appointed attorney relates himself to the legality of the proceedings rather than to the validity of the allegations, the cases are rarely contested or appealed, he said.
According to West, about 3,500 adults were committed to the three state hospitals last year. Although 2,000 of these are primary, 1,500 (42 per cent) were not. he said.
Although it is the court's discretion to issue an order of protective custody, should the applicant believe that the proposed custody be not detained immediately, this is usually a matter of routine, Frydman said. So much so, Frydman said, that in Johnson county the order of protective custody is incorporated into application for a mental illness examination.
The 1972-73 William King Candin Award was recently presented to Thomas M. Assistant, assistant professor of biology at Washington University for his research on ribonucleic acid (RNA).
"Even though legally the state hospital need not accept a patient on a protective custody order, I have heard that hospitals should evaluate the need for hospitalization prior to admission," Frydman said. "To do otherwise would presumably be embarrassing to the judge."
Frydman said that this was a "Catch 22" situation. The legal definition of mental illness includes "dangerousness," he said, so the probate judge feels bound to order involuntary detention and treatment when a diagnosis of mental illness is made.
*and large, as one council member who wished to remain unidentified put it, there was a system in the hospital system and the hospital system. Each system addressed itself to a different aspect of the commitment process, but neither took full responsibility for the individual, she
At this point, the probate judge sets a date for the hearing to determine whether the person is mentally ill and appoints an attorney for the proposed patient, Frydmann said.
"In essence, we would agree that mental health depends on freedom against any coercion or confinement regardless of whether the coerces mean well or not. Commitment should be based on laws against society and definitive evidence that temporary deprivation of freedom will result in safeguarding the individual's life."
Another council member, Chuck Worden, Topeka attorney, said that because legal proceedings were conducted on behalf of the defense counsel, the adversary process were unavailable.
2406 Iowa
"As clinicians, which we mostly are," said Frydman, "we question the therapeutic value of being the patient's warden. The deprivation of freedom, coercion and control works against a trusting relationship between doctor and patient."
Similar loss of proteins occurs in muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, autoimmune reactions and other human diseases. DNA damage has not been shown that RNA loss is involved.
Using radioactivity and an electron microscope, O'Connor found that nerve cells degenerate and lose their RNA molecules, which govern production of proteins by the cells. When the RNA is lost, the cells die.
The Candlin Award, which includes a $300 stipend, is presented each year by the University of Kansas physiology and cell biology department. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Candlin, Lawrence, established the memory in memory of their son in 1968.
Under the existing laws, a person who has voluntarily committed himself must give up his property.
If a patient has to give notice before leaving, said Upshaw he is not a voluntary patient, especially since the hospital can be over the phone to keep him institutionalized.
O'Connor is studying "Cell Degeneration During Embryonic Development of the Chick Spinal Cord" for his doctoral dissertation.
With the amendment that requires only a one-day notice, she said, the hospital would have to more fully respond to the patient and his desires.
One example that West gave of the need for this kind of legislation was the case of a young man who contacted him the day the police said he had been killed by the young man recognized that he had
'...the hospital staff
rately, if ever, even attempts to evaluate the need for hospitalization
prior to admission.
But what he didn't realize. West said, was that because he was a monitor and had no parents to sign the release papers, he didn't leave. He wasn't released until 1966.
Involuntary patients have no five-day notice, according to Upshaw. They must either wait for a staff discharge or wait six months for a probate court review, but they are seldom notified of this right nor held with an attorney to represent them.
The right to avoid self-incrimination is another issue that concerns the council, in a way similar to the one there are no provisions for informing a proposed patient of the charges against him, or his legal rights or that anything he says may be used as a basis for involuntary prosecution.
Frydman said that a common question on institutional mental examinations was "Do you know why you are here?" The patient who had been picked up by the sheriff and told nothing, usually replies, "No," which was interpreted as disorientation he said.
the only way to be dismissed is to say that you were sick, but you're getting better.
Frydman also referred to a recent experiment by D. L. Rosenhan in which nine sane people voluntarily committed themselves. One of the conclusions of this experiment, he said, was that you don't leave a mental institution by claiming to be sane;
Edward Dutton, associate professor of social welfare and a council member, said that he has worked to overcome individual needs. The number of patients, low salaries for employees in state hospitals and the need to maintain control over patients influenced the treatment and care.
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According to the National Institute of Mental Health, there has been an accelerating decrease of patients in state and county hospitals, but over the past 20 years there has been a trend of increasing admissions.
In 1970, for the first time, the number of admission is the number of admissions the institute sees.
Frydman called it a "revolving door syndrome" in which people were discharged because their behavior was no longer troublesome rather than because their serious life problems were resolved. They returned to the hospital, environmental stresses needed itself and the tranquilizing medication no longer sufficed.
The institute attributes this trend to the gradual reduction in the length of stay, increased availability of outpatient and community mental health centers of community mental health centers.
James Stachowiak, professor of psychology, reacting to the same statistics, agreed. It's a paradox, he said, that the overcrowded hospital releases patients too early to make room for them to come back. It's questionable whether a state hospital is really the palce htat could help the placem, he said.
"The commitment process is much too simple in view of the serious potential consequences to the person involved," West said. "Essentially all of us today should be and are concerned with the rights of the individual.
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BILL SPENCER CANDIDATE FOR CITY COMMISSION SPEAKS TO KU:
PETER M. ROBERTS
The Citizens of Lawrence are Frustrated.
They want to be informed.
There is no way we can determine whether an elected official is representing us the way we want to be represented unless we know whether or not we would have made the same decision with the same set of facts. Secondly, with facts, we can, if we desire, directly present our views and opinions. If we can directly present ourselves, and if we are listened to, then we must be represented.
If the facts are known, and the decisions are known, the whole system of openness is academic, for whether or not it is seen at all times, at all levels, in all phases of government is relatively unimportant and almost impossible if you believe that it is seen at all times.
And they want to be able to tell when their government is making intelligent decisions.
If the people truly feel free and secure in telling government what they feel, based on facts, then it is very obvious whether or not any government or any official is being responsive.
WILLIAM H. SPENCER will make sure the citizens are kept informed.
Paid Political Advertisement.
Paid for by Wm. H. Spencer.
4
Monday, February 26,1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Homosexual Taboo
A bill tentatively approved last week by the Kansas Senate would prevent Kansas probate judges from issuing marriage licenses to persons of the same sex.
Without condoning homosexual marriages, it seems logical to question a legislative body's right to determine their legality. A vote for the bill would tend to reinforce our society's taboo of homosexual relations.
A homosexual is not a homosexual by choice. Psychiatrists differ on their explanations for the causes of homosexuality. Some contend a person is born with homosexual tendencies. Others believe a person's homosexuality results from his childhood or adolescent experiences.
Most do agree, however, that homosexuals rarely are curable. "Curable" is probably a bad term, because many homosexuals do not consider their homosexuality an abnormality. They have come to accept their homosexuality as part of their characters and are unashamed of it. Unfortunately, society is not so quick to accept their differences.
Homosexuality in our society is defined both legally and socially as a criminal and deprived practice. The homosexual is threatened by social and occupational ostracism, ridicule, violence and, in some states, imprisonment. He is forced to choose between keeping his "deviant" sexual tendencies secret, so that he may have a chance at social and economic security, or openly admitting his homosexuality,
"The thought that you are 'gay' is always with you and you know it's there even when other people don't. You also think to yourself that certain of your mannerisms and your ways of expression are liable to give you away. That means there is always a certain amount of strain. . . You know, the only time when I really forget I'm gay is when I'm in a gay crowd."
thereby lowering his social and economic status.
Most homosexuals naturally seek some form of campanionship with other homosexuals. This provides a social context within which he can find acceptance. Many who wish their homosexuality to remain a secret fear detection and are often anxious about their association with other homosexuals. A statement made by a homosexual illustrates this fear.
And the more liberated homosexuals, those who are willing to openly admit their propenitions, are also persecuted. They have decided to stand up against society's taint. But as they try to conduct what they consider normal, moral lives, they find themselves pinned in by laws that try to force them to be something they can't be. If a psychiatrist can't help a willing homosexual become heterosexual, how can a law change him?
One mark of a healthy society is its tolerance of people who deviate from the norm. Today's homosexual can hardly escape the harsh judgments of society. He should at least be free of restrictions by the laws.
—Barbara Spurlock
Eradicate Town-Gown
Guest Editorial
The best way to unload a tacky, leftover conflict like the hoary town-gown one in Lawrence is to take an active part in getting rid of it. On March 6 some University of Kansas students will have an excellent opportunity to do that by voting in the city commission primary election.
There is no practical method of discerning how many KU students are eligible to vote in the election, but of the approximately 37,800 people in Lawrence registered to vote, the percentage of KU students undoubtedly is significant.
Most of the town-gown conflict is traceable to lack of interest by students in city business. This situation has deteriorated to the point that some students do not know what town they are in the moment they set foot off campus. Therefore, a typical city commission primary usually would evoke little more than a yawn from students.
This year's primary, however, is anything but typical.
Two of the candidates are members of the KU faculty, which alone should be enough to arouse student interest. Three candidates
running under the auspices of the Support Your Local Police Committee have adopted a platform that strongly condemns city officials currently in office. The other nine candidates present a broad range of backgrounds and opinions seldom seen in a city commission election.
Three of the five city commission posts are open this year, an important number since three of five represents a majority vote. Because Lawrence is in a crucial stage of development and growth, the three votes will be vitally important in coming years.
Plans to expand K-10 highway to four lanes and to develop the Clinton Lake area will cause Lawrence's strong university flavor to fade as the town becomes more attractive to people interested in KU. The University's current strong position can only be maintained if students and faculty alike take an active part in the growth of Lawrence.
On March 6 eight of the 14 commission candidates will be eliminated by the primary. Each student who is qualified to vote should ask himself, "Who has to go?" and vote accordingly.
Chuck Potter
James J. Kilpatrick
Kennedy Promise Unfulfilled
WASHINGTON—One of the most perceptive writers in Washington, British correspondent Henry Fairle, has written one of the most perceptive political books of our time. The late Nicolae Luccei wrote that years, could not have done a better job than Fairle has done with "The Kennedy Promise."
Machaavelli's purpose in his masterpiece, "The Prince," was to advise a young Medic on the art of statecraft. Fairlie's purpose in this brilliant work is to analyze a young president's aborted administration. His retrospective documents of the recent days are the best judgments yet rendered, but his observations on the American presidency look beyond the Kennedy years.
Yet, looking back, Fairlie asks what it all meant. The incessant demand for action ruled out the alternative of inaction, of simply, in a given situation, doing nothing. The Kennedys never knew how to do nothing. The spirit of the New Frontier, in
Fairie has subtitled his book, "The Politics of Expectation." His thesis is that the Kennedy administration, dining on a diet of daily crises, lived on the rich sauce of things it meant to do. In their public lives, no less than in 1960s New York and Kennedy and their team had to action. That was the watchcry: Action!
Fairie's telling line, was a spirit of physical bravura joined to intellectual bravura. The comedy was composed entirely of cadenzia.
"Whenever there was something when he wished do, she would have said 'amersa and could rely on obaining the desired popular
reaction; the expectation was aroused, and the expectation was supported; but on the following morning the thing had still to be
James J. Kilpatrick
Fairlie continues with a Machavelian insight: "There is in fact very little that the people behind it know. They are in office; brought together at a general election, they are dispersed between elections; brought together by different address nodes; dispersed the next day. Popular
leadership can bring only small returns; and it should be used sparingly."
A part of Kennedy's difficulties rested in the intellectual activism of the men who were closest to him. With few exceptions, they had been hardworking studed power, and analyzed power and talked about power, but they never had exercised power. And when at last they got hands on this beautiful instrument, it would play to play it loudly and with flare.
Thus, in the ill-fated Alliance for Progress, the team acted on the assumption that it was "one night" or "midnight" in Latin America.
Says Fairlie, "But it was at one minute to midnight that the administration believed that the hands of the clock always stood, all over the globe; and they were driven by the fear that, if they did not act before the clock struck, their plains would be pinned. They aspired to greatness, not just occasionally, but all the time."
Greatness, of course, is a fine thing to aspire to, but true greatness is seldom capable of anything. You can somehow expected of their politics, "not the modest arrangements which are their proper concern," but a humanist arrangement, an inhuman fulfillment."
The atmosphere of dizzy ex-
US
MAIL
New Emphasis on Prayer
By GEORGE W, CORNELL
AP Religion Writer
After a period of decline, prayer is making a strong comeback, according to religious authorities.
The Rev. W. Norris Clark, a Jesuit philosopher, calls it an "inward turn."
It is a "turn back to contemplation as to the living roots of truly fruitful action." Clarke said. "This is what we find happening all around us today."
The resurgence shows up in the spread of prayer houses, prayer retreats and shared prayer groups, and in a growing charismatic movement of Pentecostal prayer meetings in major Protestant and Catholic denominations, and in youthful interest in Oriental meditation.
In the past decade, as technology has swelled and religious forces have concentrated mainly on operational reforms—theological inquiry and widespread action for social justice—many church scholars have cited a dwindling of past disciplines of prayer.
"People all about us are hungry for dimensions of mystery, for experience of the spirit," says the Rev. Dr. C. F. Allison of the biological Seminary, an Episcopal institution.
turning to devotional resources to firm up the religious basis for action in the world.
A one-sided dedication to action brought a slow spiritual starvation, Father Clarke of Fordham University wrote in the New Catholic World.
But now, he said, "generous Christian people dedicated to Christian social action are beginning to feel the need to take time out from their action, from their working for God . . . to turn within . . . to live with Him in mutual presence."
But now, they see a reviving awareness of a need for inner consciousness and prayer, a
The new interest in prayer could mean a withdrawal from social action, said the Rev. Gregory Baum of the University of Toronto, but it also could mean that church people have found that sound action requires sensitivity to God's directions for it.
Kevin Ranaghan, a leader in the charismatic movement, said that secularized theology led to the impression that prayer is passe, but he added that it now was being revitalized in the church from classic prayer disciplines to loosely structured, spontaneous prayer meetings.
In a recent address in Washington, D.C., the Rev. Bernard Hearing, a moral theologian, said the modern struggles for a deeper understanding were related to a surprising growth of personal prayer.
Griff and the Unicorn
WATCH ME,
GRIFF
O.K.
WEBSTER
By Sokoloff
HERE COMES THE
FEROCIOUS SPIDER
STALKING IT'S
FEAR-STRICKEN
VICTIM...
WATCH ME, GRIFF
O.K. WEBSTER
HERE COMES THE FEROCIOUS SPIDER STALKING IT'S FEAR-STRICKEN VICTIM...
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
THE WHOLE THING IS RUINED WHEN THE FEAR-STRICKEN VICTIM GIGGLES...
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE HEE
HEE
HEE
HEE
THE WHOLE THING IS RUINED WHEN THE FEAR-STRICKEN VICTIM GIGGLES...
HEE HEE HEE HEE HEE
pectation, in Fairie the view, was bound to produce the Bay of Pigs fiasco. It could not have been otherwise. The Kennedy players, supremely confident of their skill in putting intelligence to work, saw only the promise of glory. The sauls of the administration were well aware of the intelligence which it gathered, impelling it forward to yet another operation. What it lacked was an anchor."
Fairie's judgments may seem harsh. Ten years after the Kennedy administration, he reworked the language of any measure of government which he established which has survived." Kennedy wished to do so much – but wishes it not enough: "He in fact achieved what I have aptly termed to be a desired, but ply 'its, its true."
(C) 1972 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
While he is keeping his mouth shut about the nomination, however, he is keeping his eye fastened securely on it. He has given President Nixon would not say, as he has been quoted, that he favors Connally as his successor. The President has indicated he, Mr. Bush, will be until the picture is clearer. He isn't expected to express a choice until he sees how the candidates do in the presidential primaries. Meanwhile, he is encouraging all the candidates to compete for the nomination.
WASHINGTON—Vice President Spiro Agnew has decided to turn his back on presidential politics for another year or two. He has rejected the advice of political pros who are urging him to stay in office, saying he foresees his rivals can move in on the Republican power brokers.
Jack Anderson
He is more concerned about Connally's moves. If the former governor moves too fast, his strong bribes for the presidency, this could divide the conservative vote. Then a moderate Republican, who might stand a long charge of winning.
Agnew's response to the move by Senate Republican moderates to block his nomination and to the increasing talk about former Vice President Ronald Reagan, finally for President, therefore, will be to lie quiet and play it cool.
The stop-Agnew move by Republican moderates in the Senate would help President Obama be ident. He doubts they will be able to unite behind a single candidate but expects them to divide the party. In several presidential hopefuls.
Jack Wrather, millionaire producer of the popular "Lassie" TV series, has been helping the Nixon administration decide what shows to kill on public television this year.
One program on the cutting block turns out to be a direct rival of the local radio series, "Lassie," now in syndication, roams the screens each week in 150 cities, the city where we have public television stations.
Wrather, who sits on the powerful executive board that directs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) recommended holding up the funding of the children's show "ZOOM," which is aimed at the same group as "Lassie," "ZOOM," "injured" and the second-matched program produced by public TV.
Agnew Tones Down 'Spiro of '76' Tune
Wrather denied his recommendation was a conflict of interest. "I like ZOOM," he told us, as Mr. Jupp noted, as chairman of CPB's program review committee, in the decision to delay funding the same time, palms TV 37 for children's shows were renewed.
Wrather told us that, to his knowledge "ZOOM" and "Lassie" didn't compete anywhere in the country. But our own quick survey of the top 20 TV markets show otherwise. We did not expect "Lassie" have competed for young audiences at the same time in at least two major cities, Baltimore and Pittsburgh.
The soft-spoken millionaire referred us to Campen Soup, which sponsors "Lassie," and the New York advertising firm of Ogilvy-Mather, which distributes it.
TRAINING-SCHOOL HOAX
"We don't consider 'ZOOM' as competition," Howard Eaton of the ad firm told us. "Comparing 'Lassie' to 'ZOOM' is like comparing the United States to New Zealand," he added icily.
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is preparing to crack on schools that allegedly have misapplied courses to believe that their courses will qualify them for airline work. The FTC says the training, say FTC investigators, only to find out later that their diploma isn't worth the paper it's printed on.
The schools, which rake in hundreds of millions of dollars a year, will be accused by the FTC of false advertising. Two of the schools under investigation are in Kansas City and Miami.
Other schools have already been served "cease and desist" orders to stop advertising that their training qualifies a graduate to work in the airline industry. The degree of employment picture in the industry is good. Both statements, in fact, are false.
A spokesman for one of the schools told us the schools provided a needed service. A high school kid," said the spokesman, "wouldn't have a prayer landing an airplane with a personel director disputed this; they told us the training made no difference in their hiring practices.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
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Mondav. February 26, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
Dirks
odselman
osner
Wood
nders
dreth
Dysart
JACKSON
Kansan Photo
Johnny, Ivan Thomas, Chooses Values of a Modern Black Society
"Ensemble in Black," "A Black Clown," and "We Own the Night," Black Theatre productions
Black Is Bitter and Sweet
By ZAHID IQBAL Kansan Reviewer
"Ensemble in Black," a University of Kansas Experimental Theatre production leaves one with a deep sense of disappointment that it couldn't have lasted longer.
The "evening of plays and entertainment" is meant for strong stomachs, and could leave the spectator somewhat disturbed afterwards. That the blacks have suffered in this "land of the free" is something everybody knows, but being reminded about that is another thing altogether.
The playwright's message in each of the three pieces presented may, therefore, be a bit disturbing to those non-black spectators who were not aware of last generations with regard to the Negro.
Stoe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" would be so much more acceptable to many (it was never supposed to change) Until the 1920s Blacks could not stage plays that contradicted the white viewpoint. It was in the 1930s that black plays came out openly with complaint for
A play that moves its audience is a play well done. The American Negro is, after all searching for an identity. Black theatre is part of his seeking.
Langston Hughes was one of the playwrights who broke away from the concept of the shuffling, chicken-stealing Negro. His "Don't You Want To Be Free," produced by the Harlem Suitcase Theatre may have been prompted by his impatience with his own people, and their acceptance of a second-class status in a "free" country.
One of the plays now being presented is a Hughes play, and is followed by a "poem" by that playwright, "A Black Clown." The New York Night," called is "We Own The Night."
"A Soul Gone Home" is frank and brutal under each laugh line. A woman is lamenting the loss of her son, who lies still and lifeless, until to be taken away.
"Come back from the dead and speak to your poor Mama," she walls. To her consternation, her son does return from the death to blame her for all the things she has done for her husband for "coming into the world hungry and going out the same way," he says.
He should have remained dead. His mother is quite content to labor under the white man, figuratively and in bed. Before they have gone very deep into their respective philosophies, the ambulance arrives, and he is carried away.
Cheryl Beauty, Kansas City M., senior, plays the mother well, despite distractions from the audience. Mitchell Hollis, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, succeeds in being slightly more detached from the audience, slightly because he thinks he's really dead.
"A Black Clown" is Hughes' protest against the Negro-minstrel-clown image of white entertainers through the 19th century. One can understand his bitterness. Not only were whites exploiting this image in the Negro entertainers' mold, but they were invading themselves and being invaded themselves.
It was not till the 1890s that plays were written which did not portray the Negro this way. The African people of South America
AURH Intervention
In his hands is the instrument of the Revolution, a gun. His emancipation is not far off. all he has to do is destroy the weak links in the chain, the cringing "nigger" of
(Continued from page 1)
The servile Negro is gone. In his search
found a new parish. He is black, and proud.
He is the servile Negro.
Trip To Coontown) but the image had been so firmly implanted over a hundred years that Hughes found fit to protest even in the 1930s.
In the case of Johnny, in "We Own The Night," this happens to be his mother. Johnny is dying but the Revolution must go forward because there's a weakness weak link in the chain.
Mitchell Hollis is excellent in his delivery of the monologue in which he complains that "from Africa to Georgia it only a clown." He also implies that he's walking away, not a black clown but "a man."
The Alpha Phi sorority and the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity covered about 50 of the 80 blocks where no block worker had been assigned.
Marcum said blockworkers covered all but about 30 blocks in Lawrence Sunday. The rest would be covered today and Tuesday, he said.
including the Source Book Library on Women, a 50-volume history of the women's suffrage movement. Other materials in the Source Book Library include pamphlets and government documents.
The number of promotional packets returned accounted for about one-sixth of all the sales in collecting money. The remaining packets will probably be turned in by the end of the week. Marcum said Sunday. He added that the packets should be sent to businesses in about two weeks.
Taylor explained Friday about some of the vouchers the AURH has called
The mood changes with Garret's "We
are in a town that is as new a people, a new
setting that we see."
Sunday's total will be turned into the state headquarters for the Heart Association today and will be updated as more money is collected, he said.
About $2,100 was collected by Sunday 650 Douglas County volunteers for the Heart Association's fund drive, according to Larry Marcum, chairman of the drive. Sunday was proclaimed National Heart Sunday by the association.
$2,100 Collected For Heart Fund By Volunteers
The goal for Douglas County is $12,000.
Marcum said that Sandusky collections
include more than 8,000 fish.
Heart Fund contributions will come in all year round, Marcum said.
questionable. The vouchers are paid from the woman's residence in the library accts and sent to her office.
AURH ALLEGED that about 60 voucherers from the women's residence hall account were questionable because the expenditures didn't seem to be in the spirit of the library fund and weren't appropriate for residence halls.
The excellence of the direction, the lighting and the actors is really brought home in this piece. The use of piston is a bit questionable, but the general effect is so overpowering that this can be easily overlooked.
One of the questioned expenditures concerned a $33.99 bill to Hixon Studio and Camera Shop in September 1791 for photography work done for a resident assistant at GSP. The bill was paid from the women's residence hall account.
The cash balance of the account as of
June 30, 1972, was $9,834.67, $12,120.30 was added to the account in fiscal 1972, and then it was transferred from the account, according to Beiser.
Sources of funds in fiscal 1972 were:
Oliver, *$38*, Lewis, *$25*, Corbin, *$169*;
GSP, *Hushing*, Husinger, *scholarship*
, *$12*, and unknown sources, *$11*.
Beisner said
A total of $768.21 was spent on books for the career library, making a total of $1,098.85 from the residence hall account spent on books and magazines.
The excitement and tension of an attack by the "pigs" is amply conveyed, and the piece receives really admirable support from Johnny, Lait JR., and Billy Joe, played by Nathaniel Foster. The warm-troffal Almed KK, Kansas City, Mo., junior and Dwight Thomas, Lawrence sophomore.
The guns and the Revolution are symbolic. Of course.
From Sept. 3, 1971, to Nov. 25, 1972 $332.64 was spent on magazines for the Women's Resource Library from the hall library account.
Taylor said the expenditure was legitimate because the resident assistant must have had the photograph put up in the residence hall.
She has never turned down a request for
from the women's residence hall library.
"In fact, I have simply paid any invoice with, or without a request," Taylor says.
Taylor said she believed all of the expenditures were legitimate and she had complaints on her administration of records until the recent allegations by AURH.
Cheryl Beatty plays a very realistic mother, Costumes and makeup help the overall impression of reality, and set alterations are smoothly effected between pieces. The background scenery is authentic, though an aerosol spray prop in the first piece is not, at least for something written a quarter-century ago.
People who are familiar with the nature—and limitations-of small experimental theatre productions will find "Black Encounters an immensely rewarding experience.
Although Oklahoma City is not one of the major centers of music in the United States, the residents of that city are fortunate enough to have a professional orchestra of some note in their vicinity. However, it seems that the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra is not unlike other orchestras in smaller metropolitan areas.
The University of Kansas Iranian Student Association is working with a group of KU professors to protest conditions in Iran, including the Mohammad Teheran junior, said recently.
Profs Protest Iranian Politics
Donald Brownstein, assistant professor of philosophy, said that he had not received any replies to his letters, but that he had been writing at the beginning of this semester.
To begin with, the orchestra itself is rather small by comparison to those in major cities. This could be either from a lack of competent musicians in the area, or because of the limited program the orchestra played is any indication, the managers of the organization must feel compelled to stick to the performance of "war-horses" (pieces which have been quite popular over the years) in order to keep the seat at their concerts filled.
"These professors are sensitive to the problem of pressure in our classrooms," Saribahalamil
He said the professors had written letters that informed him of the treatment of political prisoners.
Potential High, Performance Staid In Oklahoma City Symphony Concert
Sarajeghian said that Iranian students returning to their country who were known to be members of the Iranian Student Organization might be taken as political prisoners.
"We want to support these students even though they aren't 'citizens of this country'. Brownstein said. "It's really怕 conditions little is known about the conditions in Iran."
By ROGER OELSCHLAGER Kansan Reviewer
Whether or not these factors were of great influence, this reviewer went away from the concert feeling that something very good had been missed. The show now has stopped just short of excellence.
"The pressure of the government goes so far as to declare the International Iranian Student Association illegal and to affix a flag in front of their members who return to Iran," he said.
With two exceptions (an encore of "The Star Spangled Banner" and another encore), the program for this KU Concert Course attraction featured compositions of a romantic nature. The first, Brahms' *Symphony No. 2* was slightly lacking in warmth of tone color (possibly attributable to the small size of the orchestra) although it was otherwise well done. Symphony No. 2 by John Pozdo (presently chairman of the Department of Music Theory and Composition here at KU) was next on the press list. The movement work was skillfully played, with the wind and brass instruments showing particular prowess.
After intermission, the tuneful Taskalchikov Symphony No. 4 floated out into the auditorium. Here, as in the Podzio piece, it was the wind and brass players who performed it, although in places they highlighted too much and masked the sound of the strings.
After a finale whose tempo toward the end somewhat weakened the clarity of Tschaikovsky's orchestra, the band moved to the music Guy Fraser Harrison announced that as an encore the Air for the G String by J.B.Sach would be played. The strings did an excellent rendition of this piece, which was unusual contrast from the rest of the program.
Once again the audience applauded warmly, but now 'new several degrees cooler than before. Unexpectedly, the orchestra roared off into a second encore, Wagner's Prelude to Act III from the opera Lehongrin. Besides ruining the tranquil mood which the Bach piece created, this excerpt was too similar in effect to the
finale movement of the Tschakovsky symphony, and thus came as little more than a showy piece which did not add any depth to the concert.
I am trying to bribe you with uncertainty, with danger, with defeat.
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PIZZERIA
MONDAY NIGHT is KU NIGHT
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Perhaps this reviewer expected too much, but there is still the feeling that the orchestra could have presented more than a collection of nice sounds.
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6
Monday, February 26, 1973
University Daily Kansan
'Hawks Blow Lead Again
Rv TIM WINTERS
University of Kansas basketball Coach Ted Owens was not a happy man after the Nebraska Cornbushers rallied to trip the Jayhawks, in a Saturday afternoon game. [LB0201]
Kansan Sports Editor
The Jayhawks, who came back in the second half to take the lead from the Huskers only to lose it in the final five minutes, allowed by the smaller 12-play players, 41-34.
"Two things hurt us against Nebraska," Owens said. "We had a poor shooting game and had a lack of rebounds. We just weren't setting, our rebounds and loose balls."
KU managed to hit on all 35.8 per cent of its shots, hitting on 29 of 81 attempts during the contest. Rick Suttle hit on only two of seven shots from the field, and only guards Dale Greenlee and Tom Kivisto were able to keep KI. Kivisto finished with a point and Kivisto with 14.
"We were missing the good abos," Gwenn said. "I thought that our guards performed well, but I was not confident."
shooting well, even though he did have a good rebounding game."
Knight finished with 13 rebounds, high for the game, but managed to score only nine
It was not the first time this season that the jayhawks had a lead in the second half only to be beaten in the final minutes. The man-to-man defense did not stop the Nebraska front line, which constantly had easy lavups against the Kansas big men.
"We're losing because the other teams are playing a little more aggressively." Owens said. "But we will continue to work on the man-to-man."
Owens said that the team would practice Sunday and Monday to prepare for the Missouri game on Tuesday night. The Tigers were idle over the weekend, but last week defeated the league-leading K-State team, which will begin at 7:38 p.m. in Allen, Field House.
Saturday's game was the fourth straight win for Nebraska over the Hawks, three of four. The Reds scored on a backheel.
KU, behind 24-12 at the half, managed to take the lead with 6:31 left in the game, 54-50, behind the outside shooters of guards 72-68 and had all of his 14 hits in the second half.
the first time the Huskers have swept the Jawhays in conference play in 24 years.
Nebrasa regained the lead with 4:32 remaining on baskets by Tony Riehl and Jerry Fort and two free throws by the baskets kept the lead the rest of the contest.
The Jayhawks are now 4-6 in the conference and 8-14 overall. The 'Hawks are tied with Nebraska for fifth place. The Cornhuskers have an overall record of 9-13.
☆ ☆ ☆
Kansas State 9
Colorado 7
Missouri 9
Oklahoma 4
Kansas 4
Illinois 4
Iowa State 4
Oklahoma State 4
Trackmen Stride to Win Before 1st Home Crowd
Having only one chance to show-off before a home crowd during the indoor track season, we had a stellar display of the team and our distanced Southern Railers in a dual meet here Saturday night, 77-54.
Although two first place winners, Jim Euell and Kent McDonald, were disqualified for cutting in too closely to other runners, the Hawks were able to counter with first place finishes in 11 of the 14 events.
KU got record breaking performances from Barry Schur in the high jump (6-10%) and Terry Porter in the pole vault (16-2). Schur's mark broke the Allen Field House and meet record; Potter's broke the meet record.
Head Coach Bob Timmons, said he was encouraged by the teams performance and additional praise on hurdlers Greg Vandavear and Bob Bonkissel, spinner Tom Scauzwo, long jumper Danny Seay and patrol rocket Guervaara.
Golf
The University of Kansas golf队 will have tryouts March 6 and 9 at the Lawrence Country Club. Coach Jeff Bridger will begin at noon on the 8th and only golfers with a handicap of 8 or under will be eligible. Wells said that five teams have applied to answer questions to call Wil伯 Norton 843-2398) or Chuck O'Neill (843-2399).
Track and Field
The 1st organization meeting of the Intercollegiate Women's Track and Field team will be at 4:30 p.m. March 1st in Robinson Gymnasium. Sharon Drysdale, director of the program, will lead each test trophy will be conducted on March 1st and after they select their team, the schedule will be set.
Coed Volleyball
--high bib - KU, Braun Cooper, 9.1; Mac Joseph, 7.65;
Halpern, 8.40; Harvey, 8.40; Bassel, 8.40; Bohlke,
Waltkowski, 8.40; Al Colahova, 5.4.
Today is the deadline for any groups interested in coed volleyball. Each team must consist of at least three men and three women and the lists are due by 5 p.m. in the Women's intramural office of the games will be held at 7:15, 7:45, or 8:45 on Tuesday and Thursday nights. People who have questions should call Cindy Kelley (814-555) or Claire McElroy, 112 Robinson.
The University of Kansas gymnasium team put together one of their season's best performances here Saturday night and will host a celebration of the University of Colorado team 149.35 to 139.95.
'Hawks Drub CUGymnasts
Cacho Bob Lockwood was he pleased with the team's effort and said that it was reassuring to score so well after a poor showing at Nebraska the week before.
The Jayhawks next meet is with the University of Oklahoma at Norman next Saturday. Lockwood said the Sooners had a fine team and were currently ranked 8th in the nation, but thought the 'Hawks would do well.
★ ★ ★
Scoring with his usual regularity, Marc Joseph, Lawrence senior and co-captain, will be the guest of honor at the meet with a strong all-around score of 52.15 and set a school record of 9.60 on the parallel bars. He broke his own record of 7.38 in the season at the Rocky Mountain Open.
Five exercise-KU, Stone Dickens, 7.00; Mar
Ellen Hassler, Stone Dickens, 7.00; Jeff Wakbus, 8.35; Kirk
Morgan, 7.9; Mark Clinton, 6.25
Pommel horse-KU. Marc Joseph, 31; Iowa Howard,
Hatch, 6.70; Jeff Waltkus, Jerry Gasselman, 7.15;
Hatch, 6.70; Jeff Waltkus,
7. 9.10, 7.9.15, 7.9.20, 7.9.25, 7.9.30, 7.9.35, 7.9.40, 7.9.45, 7.9.50, 7.9.55, 7.9.60, 8.10, 8.11, 8.12, 8.13, 8.14, 8.15, 8.16, 8.17, 8.18, 8.19, 8.20, 8.21, 8.22, 8.23, 8.24, 8.25, 8.26, 8.27, 8.28, 8.29, 8.30, 8.31, 8.32, 8.33, 8.34, 8.35, 8.36, 8.37, 8.38, 8.39, 8.40, 8.41, 8.42, 8.43, 8.44, 8.45, 8.46, 8.47, 8.48, 8.49, 8.50, 8.51, 8.52, 8.53, 8.54, 8.55, 8.56, 8.57, 8.58, 8.59, 8.60, 8.61, 8.62, 8.63, 8.64, 8.65, 8.66, 8.67, 8.68, 8.69, 8.70, 8.71, 8.72, 8.73, 8.74, 8.75, 8.76, 8.77, 8.78, 8.79, 8.80, 8.81, 8.82, 8.83, 8.84, 8.85, 8.86, 8.87, 8.88, 8.89, 8.90, 8.91, 8.92, 8.93, 8.94, 8.95, 8.96, 8.97, 8.98, 8.99, 8.10, 8.11, 8.12, 8.13, 8.14, 8.15, 8.16, 8.17, 8.18, 8.19, 8.20, 8.21, 8.22, 8.23, 8.24, 8.25, 8.26, 8.27, 8.28, 8.29, 8.30, 8.31, 8.32, 8.33, 8.34, 8.35, 8.36, 8.37, 8.38, 8.39, 8.40, 8.41, 8.42, 8.43, 8.44, 8.45, 8.46, 8.47, 8.48, 8.49, 8.50, 8.51, 8.52, 8.53, 8.54, 8.55, 8.56, 8.57, 8.58, 8.59, 8.60, 8.61, 8.62, 8.63, 8.64, 8.65, 8.66, 8.67, 8.68, 8.69, 8.70, 8.71, 8.72, 8.73, 8.74, 8.75, 8.76, 8.77, 8.78, 8.79, 8.80, 8.81, 8.82, 8.83, 8.84, 8.85, 8.66, 8.67, 8.68, 8.69, 8.70, 8.71, 8.72, 8.73, 8.74, 8.75, 8.76, 8.77, 8.78, 8.79, 8.80, 8.81, 8.82, 8.83, 8.84, 8.85, 8.66, 8.67, 8.68, 8.69, 8.70, 8.71, 8.72, 8.73, 8.74, 8.75, 8.76, 8.77, 8.78, 8.79, 8.80, 8.81, 8.82, 8.83, 8.84, 8.66, 8.67, 8.68, 8.69, 8.70, 8.71, 8.72, 8.73, 8.74, 8.75, 8.76, 8.77, 8.78, 8.79, 8.80, 8.81, 8.82, 8.83
Long horns-KU, Mike Backus, 9.20, Titian Qim, 9.23, Al
Miller, 9.18, Jeff Wattknox, 9.17, Steve Bates, 9.18,
Kirk Mierer, 9.15
Parallel-bear, KM·Mar Josee, 60; Brad Barak, 8.5;
Parallel-bear, 8.1; KU Marseille, 2; Jeff Wesson, 8.5;
Barak, 8.1
Big Eight Meet Climax for Senior
All round— J. Joseph, KU, (32.15), W. Walkin, (37.14), 47.10, Theorem (KU, 46.05), 4. Colleyce, (CU, 37.15).
Fezler Fizzles; Trevino Wins
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)—Forrest Fezeler short puts on the last two holes Sunday and let Lee Trevino escape with the victory and a $2,000 first-place check in the Jackie Gleason Inventary-National Airlines Golf Classic.
Trevino matched par 72 on the 7,128-yard Invergary Golf Club course and backed in to his first victory of the season when Fezler blew it down the stretch.
Trevino, now the winner of 14 American
nationals in his career, finished with a 79.
He also scored 63 points.
Fezler missed a four-foot pear put on the 17th to let Trevino—already in the clubhouse—take a share of the lead and failed on a five-foot effort for a birdie that would have forced a play-off on the final hole.
By BOB MARCOTTE
Kansas Sports Writer
For Roland Sabate, Shawnee Mission senior and member of the KU swim team, *Be Big Eight Conference Swimming* will be scheduled for March 1-8 will be especially significant.
It's the last Big Eight Conference meet that Sabate will compete in, climaxing four years of hard effort with the KU swim team and Sabate said Wednesday that he already felt the pressure of the meet two weeks beforehand.
"I've been at this four years," Sabate said, "and this is it."
The tension and pressure will continue to build right up to the meet itself, Sabate said, and that until then, the preparation by team members would be mostly mental.
"We're all in shape right now," Sabate said. "What we need to watch most is our bodies, especially the lower body."
Sabate said that to achieve that end, swim coach Dick Reamon has used a tapered practice program during the season that now has team members working out once a day and logging about 4,000 yards daily. Sabate said, this represented a gradual decline from the heavy training period in January to fall to twice a day and team members were averaging 10,000-12,000 yards of swimming per day.
Sabate that the heavy training period had built up endurance and strength among the team members and that now the em- orienteers are prepared in preparation for the conference meet.
"I've got a lot of confidence in the coach's tapered program," Sabate said. "We've decreased quantity but it's increasing quality."
Though the meet weighs heavily on his mind now, Sabate said that once he hit the water in an event it would "all become mechanical."
Sabate swims the 50-, 100- and 200-yard freestyle events and he said it was only in the latter event that he consciously paced himself.
"The others are really speed sprints." he
"and sprints you don't look
around."
previous years that Sabate has been on the sound. The biggest of these is team spirit
"We've got a lot of team spirit" 'Sabate said, "more so than any of the other teams we played."
"Most teams just sit around during a meet. We get really excited and hopped up over what's going on. We have cheers we do to give each other support.
There are other factors besides the hard work that Sahabate attributes to the success of a project.
"There are guys on our reserve team who could be starting for other schools, but they came here because KU has such a good team." Sabate said.
"That makes us swim a little faster. You don't want to let anybody down when you know the whole team's behind you."
Because of this, Sabate said he has never allowed himself to feel completely secure in his position on the team and has had to put all the more effort to maintain it.
meet," Sabate said, "a kind of mental
image of every stroke, and I perfect each
"I think a week about it, and sometimes in a week before a meet I get eggy and hard in my head."
There is a favorite quotation on a picture of a starting block that hangs above Sabate's desk to remind him of the challenge of the coming meet:
"I try to imagine myself swimming in the
"You must deny yourself many things that would keep you from doing your best.
"We go to a lot or trouble just to win a blue ribbon or a silver cup, but we do it for that." "We know what disappears." For Sabate, that reward is having met a challenge and done his best.
Rest assured that in the coming two weeks, whenever Roland Sabate sits down to his desk and reads over those words, there will be visions of strong, perfect characters whose mind as the contemplates a victorious conclusion to his KU swimming career.
Ryun Entered in Pro Meet
POCATELLO, Idaho (AP) - Jim Ryan, the world's fastest mileer, will be among the competitors Saturday in the first pro track formed International Track Association.
Also scheduled to participate are Tom Von Ruden, the third fastest indoor米尔 at 3:57.9 and holder of the indoor record for 1,000 meters at 2:04.
The ITA has signed three seven-foot plus
The meet will be held in the 13,000-seat Minidome.
Entered in the sprint field are Jim Hines, 1968 Olympic gold medalist; Jean-Louis Ravelmanantoa, fourth in the 1972 Munich games; Warren Edmonson, 1972 National College Athletic Association champ, and six-time NCAA champion Gerry Lindren, formerly of Washington State.
World record-holder Bob Seagran, gold-medal winner at the 1968 Olympics, will compete against Dennis Phillips of Oregon Mike Wedman of Colorado in the pole vault.
Von Ruden is from Notus. Idaho.
Wednesday Night is Ladies Night, Draws only 10*
The Jahwais next meet will be the Big Eight Indoor Championship in Kansas City, MN.
11:00 a.m.
to
midnight
DIRTY
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Introducing Herbie and His Night Time
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708 MASS.
843-9608
AND, DON'T FORGET TGIF with Herbie from 3:00-6:00 on Friday.
★ ★ ★
Tuesday Night Pitchers $1.00-7 p.m. to midnight
SPECIALS:
Pitchers $1.00
high jumpers--Marty Hill, formerly of Oregon, who jumped 61-1/2 at the Mindone two week ago; Obit Burrell, Reno, and John Dobroht, a graduate of Occidental.
BLACK THEATRE ENSEMBLE IN BLACK K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982 Feb. 25-Mar. 6
Randy Matson, the only man to put the 16-pound shot over 70 feet, faces three competitors, Brian Oldfield, a 1972 Olympian; Fred DeBernardi, formerly of the University of Texas-EI Paso, and Karl Salb, a three-time NCAA indoor champion.
Two of the fastest women's sprinters, Woyia Tyus and Barbara Farrell, are scheduled for a special women's 100 meter dash.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
NOW OPEN
Fully accredited, 20-year UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA Gudalajala Summer School offers July 2-August 11, anthropology, art, education, folklore, geography, history, government, music, Tuition 165; board and room 221. Write International Programs, University of Arizona, Arizona U85721
Long jump, 1 - Seay, KU, 34(8), 2 Brown, SU, 23(9),
Hackman, SU, 21(11), 2 Brown, HI, 20(12), 4.2 Brown,
Shaffer, KU, 42(8)
Long jump, 2 - Seay, KU, 34(8), 2 Brown, SU, 23(9),
Johnson, KU, 44(0)
Long jump, 3 - Seay, KU, 34(8), 2 Brown, SU, 23(9),
Johnson, KU, 44(0)
Pole vault, 1 - Seaver, KU, 50(6), 2 Lutz, KU, 31(1),
Ramnun, RU, 100-1 m, 2 Lawn, KU, 13(4), 2 Smith, SU,
6(3)
Dash 1 - Seaver, KU, 50(6), 2 Lutz, KU, 31(1),
High jump, 2 - Schuh, KU, 60(6), 2 Lawn, KU, 67(3),
High jump, 3 - Schuh, KU, 60(6), 2 Lawn, KU, 67(3),
three people, 2 - Seaver, KU, 50(6), 2 Lawn, KU, 67(3),
Vandevera, KU, 7.3 - Robbins, KU, 7.2, Browne, KU,
7.2, Browne, KU, 7.4 - Vandevera, KU, 7.3, 2 Craig, KU,
3.1, John, KU, 9.23(8)
Martinez, KU, 9.23(8) 2 Ishikawa, KU, 11.5(9), 2 Hinton, KU,
21.4 Martinez, KU, 11.5(9) 2 Hinton, KU, 21.4 Martinez, KU, 106(5) 2 Boat, KU, 20.0(0) 3 Hill, SOUT, 2.7
Brown, KU, 20.0(0) 2 Bornkelock, KU, 6.2 2 Vanwarder, KU,
7.0 2 Robinson, KU, 7.0
Smooth kick, 1 - Snell, KU, 7.0 2 Bornkelock, KU, 6.2
Brown, KU, 7.0 2 Bornkelock, KU, 7.0 3.2 Bornkelock, KU, 3.2 3 Snell, KU, 7.0 2 Bornkelock, KU, 7.0 3.2 Bornkelock, KU, 3.2
Smooth kick, 1 - Geavers, KU, 58(4), 2 Colson, KU, 31(4)
Smooth kick, 2 - Porter, KU, 27(9), 2 Zagano, KU, 31(3)
Volley ball, 1 - Porter, KU, 27(9), 2 Zagano, KU, 31(3)
Volley ball, 1 - Porter, KU, 27(9), 2 Zagano, KU, 31(3)
shot point, Gouverneur, K9, 58-12; B Cousson, K9, 53-12;
Sheriff, K9, 60-11; W Tate, K9, 46-10. (A) U.S.
Union, SUI, 114; (B) Meet record, Rachard, Hatcher, K9,
61-11. (C) Meet record, Hatcher, K9, 58-12.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 26, 197
7
SUA to Offer Europe Trips At Group Rates
Albaugh the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) has not yet approved group affinity regulations, SUA is offering four flights to Europe this summer on a first-come, first-serve basis, Tony Mosiman, SUA travel advisor, said Monday.
Should CAB eliminate group affinity flights, SUA will have to alter the dates and possibly the fares of the flights. SUA is making a decision to fly until the airlines make a decision.
Flight No. 1, goes from Chicago to Paris on May 30 on Air France. The return trip is Aug. 1. The total cost for one passenger, the cost of 40 persons are on the flight, is $304.
The three other flights, all on Icelandic Airlines, cost $213 for each passenger. The flights go from New York to Luxembourg and require a minimum group of 25 persons. Flight No. 2 leaves May 23 and returns July 24. Flight No. 3 leaves May 23 and returns Aug. 1. Flight No. 4 leaves May 30 and returns Aug. 1.
The SUA also has four connecting flights. Flight 1C to Chicago May 30 has an open return date and costs $35 on Braniff International Airlines. Minimum group size is
Three flights from Kansas City to New York are scheduled to connect with the Icelandic Airline flights. They cost $137 on airlines and Airlines for minimum groups of 25 people.
Any student, faculty or staff member and his immediate family are eligible for the flights.
All prices are subject to CAB approval.
KU Debaters Take
2 Nebraska Awards
LINCOLN (AP)—The University of Kansas won two team awards, the Donald Olson trophy in debate and the sweepstakes trophy which includes debate and individual events, at the University of Nebraska Sunday.
Runner-up for the Olson trophy was the University of Minnesota. Third place went to Rutgers University. Final round winner
The individual oratory winner was Tam Keller of Washburn University and the oral interpretation winner was Molly Landgraf of Hastings College in Nebraska.
The extemporaneous speaker winner Paul Johnson of Gustavus Adolphus of Middletown.
In varisty debate, KU finished first and
University of Nebraska at Omaha was
second.
The varsity team comprised Joel Goldman, Mission junior, and Bill Webster, Carthage, Mo., sophomore. Goldman and Webster lost no rounds.
Other members of the KU team were Stanley, Lawrence sophomore; Todd Hunter, Oklahoma City, Okla.; sophomore; Dana Waildson, Wellington senior; Lynn Hursh, Mission sophomore; Stewart Whitman, Atlantic, Iowa; freshman; Whiteman, Atlantic, Iowa; freshman; Jim Prentice, Turon freshman; and Phil Snow, Houston, Tex. freshman.
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each additional word: $.03
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
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Deadline : 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered, without regard to whether or not national or origin ordained ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE COUNTRY Shops—3 bus. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Iowa 2 bus. becking & cooking cows, bicycles between 10 speeds, edels, old pot butteries and 1 bucket baskets & wooden cottages, 1 and 1 bucket baskets & wooden cottages, Fireplace wood baskets & bamboo cottages, good paint baskets & bamboo cottages, balsam bark & wheat straw, Open 9 to 7 days, 842-319-3199 Herb Attendant
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Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
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"New Available now Campus Madhouse, Town Crier
5-8
Fisher 202. Receiver Amp 28, watts RMS per
channel Amp 12, 5" spaced 2 times
$400.00. Call 842-7238.
Dynaket Stero 70 wired and prep-am. Works-
must. Good. Bill$13.00. Call 845-1846. -1866.
Zentih stereo for sale with AM-FM Stereo radio.
108-watt speakers 109 watts speaker
Art. 684-693. 2-26
MARTIN D-18 d-18琴 with hard shell case, 6 months old. ask for Clark. 842-4579. 2-27
1988 GTO 2-DR HRT, yellow with black vinty top; 2杯
GTO 3-DR HRT, red with black vinty top; 418-343 when 814-388 when
new.
PHILIPS GA125 furnatable with Shure V-15 sermon
speakers. For a custom condition $229 will airs $116 for the
shade.
MINOLTA SHR for sale. Several lenses also. Call
843-566- to see.
2-28
97 Barracuda, 50,000 miles. Good condition Rare,
power steering, 3 new tires, tire charges $149.
$299-500 for complete service.
FIAT 124 SPORT COUPE-5-speed, mop wheels, mats,
clean and well maintained, ready for winter,
runs all day at 90 on 28mm. Reclining seats.
Clean, well maintained, INTERSTARED
Chip Lehman, 841-2726.
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all-
over Hoover, Eureka, Electricula, etc.
e-218
MBs Man
M
Stereo component package -AM/FM Stereo res-
2 mii BMChanger headphones, and 10 bins
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4-Channel Stereo component system, AM/FM
player, USB/SD changer, PS3 Speaker, Steering
player, 850K ohm charger, AC850K charger
1966 CHRYSLER II 227.4 system, 5.123. Lakewood.
New York. Aeropropeller. With two more
machines. Will trade or offer best
offer.
FOR SALE-- 86 Dodge Charger-131-2-Barrel
For Sale-- 86 Dodge Charger-131-2-Barrel
843-2597 (keep trying).
2-26
BEAT THE SPRING RUSH—(Ash) 20:10 to 19:40
The rookie in the first round beats two teams, a twin team-pull伙伴 2 mins. of 35 minutes and a team-pull partner 1 mins. of 35 minutes.
Such a deal. Used fluid (Armornet) in good condition with xig-rg $20.00 Call Saan evenings.
RIP MEP OFF-Must sell to finance Florida FIRESTACK PLAYER; HAVE CASS LOSS in 2-28
SPORTS CAR-1966 Sunburn Alhaji, Roll Harbour
throughout Gale Glimare, 841-329 before
death.
DISCOUNT FURNITURE We sell quality, name brand furniture. At a few extra miles, you can save a lot. Armorville Furniture ... (584-1264) For more information and directions, call 813-3780 between 6-10
For sale 65 *Plymouth Sport Fury*, automatic trans-
port, 1900 Cars, 848-372-8281, auto-safety
400 Cars, 848-372-8281.
**65 Buck Special 4 drs.** cylinders, excellent compartmentalization. $99.90. 206-227
2-3 mm. 5-1 mm.
Super 8 movie projection $175 new-Now $100.00
Super 8 movie projection $249 new-Now $200.00
Call 606.592-4928 for details
Call 606.592-4928 for details
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
72 Toyota Corolla Deluxe. Snow树. Must Sell.
Economical operation. Call 841-5270. 2-26
PEUGEC
For ask by ask, hire small business, currently operating on a full-time basis for one day per week. Priced for quick sale with no offers or promotions. Call 800-415-6249.
Give a tea party with a tea set from the HODGE PODGE, 15 W. 9th.
3-1
Peugeot uo-8 $117.50
Pearseot PX-10-E $225.00
880 SUZUKI 1972-2,300 ml. immaculate. See and
ride to appreciate (2 ml. besides) Ron. Also
and ride to appreciate (2 ml. besides) Ron.
For Sale. 64 VW needs engine work. Cheap $200.
Call 812-7768.
**3-2**
Bala, Aila. 10-open, 10-reveal, very rare; need grind-
Fred around 6:00 P.M. 842-897-7000; need Fred around
2:28 6:00 P.M. 842-897-7000
Please give my watered up a good team. The comp is $35.00. Good condition, no break. Call $200.00. Good condition, no break. Call
Must sell story and Clark piano. In excellent condition. Need money for school. $500 Call apples to 800-231-7924.
Get a car at Spring 60. Corvair Truly excellent car morning for 11.35%. Get a car at Spring 60. Corvair Truly excellent car morning for 11.35%.
1963 Chiv 8- passenger Caprice Wagon. One own-
er, Markleigh, registration #824. 842-178-947
Registration number: 842-178-947
FOR RENT
sirloin
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP CLIMBING / ARMORED
SHOULDERS, directly across Carlin,
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, packed parking lot, free Cash.
Free Wi-Fi, internet access, rated rates, furniture available, ideal roommates or couples. In Saiton Aprs., 123 Ind. Apt. 9 - 10.
RIDE ON BICYCLES
1401 Mass. 843-8484
LAWRENCE KANSAS
$40,000 RENTAL MONEY for their rental in rental for the late January 2016 Lawrence Rental Exchange, $850.00 for the late February 2016 Lawrence Rental Exchange, $850.00
MALLS
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
Come by and see these apartment apartments. Rent water bills are $103. Water bills are $129. Water bills are $149. Leaves of various lengths are $15 to $17.
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu, Steak Sandwiches, Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks Our menu is and has always been there to offer for quality food. **1.** Miles North of the
Those beautiful apartments narrowed at a pietra
floor. Each room had an eight-foot-high fence.
Finger Hall only 18 blocks east of the main
building.
Available Evenings call 842-7851 2411 Louisiana
For rest, clean, quiet apts with carpeting, dish-
towels, and linens. Roommate required. Enviorn-
ment 1025 Alesis Blvd. 842-602-9635
1025 Alesis Blvd. 842-602-9635
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing 1 and 2 bedrooms, hot tub, large kitchen, central heating and air, pool and pool. Most utilities paid. Close Contact. Call 845-8229 or see at 131-607-3000.
2 bedroom house unfurnished $100 Call 842-
6908
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
5.8
Nice studio apt. Close to campus. -off-street parking.
1423 Abbott, 841-213-176
2-56
If you call us now, we have a 1 and 2 bedroom
unit. We offer:
WOOD APARTMENTS: 843-116-1
2-28
Sleeping rooms with Kitchen privileges $55. Call 842-6088.
Very small room—furnished and utilities paid
855.30 Call 842-0908.
2-28
Open 4.30
Closed Mondays
NEDA A SUMMER PLACE! Meadowbrook has it. NURSING 1, and 2 bedrooms, great recreational facilities—two basketball and tennis courts, a gymnasium, a library, an open House, Sunday, March 11. 3-9
Phone
843-1421
Large unimproved apt_1, utilities drove—love and
refrig. $150.00. Call 842-6988.
2-28
11; Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
%
COUNTYNLIVING—à mil to KU —Sapienza form
e, spazio per la vita. C. waerer, drink, prir.
C. waerer, drink, prir.
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
THE HILE in the WALL
Apt. for Renf, 1025 Ohio St. NO CONTACT AUG.
except electricity be any time. Call 844-763-3950.
Nicely furnished gt for 1 or 2 students. Close to campus, parking. Phone: 618-793-4510. Campus Phone: 618-793-4518.
Open only 5am - late 11am
843 7683—We Deliver—9th & 11th
Furnished apartment for rent. Single bedroom at 9, W. 128, Ipk. Call server.迎见 1 p.m. 843-914-584
$99—one and two bedroom baths, electric kitchenches, carpeted, draperies, color TV availability, air conditioner, modern facilities and on the bus route. Rate: $180-$350 at 12:00-5:00. Wheel Width: 25th W. #241-6522. Hills View Apts.
TRAILHIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and fall openings; three-room suite with 2 bedrooms with study, Drapes and deep skirt carpet, fully equipped with a dining area, excellent management, furniture available for rent.
NOTICE
ATTACHMENT NOTICE
House, apartment and office locations all areas,公寓、住所和办公场所全部区域,住宅、
115 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q We Q-Bare in queen in a red 28" rack $30 each. S to eat add to bate Barge $20, large 7lb plate $10. S to eat add to bate Barge $40, large 12lb plate $60. S to eat add to bate Barge $10, beef au jus. See, found of beef $1. $1 chicken plate $2. $1 salad plate $2. $1 wine plate TW I $29. 2010. Mish. St. U
No charge, list your house, apartments, duplexes,
cottages, restaurants, hotels, and waiters. More info for local Locate
www.locate.com
Discount prices with saving up to 40% on some items. The discount valid at Country Shop, 707 North 2nd, Open 9-7, day(s) per week.
Orest Quaker Messing wants move Friends We
have to leave. We are going to move the
Chapel. For more information add Amuere Mathews
For birth information and abortion com-
munication, call the Center for Birth
- 340-366, 24 hours a day
(Karn 500-1508) This spring, as campus coordi-
tors write to P.O. Box 21588, San Jose 94117
FUN FACTS about VENEERAL DISEASE
welcome, GAY LIBERATION-training,
Mon., 6:45-7:30 a.m., SOCIALIZATION-CONSULTING,
842-778-4920, 842-778-4921
FUN FACTS about LAWYER COUNSELING
Box 234, Lawyers, 842-778-4928
Why buy a landlord's furniture for him with your own? If you want to sit along with your diplomat's $6 or $8 rent, vent can be again. Why not check into a home insurance company?
25% off all clothing at the HODGE PODGE 15-1
W. 9th.
Just arrived new shipment of earrings at the HODGE PODGE 15. W 9th. 3-1
Original Lawnery Antique Show, National Guard
Armory, Lawnschr. March 2, 3 & 4 Slow Hours
11 a.m. to 10 p.m.-Sunday **Admission $1.00**
or all day. Enrolled by Pilot Club of Lawnschr.
Need a Handy Man? Gay Community being formed
in response to call imply at 841-329-9100
No Transgender person
Coins & coin supplies. Also buy gold and silver coins, Indian head pennies. Teachers' coins. Mass. Index. 32-8
THE PUB INC. IS IN KANSAS NOW. The newest concept in young people entertainment lounges. If you are interested in becoming a PUB OPERATOR in your city write to the Valley Center, Kansas or call 316-772-5701. $490 investment. All are strictly confidential.
DATSUN IT SURE BEATS WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S IMPORTS
DATESUN
500 E.23rd
842-0444
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
If You're Planning on FLYING,
Reservations Early
Bicycle
Make Your Spring Break
PHONE 843-1211
Maupintour travel service
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
DISCOUNT
928 Mass
PERSONALIZED SERVICE
The Stereo Store
UDIOTRONICS
...
WANTED
Fair prices, paid for, good used furniture and antiques. 843-7098 If
Commuting, wire needs speed from 83rd Street
and Apt. 2510 to 83rd Street, 63rd Street, 49th
Apt. 38, ROW 1 P.M. or LPM, at Cell 644-762-4011
(714) 625-2711 (714) 625-2711
843
8500
Wanted: 1 or 2 female roommates to share a living space and next year in Jaywalker.
Call 843-1954. 2-26
Dedurably needrise rife from Kauppi clio to KU (Kupari) to KU, which must be a 60-70 km long line. If interested she will 925-308 or 631-308.
Need 1 to 1 roommates, 4 bdm, double duplex.
Rent $150 uto. mail. B2-842-6644. 2-27
Wanted: Pursuit refinisher to share Mass Ave,
location with related business 842-708-9887
Cocktail waitresses waffled afterwards and
calls 843-9800. The Flaming Club. 2-27
To sell Gibson EB-2 hollow bass guitar or
to use a 10-speed bicycle. Call 854-6832-2787
for Rent.
Pinekicks for our picnic baskets. HODGE
PDOGR, 15 W. 9th.
3-1
Wanted: Girl to submit my part of Ajayhawk
communications with her husband
with husband
at 875-734-2100.
LOST
Last Valentine's Day, in Shoufter Place, area near Cedar Park, was a surprise for the pregnant and were very worried about her health. At first, she said, "I don't care."
One brown wallet vicinity McCollum Hall Inst-
nude to owner. Find please me at Mackenzie 2-777-3020.
LOSKY, intelligent, sensitive cat, blood male. 8
wife. 10 years old. He is his family by his name. Call 842-729-1280
Black and orange matted female kitten, 6 months. Feb. 15, 2014. Area: 842-1482-2388.
Lost Tuesday near Gibbon's Friendly趴-walking
museum. We are planning a walk to the museum.
We are anxious to have Tinker back. Please call
us at (212) 450-6348.
Gold wedding ring: free fringed filler design
Wedding band: free fringed Friday, Feb. 14
Ward room: call 841-3237, 2-58
HELP WANTED
*JOBS IN ALASKA* Available now. This hand-
book includes a full curriculum for *GYND VISION*
$2,000 JAX Box. Contact us at info@jaxbox.com.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waitress.
Weeknight and weekend hours. *Pine 843-656*
Weekday only.
OVEREARS JOBS AT AMERICAN AIR FORCE
Air Force Academy, WI.
Training in the basic training
requirements. Flies into, write, fly, DLG,
deep dive, and rescue missions.
Applicants must be proficient in
English.
YARN - PATTERNS - NEEDLEPOINT
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10-5 Monday-Saturday
People interested in electronics to work part
and part of the team. Phone: 345-6789 or email:
fundamentals.as part of work. Phone: 345-6789.
Counselors-Resident Summer. Camp counselor needed for all girls' camp. For further information contact: Resident Camp Director, Sunflower C.I.C., Gly, Inc., 143 Armstrong, Rowan K. 61022
SERVICES OFFERED
Cambridge College Men interested in part time
work. Send resume to W. R. Brennett, 402 West Hill
Rd., Writing O, 81 Rt. Bennett, 402 West Hill
Rd., Cambridge, MA 02138.
Due to our expanded business we are in need of both hostel and romale hostel Apply in person or by phone. Visit us at www.greatmasters.com.
PERSONAL
MISCELLANEOUS
Sewing and altering for the college girl. Pick up a needle, sew with double thread, wear yarn, coats hemmed and reined 8-4 daily.
Math tutoring--for Math 2, 2c and 45. Resistance.
Hates. Call 811-2491 and ask for Gk. 2-26
Have trouble waking up? Try our wake-up service. Have trouble waking up? Call 842-3514 or 842-7580. For information call 842-3514 or 842-7580.
Friday Nite
is Date Nite
You and Your Date
3 games each
$2.00
CHEAPER IBER EVERYDAY $1.00 plumbing and
electrical services 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM
Haven 12th & Play Ground Playgrounds or
Ball Fields $4.00 per person
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, alterations, term
replacing, and indentation. Send resume to:
Woodside Press, 1075 Walnut Street, New York, NY 10024.
Email: wpress@wooldsgress.com. Spelling correction,
Word check, spelling corrections.
Come down and enjoy PINBALL, FOOSBAL and POOL—take your beer-at the Oread Street Area located right under the Mount Oread Bear park. The camp open, 1-3pm, 2-4 daily; Sunday 6 p.m.
Ned Money? Traders has the fastest $buck $ in
M22 Maintenance on items of value. Trade
822 Maintenance
FOUND
Slide rule in O one on 2-19. Describe and it is yours.
Call 844-1379, 5- p.m.
**p. 11**
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**p. 99**
**p. 100**
Handcrafted belts, purse and sandals from the meat leathers mats at the HODGE PODGERY 3-13
WHY RENT?
SPECIAL
Open 24 hrs.
RIDGEVIEW Mobile Home Sales
STATE UNIVERSITY
3020 Iowa (South Hwy.59)
1.
3 games for $1.00
Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
Jay Boul
KANSAS UNION
KANSAS UNION
DRIVE IN
MARKETING
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
INSTRUMENTS
843 5304
Independent Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
888
Coin-Op
Laundry & Dry Cleaners
19th & La. 843-9631
7
days per week
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pickup a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 830-430 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearing this spring.
8
Monday, February 26, 1973
University Daily Kansan
APPLICATION
master charge
Kansan Photo by LESLIE RISS
Making Life Liveable All the Time
More than 60 million Bank Americand Master Charge in circulation . . .
A new ruling by the Kansas Bar Association which allows the Douglas County Legal Aid Society to handle misdemeanor cases has substantially altered the society's caseload, the annual report released last week showed.
"Misdemoneman cases will probably be the largest category of cases we'll handle in the future," said Louse Wheeler, director of society. "Society and assistant professor of law.
The Legal Aid Society, a clinic for University of Kansas law students, has handled 160 misdemeasure cases since the bar ruling gave it jurisdiction over the area in July. This was second only to the 260 misdemeasure cases, out of a total caseload of 890 in 1972.
Before the organization was allowed to handle misdemeanor cases, family cases involving divorce, annulment, alimony and other domestic problems were always the largest category. Wheeler said. In six months, she said, the misdemeanor cases handled only 45 fewer than the family cases for the entire year.
The organization also handed 117 consumer and employment cases, 58 administrative cases, 83 housing cases and 66 unrelated cases, according to the report.
Legal aid, supervised by the director and members of the Kansas Bar Association, is required to go into court to argue cases, Wheeler said. Although the society is not a part of the KU law school, students receive three credit hours for each semester of work in the office.
Legal Aid's Uses Grow
The board of directors of the Legal Aid Society consists of Lawrence businessman, headed by James L. Postma, president and Lawrence lawyer. Wheeler said she and Lawrence associate professors were the only KU faculty members in the organization.
Convenience...
(Continued from page 1)
At the same time, various members of the Interbank system begin issuing their own cards: Bankcard and credit card area. These cards, however, differed from area to area, and often a holder of one card encountered problems trying to use it in a different part
America and other independent banks, the BankAmericasystem of charge credit banking.
So in 1970 Interbank began consolidating all the individual cards in its system under an umbrella card, Master Charge. Today, the majority of Interbank cards are Master Charge.
one blossoming forth of BankAmericard and Master Charge created a revolution in the credit card industry. For the first time a credit card that was good almost anywhere was available, places around us were available free of charge to just about anyone who wanted one.
Travel and entertainment cards had long been issued to upperclass businessmen and were honored throughout the world. But those were issued for a fee and an applicant was submitted to a rigid credit check. As a result, only 2 per cent of the credit cards in circulation in the country in 1970 fell within that classification.
With the advent of such easy and versatile credit plans, the use of credit cards in the United States boomed. In 1970, there were an estimated 300 million cards in the country. That number is expected to double by the end of 1973.
Half of that 1970 total were affiliated with independent retailers, some 80 million were oil company cards and over 20 million were bank cards. The remaining 60 million are miscellaneous cards. Only 50 million of the 1970 figure were bank cards, but BankAmerica and Master Charge officials estimate the combined total of their alone totals nearly sixty million today.
According to Gene Mahaffa, assistant manager of the BankAmericard center at the Commerce Bank in Kansas City, Mo., he said that bank customers were BankAmericards in circulation throughout the world in 1972. More than six and one-half million of these were in 75 foreign countries. Mahaffa added that these were honored in two 11,400 bank outlets and 11,400 bank outlets.
Master Charge, said Collins, is accepted in well over 900,000 merchant outlets and in some 15,000 bank outlets in the country. Collins said that there was a smattering of Master Charge cards in almost all of the free world, except Africa.
Both Mahaffie and Collins said that obtaining either a BankAmericard or Master Charge card was reasonably easy, that applications could be obtained in member banks, that other member banks sent out applications to persons who had accounts with them.
At one time cards were sent unsolicited to people in the mail, which many oil companies did, but a 1971 federal law prohibited that practice.
Mahaffie said that the BankAmericard credit requirements were not stringent.
"We look for the minimum criteria," he said. In Kansas, you must be 18 to graduate. You must have been employed for two years, but this is waived for the college graduate who has a job laid out. We also have a requirement of ten years of the applicant and verify his rating."
Collins said Master Charge required that a person's annual income, any additional income and his financial statement appear on his application.
*You have to go by a customer's ability and willingness.* Collins said. *You can't be right without thek
The payment plans on BankAmericard and Master Charge purchases are identical.
dependent retailer systems. Bith allow repayment of the debt within 25 days of the billing date without incurring a finance charge.
At least $10 must be paid on the first installment, and if the debt is over $200, 5 per cent must be paid. A 1½ per cent finance charge is incurred on any outstanding balance after the first payment and on the remaining amount every month thereafter.
On the other end of a credit card transaction, the merchant must also deal with the credit card company. Every month he must turn in slips for each of his credit card sales and for these he receives cash. He buys an amount, which usually runs from 2 to 5 per cent.
Under this arrangement, said Maahaffa, the merchant would obviously prefer cash.
"But under this system, he can often get to work." He is increasing his volume. Let's face it. he's increasing his volume. Let's face it.
People are a lot less reluctant to use Master Charge or BankAmericard than they are to sit down and write a check every time. And he (the merchant) doesn't have to worry about losing a check because he cuts down on paperwork. He probably gets back that 2 1/5 per cent right there."
Although $1\frac{1}{2}$ per cent is the most common consumer interest rate, there are a few states in which it varies from $%$ of a cent to 1 per cent, and several other states are considering lowering their rates.
Collins, however, said no one would real-
saving money if the rates were lowered, "We are just like anyone else," he said. "We must have an adequate return. If we are forced to lower our rates, we'll have to supplement our loss somehow. We could have paid less directly dismount on the merchant. And what would his logical move be if we did that? He'd be forced to raise his prices."
Join the Search for Tomorrow's Energy MEASUREMENTS POINT THE WAY
An Equal Opportunity Employer
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO DISCUSS YOUR FUTURE AS A FIELD ENGINEER
Schlumberger
MARCH 5
The organization primarily serves persons with low incomes, either temporary or permanent, according to Wheeler. An individual must earn less than $250 per month and work for the organization he said. A couple must earn less than $250 per month to receive legal assistance.
About 30 per cent of the organization's clients are students, who support themselves or have a poor family background to receive legal aid.
According to Wheeler, many of the student cases involved housing and were usually cases in which the student has not been treated for drug-related problems. Many cases are referred to some other agency, said Wheeler, because the client either makes too much money or does have a real legal case. Between June and December of last year, 83 cases were filed with the district court and 23 because they were not within the organization's jurisdiction.
During 1972, the organization received $14,500 in funds from the Council on Legal Education for Professional Responsibility, $4,450 from the KU Student Senate, $2,941 from the KU Career United Fund, and $10,050 from the KU law school, according to the annual report.
LUNCHEON SPECIAL 99
The KU Student Senate has provided funds for the organization the last two years, Wheeler said, and it is one of their most important fund sources.
In addition, the organization charges each client $1 for an initial interview, she said. If the client is accepted, he must pay a $5 fee and if the client is accepted, the organization received $84 from fees last year.
MON.: Roast Beef Plate with salad and vegetable.
TUES.: Hungarian Goulash Plate with salad and vegetable.
Plate with mashed potatoes, gravy and vegetable
THURS.: Beef Stew Plate-A gourmet's delight.
Plate with cheese and Cheese Plate with salad and vegetable
saat and vang
ABOVE VLUNCHES INCLUDE
BREAKING WAITER
BOVE LUNCHONS NCLC
BREAD & BUTTER
COFFEE OR SM. DRINK
SUNDAY 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
ITALIAN SPAGHETTI $1.00
Includes salad & garlic toast
UNCLE MILTY'S CAFE
UNCLE MILLY'S CAFE
23rd & Barker (3 biks East of
Mass.)
843-9816
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
ANY KU STUDENT CAN $ ^{*} $
- Join Next Year's SUR Board, That Is.
Interviews the week of March 5
Festival of the Arts Public Relations Special Events
Films Forums
Fine Arts Recreation Travel
Applications NOW in the SUR Office, Kansas Union
LARGE SHIPMENT LEE Brass Button Throughs JUST ARRIVED
general jeans
1000 Mass. 842-7611
master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
Your
BANKAMERICARD
welcome here
general jeans
1000 Mass. 842-7611
GA T
Fac the O Mond cellor facing
Jac and c the se for hi alum
A LITTLE WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
83rd Year, No. 99
College Students Still Marvel At Comic Heroes
Tuesday. February 27, 1973
See Story Page 3
Search Group Gains Insight To University
Faculty, student and alumni members of the Campus Advisory Committee said Monday that they were providing insights into problems facing each of the representative groups.
Jaceb Kleinberg, professor of chemistry and chairman of the committee, said that the search process has not been assessed his relations with the alumni members of the committee.
"For the first time, I really appreciate the value of the alumni," he said. "I hope that they now appreciate the problems of the faculty and the students."
Hoy Edwards Jr., alumni member from Kansas City, Kan., said he learned much from his experience on the committee and on the subcommittee which interviewed candidates for chancellor in the city of Washington, D.C. and San Francisco.
Edwards said that he had some idea of the scope of these problems but that he didn't know how to solve them.
"When you are sitting on the other side, you really don't understand the kinds of problems the faculty face," he said. "I can always talk to them. I'm the temple-related and budgetary problems."
William Hagman, Pittsburgh alumnus,
and that he never felt that there were three
seasons to play.
TASTRIES to SERVE Discriminating TASTES
"I sensed a feeling of unanimity from the first meeting," he said. "The members of the committee talk as individuals with one another, and that is to get the best man for the job."
The members of the three groups which make up the committee were appointed by three different constituencies, but Edwards and others were not included in references of opinion within the committee.
Speaking about the student members he said, "I found their views and our were the students who believed in change."
Hmagan said that he had worked on many business committees but never one as big as the group, and troopily well-qualified, he said, and the students were "autate." He called his role
See SEARCH Page 5
Watched
In an attempt to discourage shoplifters, several Lawrence area grocery stores have installed closed-circuit television systems. The move has met with success.
according to one store manager, who reported that the shoplifting rate decreased in the months after the cameras were installed. Despite preventive measures, shoplifting remains a problem to Lawrence area grocers. See story page
Unsettled Peace Pact Halts POW Release
*SAGION (AP)—The chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegation said Tuesday there will be no further release of American prisoners of war until several other points in the Vietnam peace agreement are honored.
ree said authorities in Hanoi and officials of the Viet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Government and ordered a freeze on the personnel officers on the South, Vietnam.
"The United States is responsible for the failure to declare," Hanoi government, Bai Tin. "deal."
He characterized the situation as "critical."
In Washington, the White House, State
government, the government declined compa-
nion on the development.
JUST BEFORE Tim's announcement, American military sources at Clark Air Base in the Philippines said North Vietnam was expected to hand over in Salon on Wednesday a list of POWs to be freed the following day.
Tin said three critical points must be resolved before the next group of American officials arrive.
—Strict application of the cease-fire;
- Simultaneous return of civilian and military prisoners; . . .
A guarantee of improved working conditions for the four-party Joint Military Committee.
Tin said the Hanoi government understood very well the feelings of the families of the American prisoners and all Americans who waited for them to come
"BUT WE must also think of the families of Vietnamese prisoners and of the millions of Vietnamese who are hoping for peace that they expect to come through the strict application of the Paris peace agreement," he said.
There was no immediate comment from the U.S. delegation.
He charged that the U.S. delegation had
witnessed and had shown only interest in
getting the deal.
Value of Mental Hospitals Questioned
BY JEANETTE HARTMAN
Koncon Staff Writer
Editor's Note: This is the last of a two-part series of stories examining proposed reforms in the state's mental health care system.
Mental institutions, commitment procedures and the treatment given to patients pose many questions. All of them are difficult and crucial; most are unanswerable.
Who should be involuntarily committed? Is the real purpose of commitment to protect society or to treat the individual? What is the nature of "mental illness"? And what chance is there that the person confined to an institution will be "cured"?
All are questions which present complex obstacles to finding solutions to the problems of mental institutions and patients today.
An experiment by D. L. Rosenhan, publicized in Newsweek and Science magazines, has focused a great deal of attention on the value of hospitalization.
in the experiment, nine sane people voluntarily committed themselves to 12 different hospitals. The hospitals, located in five different states on the East and West sides of the country, provided values and their orientation toward research. Only one was a private institution.
EACH PSEUDOPATENT complained of
bearage vague voices saying "empty",
"empty".
"hollow" and "bud." Beyond falsifying names and occupations, the pseudoputients gave true life histories and behaved as normally as possible once admitted.
All except one were admitted with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and released with a diagnosis of schizophrenia "in spite of having been from seven to 52 days with an average of 19 days, in spite of the pseudopatiens' requests to be discharged. This was true even in states that required only a three-day notice period before dismissal. Rosenman
CHECKING THE pseudopatients' records afterwards, Rosenhan discovered that the patients' biographical material and behavior were interpreted in a psychopathological context. And although the staff never suspected the pseudopatients' insanity, other patients did, Rosenhan said.
The average daily contact with psychiatrists, psychologists, residents and physicians combined ranged from 3.9 to 25.1 minutes, including admission interviews, ward meetings, group therapy sessions and discharge interviews.
He concluded that "the hospital itself imposes a special environment in which the meanings of behavior can easily be misunderstood. The consequences to patients hospitalized in such an environment—the powerlessness, deper-
sonalization, segregation, mortification and self-labeling—seem undoubtedly coun-
According to the National Association for Mental Health, one in 10 Americans had some form of mental or emotional illness in 1969. On any one day, 378,000 persons were residents of a mental institution; 12,700 were under 18.
AS OF 1989, according to the association, there were 498 mental hospitals in the United States, including public hospitals, private hospitals and neuropsychiatric facilities under the Veteran's Adjuvant 380 general hospitals and psychiatric units.
According to the American Psychiatric Association, there was one psychiatrist for every 8,000 people in 1971. But this statistic is distorted because New York, California, and Texas are major centers of practice and half of the total practicing psychiatrists but only one third of the population.
ACCORDING TO James Stachiwak, professor of psychology, at the University of Kansas, hospitalization "is a very complex process" that feels like hospitalizing a person
There were 2,088 public and private clinics treating 1,199,061 patients, both children and adults in 1969, according to the National Association of Mental Health. Nearly half of these clinics were in Northeastern cities.
Unionizing Gets Under Way at KU
Recent moves towards employee organization by maintenance, service and library employees are a first for the University of Kansas.
Kansan Staff Writer
Before this academic year, there had been a system of to officially unionize University employees.
Kansas Senate Bill 333, the "meet and confer" law, which did not take effect until March 1, 1972, provided the framework for the workings of the legislature, including those at KU, could organize.
By ELAINE ZIMMERMAN
The bill created the Public Employees Relations Board (PERB). Its five members are appointed by the governor and comprise a representative of both public employees and public employers and three members at large.
MUCH ADMINISTRATIVE time is required to meet with employee representatives to discuss working conditions, hours and rates of pay, Nitcher said. In a formal situation, the University needs a staff that meets with employee representatives.
has been to formalize the relationship between KU and its employees.
Charles Oldfather, university attorney, said the effect of employee organization on the campus would not be much different from the effects of a nonunion plan becoming unionized. There would be a representation "of some clout," he said.
Nitcher added the University planned to add the staff by June 1 a labor relations director who would deal with grievances, hearings and other forms of perceptions.
Keith Nitzer, vice chancellor for business affairs, said the effect of the law
When employees organize, Oldfather said, someone represents them when "a secu-
tory needs to be done."
hold for wages, however, he said, because
wages are controlled by the state.
The analogy to private industry does not
BECAUSE OF CIVIL service regulations and state funding, the University does not have as much leeway in dealing with its employees as private employers do, Oldfather said. There are basic hire requirements for civil service employees, and rank and salaries are governed by regulations.
Oldfather said that the University had more control over working conditions than over wages and that most direct bargaining with the University thus would be over working conditions. The most the University can do about wages, he said, is to
See UNIONIZING Page 5
trouble mentally, they have done a good, that belief is not well formed, would suggest that
Although there probably are many people who profit from hospitalization, he said, there is pressure to use the mental health profession to protect the status quo. More than half of these people have the conservative side than be responsible for someone's behavior later, he said.
"I think the whole philosophy of the
See MENTAL Page 2
A subcommission on captured persons convened again Tuesday in efforts to restore them.
The United States had said earlier it would press the Communist delegation for a list and timetable of the next group of American prisoners to be released.
At least seven North Vietnamese delegates were injured by mobs of rock-throwing demonstrators in the northern cities and Da Nang on Sunday, acc. to T.P.
THE NORTH VIETNAMESE have repeatedly charged that the Saigon government had harassed and provoked their representatives and had sanctioned demonstrations that have led to violence against members of the Hanoi delegation.
"IF THE United States and the Saigon government had strictly implemented the agreement, the United Nations would haveudio Hanoi said. "The Vietnamese people of South Vietnam should have been offered a peaceful life, independence, and the first step in stabilization and concord should have existed.
Tin said if the harassment, provocation and lack of security and accurate accommodations continued, the Joint Military Commission could not function.
Shortly after Tin's remarks, Radi Hanoi
"But the United States government and the Saigon government have systematically sabotaged the most important and urgent provisions of the agreement. While the cease-fire has been in force for nearly one month, the Saigon government has already launched thousands of bombings and attacks in China under the liberated areas which are under the jurisdiction of the Provisional Revolutionary Government."
denounced Saigon and Washington for "seriously violating" the Paris agreement.
The Provisional Revolutionary Government is the political arm of the Viet Cong.
"I think they (opponents) completely misunderstand the bill," Harder said. "It doesn't open up any gates. Actually, it does more than the present law, I think."
TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Senate voted 21-13 Monday to kill a bill designed to bring the state's 1970 abortion law into compliance with the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on two other states' abortion laws, but a move is likely today to reconsider the action.
Abortion Bill Stymied; New Driving Test OKd
The Senate also concurred with a House amendment and sent to Gov. Robert Docking for his signature a bill, effective Jan. 1, 1974, requiring Kansas drivers to take an open-book rules of the road examination and an eye test before they can renew their motor vehicle licenses every four years.
Somewhat surprisingly, the motion carried 20-14, prompting Sen. Joseph Harder, Senate majority leader, to change his vote so he can move for reconsideration today. Only a person voting on it would be considered for consideration. Harder's switch made the vote 21-13. Two senators passed and four were absent.
The Senate passed the driver's license renewal test bill 31-4 after the House had passed it earlier Monday by an 86-34 vote. The abortion bill was killed when sen. Robert Madden, D-Wichita, moved during debate on the measure to strike its enacting clause.
A long hassle is expected today on a school finance plan endorsed by the Senate Education Committee and the Republican majority and opposed by most Democrats.
Sen. Robert F. Bennett, Senate president,
said, "we'll have to see who voted how
before we'll know whether it will be
wrong to vote for him or not, plain to
sure of some the what the bill does."
Harder, who eight years ago spent four hours debating the present school foundation aid system, will again carry the bill. He said he didn't expect to debate as long as he had been in the partnership had continued extensive caucuses to get the plan explained to members.
Madden, Sen. James Francisco, D-Wichita, and Sen. George Bell, D-Kansas City, led theAttorneys no restrictions on who could have an abortion the first 24 weeks of a pregnancy, except that a physician would have to perform the operation in a licensed physician.
In the final three months of pregnancy, a woman could obtain an abortion in Kansas only if a physician agreed it was necessary to protect the health of the woman.
Under the present Kansas law, adopted as part of the state's criminal code in 1970, a woman can get an abortion at any time of her own choice and is necessary for her mental or physical health.
The bill was amended in committee to exempt from performing abortions any hospitals and individual personnel who object to the operation on moral grounds.
Students, Sellers Use Credit Cards As Modern Medium of Exchange
Editor's Note: This is the second story in a three-part series dealing with credit cards and credit sales. Tomorrow's story will examine the advantages and disadvantages of credit cards to the consumer and to the merchant.
By DANGEORGE Kansan Staff Writer
Once the pledge of students in the world of credit could be quite accurately compared to that of non-credit students,
With no steady means of support, the average college student was forced to spend a little money as possible and to never buy anything he couldn't pay for with cash. Thus, when he learned of credit and because of that, found it difficult to get one started.
But that, according to spokesman of BankAmerica and Master Charge corp., has been a "success story."
"Very few bank cards turn down persons for unestablished credit anymore, unless perhaps its a case of a middle-aged guy who simply hasn't bothered to bother, assistant manager of the Bank Americard center at Commerce Bank in Kansas City, Mo.
"We think college students are really pretty good risks. If they're willing to work their way through school, we figure they'll be good risks when they get out. Actually, you can correlate by education how well a person is going to handle credit. The biggest problem for many people is that they just don't understand the system."
ALAN COLLINS, assistant manager of
CAL INFINITI, paid red card credit
City National Bank, CITY Mo.,
agreed that education was a prime con- negation in issuing credit cards.
"We feel very comfortable about today's youth," he said. "Today's college student's potential growth in far greater than it's ever been, simply because he is better educated."
The growing acceptance of college students as credit customers, not only by the bank card corporations but also by oil companies and independent retailers, is reflected on the local level by an increasing use of cards by students in Lawrence. And the uses of the cards appear to be almost as if as the number of students themselves.
Purchases range from the usual gifts at
automobile brakes to the even paying of automobile
burys.
"We accept only Master Charge now," said Ronald Hamilton, comptroller at the University of Kansas, "but students can get from them. We don't send them from their banks and pay it that way."
THE UNIVERSITY accepted 502 payments through Master Charge during fall enrollment last year, Hamilton said, and 432 during spring enrollment this year. The total charge for the two semesters amounted to more than $179,000.
'one card was used primarily for tuition fees, not books or dorm fees,' he said. "The (Kansas) Union is not presently able to get the zero discount that many students receive in Master Charge charge. And there hasn't been much demand expressed by people in the dorms for Master
by people in the country for him
See STUDENTS Page 2
HEW Team Visiting KU To Study Hiring Practices
A two-man site investigation team from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare began a review of the University employment practices.
Shirley Gilham, director of the affirmative action office, said that the
The team met with Chancellor Raymond Nichols in the morning and began reviewing employment data and interviewing University employees.
team was based in her office and had an additional office in Spencer Library. She said that her office had helped the team with a statistical employee analysis.
"They supplied me with a list of positions for which they wanted to interview," she said. "The list includes students, faculty and administrative staff."
2.
2
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Students, Sellers Use Credit . . .
(Continued from page 1)
Charge use. It could change in the future, though." Hamilton said.
But student credit use for the most part strongly resembles that of most other people in that it is confined primarily to retail stores and gas stations.
Although many Lawrence department stores were unable to release figures on the amount of credit card business they handled, most said that their college trade was
L. S. FLANNERY, manager of Weaver's
S. L. FLANNERY Store, 911 Massachusetts St.
and said that he would not give cards but was willing to open a store credit account with anyone who had a card at his local bank.
"If those companies give them credit, it's good enough for us," he said.
Don Cole, manager of the McCrystal Otasco store, 1818 Massachusetts St., said that his store did not have as much college trade as stores in other college towns, but added that about one third of his total sales volume was credit sales.
"We do lots of college business. We have charge accounts in just about every county in the state. You know, a lot of the bills are sent home to the parents, too."
"We do take Master Charge and BankAmericard," he said, "but it is a small percentage. Not very many college students would want to obtain that long enough to establish credit." Cole said.
PROBABLY THE biggest concentration of credit card use is at gas stations, particularly those near apartment areas.
"About 40 or 50 per cent of our trade is
Finance Losses To Be Reported
A report outlining federal aid losses at the University of Kansas in the wake of President Kim's proposed budget cuts for universities and universities will be released Wednesday.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Monday that the report, which was prepared by William Argersinger, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, still lacked figures from the aids and awards office.
News Briefs By the Associated Press Inmate Protest
LEAVENWORTH-Warden Samuel Britton of the U.S. Penitentiary at Leavenworth refused Monday to replace the chief of food services at the prison, as inmates had asked in a list of grievances. Britton said prisoners were fed in small groups Monday and most of them chose to eat. The regular work schedule at the prison was that inmates went up once perieceal trips to the mess hall, so reports that the inmates were ready to begin a general work stoppage on top of their food boycott could not be tested.
from the college and 50 to 75 per cent of that is with credit cards," Charles Spease, manager of Tony's Phillips 66, 2434 Iowa St. said.
Gene May, manager of Jayhawk Oil Company's N. 2 station, 902 W. 23rd St., said that about half his business was college credit cards and four good three-fourths of them use credit cards.
Credit card use among students was reportedly not quite so heavy in areas farther from campus, but nearly every station cited some instance of a student using either his own or his parent's credit card for gasoline, oil or repairs.
"We get very little college trade and we get more checks than credit cards from students," said Bill Burns, manager of Deep Rock Station 1, no. 920, N. Second, SCL.
"THE ONLY TIME we have any trouble with college kids is when the semester is over and they're getting ready to leave. Then you'd be watching them," Burns said.
For many students, however, their biggest problem, despite their access to
"We try to keep care car use down," Charlene Droste, Lawrence junior, said. "But it is convenient. When you do need them, fire tires, you can buy them with no trouble."
THEODORE HOLLEMBEA, second year law student from Arkansas City, said he had a Master Charge card but threw it away.
credit cards, remains basically the same as before: a shortage of funds.
Another advantage, according to Craig Swanson, Lawrence junior, is that credit cards are often required when applying for a loan or other credit.
Talks Marred
"I figured we'd get carried away with it, and get caught up in the 18 per cent interest. Mongeonny Wards and Penney's. We probably use the Wards card almost 90 per cent of the time, mainly because we live on blocks from the store," Hollembeak said.
Mental Hospitals
"We practically never use them," he said.
"We just keep them for credit applications.
(Continued from page 1)
mental health profession is that they mean well. But how much do we want to tamper with individual freedom and who should be allowed when it should be done?" Stachowik said.
“IT'S VERY HARD to do because by the mere existence of institutions, the institution is placed in a role by society of taking care of deviants since it is supported by state funds. It's hard to be anything else.” he said.
"I SEE AN EVOLUTION occurring. We need to view deviance as a moral problem or sometimes as a legal problem. Now we'rending to view it in terms of illness, that means an era when we're interpreteed as an agent of behavior-in-medical terms," he said.
Stachiwaki referred to one theory by Thomas Szazs, a psychology professor at the State University of New York, that the label "mentally ill" is a myth similar to the Medieval concept that a person was possessed by demons.
Antonio said that psychiatrists were a kind of gatekeeper; they decided who would be officially labeled deviant or mentally ill. Although we are led to believe that they are experts, he said, they are not set to see the world through a certain set of concepts.
Deviant behaviors fall into three classes, Stachowka said. They are psycho-social or hostile withdrawn behavior, ethical or good and bad behavior, or legal behavior. One type of behavior is psychological symptoms are behaviors which have extreme effects on others.
Robert Antonio, KU professor of sociology, said that society was becoming more complex.
Psychiatrists look for symptoms, Antonio said, and among doctors, psychiatrists find issues in the brain.
PARIS-East-West differences clouded the start of the Vietnam peace parley Monday. The Vietnamese Communists resisted key U.S. proposals for the postwar eruption. Mitchell Sharp, foreign secretary of Canada, laid down a virtual ultimatum. Canada, he said would quit the Invasion and control of Central Supervision on April 30 unless some system could be agreed on for dealing with violations of the cease-fire. This demand won backing from U.S. Secretary of State William P. Rogers.
WASHINGTON - Israeli Prime Minister Gold Meir said Monday that she hoped there would be no repetition of the incident in which Israeli fighters shot down a Libyan jet and were such that I hope nothing like this will happen again," Mrs. Meir told a news conference on her arrival in Washington. She called the incident last week a tragedy. "The plane was "washed and shocked and there is true sorrow" in her country, she said.
--said, "He not only loses his freedom, but his
knowledge and interpretation in pathological
terror."
Ralph Nader has studied mental institutions from the viewpoint that mental patients are consumers of mental health. The Nader Report contains several recommendations about mental hospitals and increasing patient's rights.
"Mental patients, in many ways, are more constricted than any other person in the United States."
HIS FIRST recommendation was that plans be made for the eventual demise of a general hospital. It is applied to general hospitals to accept all medically ill patients, including "medically ill psychiatric" patients, who should not be segregated from other medically ill patients.
Mental patients, on the other hand, are sentenced to indefinite confinement on the basis of someone's interpretation of the law. A person may be sent into a subordinate position, but any attempt to reject or appeal the label of "mentally ill" is seen as hostility and another sympathetic response.
IN CONTRAST WITH MENTAL patients, Antonio said, there are fairly objective criteria for judging if a person is a criminal. Breaking the law is an observable action, he said, and even if the court is wrong, the owner can reject his label and appeal his case.
LOS ANGELES—The judge in the Pentagon papers trial ordered Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo each acquitted of one count of the espionage charges in their 15 count indictment Monday and scheduled the defense portion of the trial to begin today. The defense rule on two other counts which he took up submission. He refused defense requests to acquit in 11 counts of the espionage-conspiracy-theft indictment.
In addition to saying that psychiatrists should be encouraged to become practicing physicians and to apply their medical training in the most appropriate way, Nader recommended increased public support of training for paraprofessionals, volunteers and citizens in running human service programs.
Israeli Regret
Court Rulings
He is forced to take medication which often becomes a form of control, particularly in large, understaffed state hospitals."
He also encouraged the growth of alternatives to hospitalization, except in life-threatening cases. This would include emergency services and crisis intervention services.
Ellsberg Trial
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court agreed Monday to decide if a taxpayer can challenge as unconstitutional the secrecy that clocks the financing of CIA operations. The justices also refused to reopen the abortion issue for pleas from court-appointed guardians of the unborn, and for additional medical data. The justices directed lower courts to apply their Jan. 22 decision to anti-abortion laws in nine states.
BRECKENRIDGE March 18-24 $106.00 HURRY! SPACES STILL LEFT SUA Office
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The Lawrence City Commission, in a meeting with 15 former city commissioners at the Ramada Inn Monday night, selected Mr. Hancock as chairman of the possibilities of a citizen's advisory council.
Former Commissioner Don Metzler suggested that J Crown, 403 Homestead Drive, and Ben Barteldes, 1745 Indiana St., compose a set of guidelines for the firm.
The group took an informal vote and approved the suggestion unanimously.
As outlined by Commissioner Jack Rose at that time, the duties of the council would be to carry out tasks assigned by the commission, gather public information and assist in creating good will for the city and help establish a goals program for the city.
Mayor John Emick said that the idea for the council was proposed by Crown and Barlettes about a year ago and that other members of the City Council permission from taking up the idea until now.
The possibility of the council was mentioned at last week's commission meeting as a possible outgrowth of the town meetings organized by the commission last year.
As proposed by the commission, the advisory council would be composed of former city commissioners and other citizens selected by the council.
Several former commissioners expressed concern about the possibility of sanctioning the council by way of city ordinance. The consensus seemed to be that the ordinance would result in the public viewing the rubber stamp 'for the current commission.
The group agreed that the meeting represented only a starting point towards involving the community in management of the city.
LUNCHEON SPECIAL 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 99c
11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
MON: ROSTE Beef Plate with salad and vegetable.
TUES: Hungarian Goulash Plate with salad and vegetable
with mashed potatoes, gravy and vegetable
THURS: Beef Stew Plate—A gourmet's delight.
FRI: Macaroni & Cheese Plate with salad and vegetable.
ABOVE LUNCHEONS INCLUDE
BREAD & BUTTER
BREAD & BUTTER
COFFEE OR SM. DRINK
SUNDAY 11 a.m to 9 p.m
ITALIAN SPAGHETTI $1.00
All you can eat!
Includes salad & garlic toast
UNCLE MILTY'S CAFE
23rd & Barker (3 blks East of Mass.) 843.9816
BLACK THEATRE
ENSEMBLE IN BLACK
K.U. Experimental Theatre 864-3982
Feb. 25-Mar. 6
Your campus bookstore carries powdered eggs...
POWDERED EGGS by Charles Simmons is a bawky, maneuver yet poignant novel about a recent fugitive from college... twenty-one years old and much involved—with girls, the Catholic Church, jobs, an apartment, a sports car, writing a novel, a crazy Spanish named Jose, an afair with an older boy, a spy called William W. William Saroyan called it "Great—a masterpiece." $1.25
...plus all these other important new Penguins
nature — the people who pull the triggers on state Mr. Laloy? And on live next door? Dehuzman by regimentation, bureaucratization, and indiscriminate violence, they are growing more numerous and more frightening—in today's post-technological world.
ROBOPATHS as Machines, Lewis '仗韛否' What can be done about the robopaths - the people who pull the triggers? The trick is to use a robot.
THE BATTLE OF BOGSIDE, Clive Limpkin. A photographic report from one of the centers of strife in Northern Ireland.
COLD WAR AND COUNTERREvolution: The Foreign Policy of President Kennedy's foreign policy, the author contends that Kennedy was a hawkish counterrevolutionary who vigorous anticommunism preared his sympathy for the oppressive policies.
SUPERSLAVE. Bill Stair and Tony Barrell. A cartoon for adults in alternate black-and-white and color, and in a landscape format. A search or quest story like the first novels, but very much of our time. $2.95
GREAT DAY COMING: Folk Music and the American Left.
R. Serge Denisoff, $2.50
INITIATION TO AN INQUEST: Reopening the Rosenberg
*Atom* *Spy* "Case. Walter and Mirman Schneier. $2.95*
FOUR BY OLAF STAPLEDON. The late Olaf Stapledon was a master of the art of fiction fans consider masterpieces. Penguin has just published four of his best books: STAR MAKER (1925, LAST AND FIRST) THE LOST MEME IN LONDON (in one volume - $245), and SIRIUS (995).
See the full selection of
Penguin Books at your
campus bookstore today
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1
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
3
Comic Collections Draw Students
By LINDA DOHERTY
Kansan Staff Writer
By LINDA DOHERTY
Captain America, Spiderman and the Hulk are comic book heroes who have entertained children for years. Now, however, their following includes a number of college students who collect their monthly adventures.
"I buy almost everything Marvel Comics puts out and a good deal of the D.C. super heroes," said Fred Cleaver, a computer operator for the University of Kansas.
Cleaver bought the two comics in his collection in 1900 and since then he has built it to 1,000 copies. The first was from 1900.
Although the majority of his collection consists of comic books from the 1960s, Clea ver said he had a Batman comic and an early Superman comic that were printed in
He once bought 23 comics for $300 and said he considered that price a bargain.
"THOSE TWO weren't my most expressive comics, but they were the ones of my comics at $4."
Cleaver said he began to collect comic books when he was a young boy. He bought them, read them and couldn't throw them away, he said.
now he looks for possible additions to his collection everywhere he goes.
S
"Lawrence has rather poor circulation of comic books," said Cleaver. "More places have dropped comics since I've been here than have picked them up."
If one is familiar with comics, Cleaver said, it is possible to determine who draws the artwork of a particular issue, writes the story and does the numbering and lettering.
"I can tell the artisty by looking at the shadowing on the nose or at the placement of the bodies on the face," he said. "Jack Kirby, a cartoonist for D.C., is known for his
MARVEL
COMICS
12¢
INDO
COMIX
CLEAVER said that he could pick out a woman's style was a little more difficult to determine.
far-out machinery. When one of Kirby's pincers punches, he's elongated—really stretchy.
"one letterer for Marvel Comics writes the 3 on page 13 backwards." he said.
Comics were born in 1938 with the creation of Superman, said Cleaver. The comics became a hallmark of comic books.
number of comic characters and brought about a patriotic fervor in comic book ad
During the 1950s, Cleaver said, the variety of comic book adventures died down considerably because of a censorship in comic book industry imposed upon itself.
In 1961, Marvel Comics created the Fantastic Four, said Cleaver, and characters began to more closely resemble real life people.
"For example, Spiderman is just a poor college student," he said. "In one issue he couldn't catch the criminal because he didn't have the necessary bus fare."
ROBERT BACKUS, Lawrence sophomore, said his collection was basically Marvel Comics and that he had over 500 issues.
"Marvel Comics are entertaining because the writers have some knowledge of the English language," Backus said. "The art is quite a bit more than stick figure and they don't issue issues. Most other brands don't even acknowledge the existence of moral issues."
Marvel Comics have a consistent continuity of character, backs Up, and what one character does in one issue may affect the other. This creates different character in a future adventure.
"The whole plot system is very complex," he said.
Backus and his second youngest brother began their collection in 1968 when they lived on an army base in Germany. They bought comics from the base store, Backus said, because there was nothing else worth reading.
Foreign and Local Politics Mark Recent University Press Releases
By DIANE YEAMANS Kansan Staff Writer
The most important book ever published by the University Press of Kansas was released last week according to Susan Schott, promotion manager.
The book, "The Rise of the Chinese Communist Party, 1928-1938, Volume Two," was written by Chang Kuo-I'a, one of the Chinese Communist party leaders during the beginning of communism in the People's Republic of China.
The book's release coincides with the first anniversary of Nixon's trip to China and is followed by the establishment of the first Embassy in China. It was established by Republic of China and the United States.
Schott said the first volume relating to developments between 1927 and 1928, was
split in 1927.
Mao Tse-tung and Chang were rivals for the party leadership, had a falling-out and Chang was finally exiled in March of 1938, she said
THE BOOKS ARE the first history of the early Communist party in China to be written.
The first volume covers the formation of the first party groups in 1920, the founding congress in 1921, the principal meetings of party leaders thereafter, the February Seventh Strike in 1923, the formation of a united front with the Nationalists, the May Thirtieth Movement in 1925, the Northern Expedition and the Nationalist-Communist
The second volume is about the Chinese Communist party's movement into the countryside, the Nanchang Uprising, Chang's own power struggle with Mao, his subsequent service in Moscow, his return to lead the Cyrus Soviet, the Long March, and the Battle of the Atlantic of the united front against Japan and Chang's exileion from the party and exile.
FIRST PUBLISHED IN Chinese, the books appeared in serial form in the Ming Pao Monthly, Schott said. The University Press' publication is the first English version, she said, and, subsequently, the first book has been presented to the Western World.
The University of Kansas and the Ford Foundation gave grants to Robert Burton, lecturer in East Asian Studies, to make arrangements for the publication of the book. Mr. Burton starred in the negotiations in 1965. The University Press became involved at that time.
Another book recently published by the University Press, The Kansas Legislature: Procedures, Personalities, and Problems, is an extensive analysis of the legislature written by Marvin Harder, professor of law at Purdue University, and Carolyn Rampley, a research assistant in the Kansas Legislative Research Department.
HARDER HAS been very influential in Kansas politics for 20 years, she said. He
served as a special assistant to Gov. Robert Docking and was chairman of the state Democratic party platform committee in 1968 and 1970.
The book has become known throughout the state for its examination of the legislative procedure in Kansas from the executive offices and the governorship to interest groups, press, political parties and elections. Schott said.
But the strongest part of the book, according to Schott, is an interview conducted with Paul Wunsch while he was a member of the Kansas Legislature. He is now on the Senate and has been elected to the Kansas House of Representatives in 1936 and served as speaker for five years. In 1941 he was elected to the Senate and five years alter he was elected president pro temp. He was long known as a liberal in the Kansas Legislature, Schott said.
THE FIRST DEFINITIVE biography of James Naismith, promoter of the game of basketball, will be available to the public some time in April. Schott said.
Quilters From California Commend KU Exhibit
The heart of America is the home of one member of the Mill Valley Quilt Authority.
Joyce Gross and Evelyn Armstrong, two of the authority's six members, came to Lawrence Sunday from Mil Valley, Calif., a suburb of San Francisco, to see the quilt exhibit at the University of Kansas Museum of Art.
Campus Briefs Pearson Plan
The college Assembly will meet at 4 p.m. today in Woodriff Auditorium to discuss recommendations of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program that are not affected by the mail ballot. The motion to be decided by mail ballot, if passed, would not allow the program to be substituted for freshman and sophomore requirements.
The meeting place for the Citizens Coalition for Clinton has been changed to the new building in the Douglas County fair will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Clinton Coalition
Testimonials
There will be a Christian Science Testimony meeting at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. Interested persons are welcome to attend.
Although quilting originated in New England, it owe said, the exhibit proved to be a great success.
The group, which started about two years ago, offers classes and workshops in quilting and sponsors shows and lectures byquilting authorities, Gross said. The group also publishes a Quilter's Calendar once a year to the Mill Valley community, she said.
With a name like the Mill Valley Quilt Authority, the group tends to be viewed as a put-on, Gross said. However, they are very popular among artists as a pastime and as an art, she said.
Gross said she and Armstrong would leave Wednesday to go to the Chicago Art Institute. More of the members will join them there, she said. From Chicago the group will go to Denver to see quilts at the Denver Art Museum, she said.
The author, Bernice Webb, received her bachelor's, master's, and doctorate degrees at KU. She is now professor of English at the University of Southwestern Louisiana.
Naismith was internationally know for his promotion of various sports. Webb's book will tell the entire story of his life for the first time, Schott said.
Quilts are a very personal thing, Gross said, because not everyone likes the same kind of quilt. She said she like the "orphan is ork", or the kind that no one else would like.
A quitting frame, usually made of wood, is used to stretch a quilt so that quatting can be done. When quitting, one uses very small stitches to anchor the backing, cotton and quilt top together, she said, and the stretching makes this easier.
There is a strong interest in antique quilts, crushed and but contemporary quilts which are to be appreciated.
The group works together at times to make a quilt, also said, although currently it is not being worked on.
The authority sponsored its own quilt show in October, she said.
Interviews
Students in the School of Engineering may sign up for job interviews at the following companies: March 3 Archerwood, Ballard Park; March 4 Rancho Santa Monica Compound, March 6; Collin Radius Co., the Rana Gas Company; March 8, Californian Railroad; March 9 San Francisco Railway Co.; Wilcox College; March 8 Firestone and Rubber Co.; Acklethon, Topeka and Rocky Mountain Railway.
Donald McCoy, professor of history at the University of Kansas, and Richard Ruetten, professor of history at California State University, wrote a book, "Quest and Response: Minority Rights and the Truman Administration," which will be available May 7, Schott said.
minority rights from 1945 to 1953, ssa salu.
At one time, McCoy worked in the Truman Archives. Schott said it gave him valuable background for the work.
MU Professor Slated to Talk
Norton Long, Curators Professor of Political Science at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, will talk on "Have Yourself a Bad Day" with the daybreak Room of the Kansas Union.
Long will discuss regionalism prospects at an interdisciplinary seminar for persons interested in political science in 525 Blake Hall.
Long is a graduate of Harvard University and has had extensive experience in dealing with the problems of urban America. His latest book, "The Unwalled City: Rebuilding the Urban Community," will be released in May.
Other speakers and the topics they will speak on later this semester include: Charles F. Crude, "Politics of Environmental Policy;" Murray Edelman, "The Helping Professions as Regulators of the Poor," and Gerhard Lowenbang, "Has German Democracy Overcome Its Historical Faault?"
His talk will be the first in a series of four lectures on "The Study of Politics and Society: Challenges of the 1970s," sponsored by the department of political science.
Backus said he bought about 25 comic books a month.
"WE HAVE several different groups of comics," he said. "We have some that we just throw around and we have comic books that are known, ordered, and keen."
The Douglas County Legal Aid Society was given authority to handle misdemeanor cases by its board of directors, not by the Kansas Association as the Kansan reported Monday.
"I once estimated that I spent $200 a year and I've stayed consistently at this level for several years."
Correction
The authority was granted in light of a 1972 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court which said that persons charged with misdemeanors have a right to legal counsel.
Pat Cochran, Prairie Village junior, said he received about 150 Marvel comic books as a Christmas gift several years ago. He then, now his collection contained close to 290.
"I love Marvel Comics, I think they're specifically written for adults," Cochran said. "The literary style and quality is very, very great." The classic example of contemporary work.
The business end doesn't enter into his reason for collecting collections, Cochran said.
"I just do it to read them. I collect them to enjoy them, not just to have them," he said.
"The only thing about it is that it gets pretty expensive, just like any habit."
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Wednesday and Thursday Feb.28 and Mar.1 2 shows each night: 7:30 and 9:00 p.m. Forum Room—Kansas Union
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Tickets available in advance at SUA Office
You've got to see them to believe them.
remarks
"Viaduct? Vinot a chicken?" – Groucho Marx
"No shoes on the gym floor." – Knute Rockne
"Even he who is pure in heart and says his prayers by night can become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is bright:" – Wolftman
"Take'em to Missouri!" – John Wayne
"Stay the way you are and you'll go far." – A Friend
"I love you. I love you. I love you. xoxoxo" – Tiny Tim
"The police are not there to prevent disorder . . . they are there to maintain disorder." – Mayor R. Daisy
"This whole area is radioactive." – Buck Rogers
"And this little piggy said: Wee, wee, wee, wee all the way home." – Everyone's mother
"And you must be Dopey." – Snow White
"2791 yb anilc-o-dni tuo eb il'eW" – nown mediserP
"Be true to your school." – The Beach Boys
4
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
University Daily Kansam
KANSAN
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
INTERNAL KANSAN MEMO TO STEVE RIEL
Miller Madness
(RE: your editorial of Feb. 22, which addressed the disturbing question of "equal enforcement" by Miller's "Operation Cloudburst"):
The State Attorney General's latest moves to twirl liquor sale or consumption by the drink over the Sunflower State do indeed pose some grave questions regarding equal enforcement.
The random boarding of flights originating or terminating in Kansas by state agents may or may not prove workable. It is certainly neither an equitable approach nor a final solution, in view of the number of other flights that pass over this very sovereign state.
Accordingly, I propose that the University of Kansas Student Senate entertain the notion of providing Vern Miller with a full squadron of suitably equipped, surplus Phantoms, in fitting recognition of his manifest efforts on the taxpayers' behalf.
These aircraft should be emblazoned with appropriate markings, including an international red-and-white circular hammer smashing through the vertical outline of a whisky bottle.
This symbol would make it apparent to any foreign visitors flying the dry skies of Kansas that, although certain of our state laws may be a bit odd, at least we acknowledge the existence of a world beyond the arid atmosphere within these borders.
The Phantoms themselves would serve as emphatic evidence of our sense of priorities and our up-to-date methods of law enforcement.
Each interceptor's equipment
would necessarily include two boom devices which could be extended as the Phantom flew side-by-side with a commercial airliner.
One boom would have a sophisticated 180-degree "fisheye" lens. When pressed against a cabin window of the adjacent civil aircraft, it would provide a reasonable scan of passenger activity.
The other boom would have a robotized black metal hand, backed with a silver star and the admonition, "Remember the WCTU." This iron hand would be clenched and extended by remote control from Miller's Master Moonshine Monitor in Topeka.
Whenever the scanning boom detected evidence of liquor sale or consumption, the Phantom pilot would maneuver his plane to a position opposite the window nearest the offending passenger.
The fist-boom would then reach out, smash the window, unclench, reach inside and grab the astonished scofflaw by the nape of his besotted neck. It would yank him out the window and clutch him firmly until the Phantom returns to the Halls of Justice in Topeka.
Perhaps the Student Senate might adopt this plan simply as an illuminating proposal to the attorney general for the protection of funding open for the moment.
In any case, let us not abandon hopes. Total control and total equal enforcement are within the scope of existing technology.
So up an' at 'em, Vern. Zap the zeppelins . . . scrutinize those Cessnas . . . search the satellites . . . the sky need not be the limit.
What next? Why "To the Stars Through Difficulty," of course.
The logic may well prove inescapable.
—C.C.Caldwell
Searching for a Job
Assuming that you have some choice, which you don't, it is a good idea to decide on the type of job you are looking for.
Job hunting is one of the few things that is irrational enough to make college seem as if it makes sense. The game is played by mailing out samples of your work, and by warning neckties and talking to people.
For most people college is a temporary thing. After four years of sleepless nights, poor health and poor food you are given an aerial photo of the University of Kansas, and then you have to find something else to do. The something else can come in a variety of forms, but for most of us who do not plan to go to Europe or become housepersons—at least not right off anyway—the something else is a job.
J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI are probably more responsible than anyone for labeling Montana as the great American Siberia.
Most seniors would suggest that a basic characteristic of a good job is that it not be in Kansas. There seems to be more peer group approval of a job in Rolling Prairie, S.D., than of a similar position in Rolling Prairie, N.J., even some out-state areas that carry negative connotations.
A close friend of mine body filled out an Associated Press application with no geographical restrictions. I told him he was going to be sent to Butte, Mont. Actually, AP doesn't have a bureau in Butte; they are talking about sending my friend to Helena.
It seems irrational that there should be such a desire to get out of Kansas. The Chamber of Commerce is probably justified in telling you to "Shop Kansas first." After all, the people of Kansas are the ones that bought the green house-trailers for you to go to college in, paid the below average salaries for your professors, provided the National
Guard to lend excitement on occasions, protected you from the open saloon and elected Vern Miller. You owe these people a lot. (If this guy is going to judge me and I think as a general rule editorials should, it is shop Kansas first.)
There are several ways this drain on Kansas resources can be halted. But it is unlikely that universities will be nationalized. It is unlikely that the legislature will approve a subsidy for college graduates who are willing to stay in Kansas. It is even more unlikely that Kansas would consider joining the 20th century.
When job hunting young Americans who have been sheltered in institutions all of their lives, are forced to make a decision that could affect them for as long as they live: "Shall I get a haircut?"
But you are not at the depths of your humiliation when the barber presses his clippers down on your head. You hit the bottom a few days later when you don't have any hair, and you still don't have any job.
Women are sheltered from this
awesome responsibility, but they
are not.
Personnel management has developed into a science. You know that, but the guy that is sitting there asking you questions had never taken Business 175 and he has never heard of the Driggs Power Co. case
In the Driggs case, the Supreme Court ruled that using hiring criteria that could not be related to job performance violated of an applicant's rights.
Of course, this was such a shock to the irrational world of hiring, that personnel managers ignored it. The Driggs Power Co. doesn't give I.Q. tests to its coal shovellers, and we're university would have taught us how to neckties or something else practical that would help us get a job.
Eric Kramer
WASHINGTON—The real reason for the rapid warming of Chinese-American relations, according to sources who have been tracking climate change in the United States has used its influence with Moscow to
Housing Backlash
KANSAN
The inattention can be attributed in part to a small attendance at a midwinter meeting of the United Mortgage Bankers of America, a black group of which Travis is president. He claims many couldn't afford to come.
LETTERS POLICY
By JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK—One of the bitterest commentaries on the administration's moratorium on subsidized housing was delivered earlier this month by Dempsey Travis, a black mortgage banker, but it went almost unnoticed.
"Sixty to 70 per cent of all black architects came into being because of the IDD programs, and they'll be going out of business soon," she added.
The federal government says the HUD programs were ineffective in solving the problem of housing the poor. But Travis claims the move to eliminate them has a racist impact and a classist impact that is unmistakable.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
It will set back racial equality in housing by 25 years, he said.
AP Business Analyst
The result, said Travis, will be demonstrated in more ways than the collapse of black architectural and building firms. It could, he said, invite into more violent friction between white and black.
As this scenario unfolds, be said, the establishment is accelerating the housing abandonment crisis in urban areas through excessively high taxes, poor schools, ineffective police protection—all combining to produce a high crime
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--UN 4-4810
Business Office--UN 4-4358
This is how he interprets the motivations and goals of the moratorium:
An All-American college newspaper
"At the same time, whites will go galloping along with their 2.4 million annual new housing starts." Travis said.
"The federal and the city fathers have finally concurred in the fact that a city with a 30 per cent to 50 per cent black population is more likely to be black."
"The best way certain to stop this trend is to withdraw all the movies in the form of suspensions and other ancillary films."
The result, he said, will be forfeiture of property to the city for taxes, to be subsequently sold to an establishment developer. This developer then will build high-income buildings which is a 1973 way of saying "For whites only." "Travis said
NEWS STAFF
News Adviser .. Susanne Shaw
Letters to the editor
letter-spoken, written,
double-spaced and
exceed 500 words. All
letters are subject to editing
by the editor. Letters
to the editor must provide
their name, year in school and
job, and staff must provide their
name and position; others
must provide their name
Jack Anderson
forestall a Soviet attack on China. We were the first to report on June 12, 1969, that hardliners in the Kremlin were contemptuing Americans for nuclear works. Our story has been confirmed by a number of
According to Travis, the market for old housing began to slip as new developments were erected. He now, he said, all of his workers had been let go.
Moscow Got Nixon's Message
Why then did the National Association of Real Estate Boards support the moratorium as necessary, and declare that subsidies "had have the effect of nurturing a permanent income Americans who look to the taxpayer for assistance?"
BUSINESS STAFF Business Advisor... Mel Adams
"Traditionally," Travis said, "the black and the poor have provided the last profit in housing before it was torn down. Traditionally, profit from the poor was greater than the original profit from the affluent..."
Travis' belief that a plot exists probably represents a large portion of black sentiment, but it may be received by less impassioned minds as biased, and even destructively so. He also points to the fact that Washington leadership and its constituency.
Theirs is an establishment position to support absentee ownership in old, ghetto apartment buildings. Travis said. The realtors who were and still are the architects of white housing in Detroit are fostering a dual market that offers on color and class.
Asked why he spoke in such bitter terms, Travis replied, "I intended it that way. It time for someone to tell the truth."
The three cities—Wadley, Ga., Columbus, Ga., and Winston Salem, N.C.-received the grants in part because each had at least one top Republican official in accordance to the affiliations.
One antipoverty official in the Midwest was told by telephone to lend aid to Philips' quickie investigation by looking for "fraud, embezlement, serious community action programs, but also in "failed" or discontinued programs.
Business Manager
To prepare for what should be an ordeal for Phillips, the young conservative has hired a team of ex-federal investigators to probe programs he and the President want dissolved.
When staff members protested to regional director William Walker and his deputy John Dyer, Gou quotes Dyer as a "cool head" who is realistic and secure the maximum number of grants for our region. . . Dyer felt sure he could not get a grant through what was 'straight down the line Democrat.' Asked who the official would be, he replied it would be Howard Phillips."
at the same time, ironically, officials in the South are stepping forward with evidence linking Phillips to allegations partisan handling of experimental community action programs.
Phillips is zeroing in on the community action agencies, which currently employ 185,000 people. We believe we welfare if the agencies dissolve.
Both Walker and Dyer deny that the grants were made on a partisan, political basis. "We never asked for party affiliations," said Walker. "The list was compiled only to make me appear mayor or congressman in the city that received the grant was not strongly against the experimental program." A spokesman for Phillips denied any wrongdoing.
Affidavits in our possession name Phillips the "selection official" who reviewed and approved three experimental revenue-sharing grants totaling $251,750 to three southern cities.
Specific instructions
oef. official Elizabeth Gouwens sweepers. Good sweepers and that other field representatives were given specific instructions on how to nominate community action agencies for the grants. They were told, she claims, to list the political affiliation of the local officials seeking the grants. Good said. "A number of staff members who have worked with us provide partisan political information of this nature. . ."
journalists with access to the Kremlin's inner politics.
The Russians, meanwhile, are highly suspicious of Kissinger's activities in Hanoi and Peking. The President will reassure Moscow, however, that the United States "might merely put pressure on Soviet interests and not working against India interests in Asia."
This was on Nikon's mind when he sat down with Chairman Leónid Brezhnev in Moscow last week, saying that their national interests in the frankest possible terms. By laying his cards on the table, the president hoped to prevent any misunderstanding that might lead to war.
Those who are familiar with
Breznev responded with equal bluntness, by asking who had made the United States the arbiter of disputes between Communist countries. Nixon replied that a war between India and China would shake the world and endanger world peace.
Henry Kissinger has informed the Chinese of the American Chinese- Russian war. This has improved U.S. standing in Peking.
Foreign Minister Andre Gromyko made a joke about "throwing in Cuba for good measure" and the discussion ended in good spirits. But Moscow got the message.
He surprised Breznevije in warning that the United States would oppose China upon China to be against our national interests. This was another way of saying that the United States might be compelled to intervene.
A week ago, thousands of poor people stood on Capitol Hill to let President Nixon know they were "somebody." In reply, Howard Phillips, the appointed executor of the nation's anti-poverty programs, will troop up in Georgia and all those "somebodies" know why the President is cutting off funds for the poor.
Phillips vs. Poor
the President's diplomatic maneuvers say he is totally dedicated to creating a world where stresses and tension is preserved and peace prevail.
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Specifie Instructions
Participatory Journalism Alive And Well in Hefner's Jacuzzi?
Lovelace's dog, Rufus, also had sent a card to Hefer, thus prompting several of the guests to come in. The girl coming in sex fads would be bestiality or child molestation. It wasn't a seminar on "Last
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF—Hugh Hefner, master of the butch, was in the foyer of his stone Tudor mansion, greeting his guests. The house, a work of superb craftsmanship and dubious architectural taste, was 25 stories tall with more millionaire, but it now does service as Playboy Mansion West. Hefner, clad in an orange terryclot jump suit with a bunny decal on the chest, was showing the arriving people a Valentine's Day card he d'ill received from Hefner, who gave such a singular performance in "Deep Throat."
--and announced that, if he'd let them, they'd like to lead him off. He said he was willing to be a hostage and they were along the night-lit stone path away from the mansion to the game house where you have a
T
The guards, with their television scanners, man the
Fange" and the Al-Bugher fight that had fetched the 80 guests and taxed the capacities of Heilner's L-alike-equipped security men.
XXX
"--- SO I COMMANDERRED that BIG JEGT SO I COULD COME HERE TO BE WITH YOU AND INMUSE MSELF IN THE PURE SOCIALISTIC EXPERIMENT AND TO SEE FOR THE PEOPLB'S REPUBLIC AND ESCAPE ONE AND FOR ALL FROM THE OPPRESSIVE PRECISION OF THE RUNNING DOGS OF CAPITALISM, MR. CASTRO, MR. CASTRO? MR.
M. J.
Nicholas von Hoffman
gates and make this fountained and perfumed estate slightly less accessible than the White House. If an honest-to-god boxing fan had been able to breach security and race through the gardens and the tennis courts he would have been in the company of a number of people, as she staged to watch the fight, piped in on a special line from Las Vegas and displayed in color on a large screen.
A few of the men, like Lloyd Bridges, came with their wives and left early after eating a buffet of roast beef and paella served by a corps of young men in dark blazers. They keep the bar and kitchen open 24 hours a day to allow you to drink while they bring you a drink at the pool you're skimpy-dipping, they don't say.
Most of the men couldn't be still. They ceaselessly circulated through the living room where Hefner and his retainers stayed playing backgammon, into the living room 15 years's Scandinavian beauty was also playing backgammon, and then back to the great foyer, and into the dining room. Always they were moving on from one side to another across the room looked titer than the one they had.
The ratio of girls, and they are girls, to men was about three to one. Almost all of them were for their looks, and when a woman who did have some other claim to fame would come into the field of conversational vision, she told him that "That bit, she's divoring her husband and naming three men as co-responders."
The girls would try to trap them. They'd come up and say, "Have you been to the Jacuzzi? Oh, you don't know what the Jacuzzi is?" Four of them, two airline friends came up with an organizational relationship, came up to a young stage, stage and couch
choice of the red or the blue bedroom. As they pulled him along one of them said, "Oh, he won't really let us do it," to which her buddy answered, "Well, I just want to participate, I just want to watch."
"That is a form of participation," someone told her. "I never thought of it that way before." she replied.
The girls, for whatever reasons—money, celebration or career—upon the face of the dress room enough to let a different emotion show. She sat on the steps of the master staircase and said, "I don't want to go to bed with you. I'm hugged, nicely hugged," and she paused in pensive emotion, and looked up to say, "The only thing anybody says to me around Bob, what big tits you have."
But mostly the girls seemed to say nothing or "Come to the Jacuzzi."
Adjacent to the Jacuzzi is a building containing a row of disobscoring compartments with piles of towels, soaps and scents. There are showers without curtains but with plate-glass windows.
There you get undressed so you can go over to the Jacuzzi, the stone, vaulted baths where everybody swims nude under the waterfall or in a series of interconnected bubbling pools, and there is no temperature. The lights are low and there is music, a better than average place to plunge into participatory journalism.
So there we floated and talked about the end of the nuclear family, the difficulties of monogamy, the liberating aspect of sex and other glib conclusions that a wise man would regard to some skepticism. I can't give you some advice. There being no way a reporter can handle a notebook and a pen in the Jacuzzi.
Washington Post-King Features Syndicate
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
5
Unionizing Gets Under Way . . .
(Continued from page 1)
petition the Kansas Legislature to raise
pages by steps.
Philip Rankin, director of personnel services, said employee organization would make it difficult to confer with employees on a one-to-one basis. But, he said, dealing one-to-one is difficult at the moment because the University is understaffed.
RANKIN SAID he could not imagine a situation under the new law in which employees would fall to report for work because of an inability to settle grievances. The law provides that the PERB will intervene in the event of an impasse, he said.
Such situations as the one that occurred last spring when maintenance and service employees walked off their jobs probably will be avoided under the law, he said.
University officials said they could not predict with any certainty whether more employees would attempt to form bargaining units.
"The history of employee organizations in colleges and universities is that there has been much activity in organizing. We might not be active activity here in Kansas," Nichard said.
Rankin said other groups probably would petition for representation. The University needs to keep the units as large as possible, he said, so they will be effectively dealt with if staff, so.
THERE HAS BEEN discussion in recent years about professors bargaining collectively. Oldfather said that in private institutions particularly, the American University Professors (AAUP) had participated in elections of public labor boards.
John Glinka, associate director of the library and president of the KU chapter of the AAP, sent to AAUP members about a year ago asking whether they favored collective bargaining. About 60 per cent of those responding did favor collective bargaining,
Glinka said, however, that AAPU members were not a representative sampling of the faculty. The temper of the times has changed since then, also, he said. The question was administered in 1972/73 in which there no were no roles in faculty salaries.
"I'T NOT THE same feeling this year," Glinka said. "There's an interest (in collective bargaining), but not a strong drive."
Maintenance and service employees are the only employee group on campus yet recognized by the PERB as a bargaining unit. The unit comprises 530 positions and includes employees from Buildings and Grounds, housing and health services.
The University has agreed that the maintenance employees were an appropriate candidate.
Nitcher said that no decision had been made about whether maintenance employees would be represented, or who would represent them.
Service Employees Local Union 1132 has petitioned the PERB to represent the maintenance and service employees. The petition was successfully commissioned administered by the PERB whether
THE COMMUNICATIONS Workers of America have asked to represent 90 classified employees in the KU library system. A bearing concerning recognition unit for a bargaining unit is scheduled for April 31. The employees are appealing the date.
they will be represented at Local 1132 or by another organization or whether to be represented at a different location.
If the hearing is not held sooner, much of the organization will be lost, and many people will be displaced. Mild hearing loss.
Nitcher said the University did not believe the library employees were an appropriate burgeoning unit for two reasons. The university does not have the faculty and the university administration believes
Second, some of the employees among the 90 seeking recognition are supervisors, and Senate Bill 331 prohibits supervisors from leaving in the same unit as regular employees.
MITCHELL SAID that campus-wide organization of clerks and secretaries would make labor relations easier for the University, but that it was not the intention of the library employees to make things simple for the administration. The employees are trying to better their position, he said.
that clerks and secretaries throughout the University, not just the clerks from the University.
"A decision by the PERB to get a campuswide bargaining unit would be a decision to
The lack of communication between employees in small offices across campus would make organization impossible, he explained.
have no bargaining unit organized," Mitchell said.
Because funding for wages comes from the state, Mitchell said, the library employs 170 staff members. The Kansas Association of Public Employees (KAFE). The AFL-CIO has a large lobby in Topeka and is one of Gov. Robert Docking's largest campaign contributors, said Mit
MITCHELL SAID one working condition library employees were seeking to ameliorate was "a feeling of helplessness in the face of bureaucracy."
AURH Stands Firm on Demands
Representatives of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) reasserted Monday the role of AURH in the development of funds by the dean of women's office.
Jack Meyer, vice president off AURH and Norton senior, and Jan Stokes, secretary of AURH and Cincinnati freshman, made a statement for the AURH executive board in response to a position taken Friday by Emily Taylor, dean of women.
Taylor had said that she would talk to AURH about allegations she had misused funds from a residence hall library but that she thought the fund was of no concern
"AURH feels it does have a right to intervene." Stokes said.
Meyer and Stokes said that AURH, as a liaison between the deans' offices and the residence halls, should act in this case because the dean's office was charged by the dean of women were involved.
AURH requested Thursday a refund of $1,000 in residence hall funds it said were used to establish a career library in the dean of women's office. The money in the refund was used by five percent rebate from vending machine profits in the four residence halls.
Taylor's office administers Oliver,
Schellars and Sellars
Passports (GSP) and Cornholds.
Meyer and Stokes said AURH considered itself representative in its action to request the refund because of eight of the 12 representatives from the five halls were present at the meeting of the Residents Assembly Thursday.
Taylor met Friday with representatives of the halls under her jurisdiction to discuss the refund request. The representatives were to explain the library fund to the residents of each hall, then report back to Taylor Thursday.
Meyer and Stokes questioned whether the composition of the group that met with Taylor Friday indicated a bias in favor of the dean of women's office.
of 10 persons at the meeting, four were library representatives from each hall, five Greg. Greg. sappomore, Socki. Scott Burch, Summit, N.J., freshman, Hashinger; Mary Had
Search Group
An awareness of the problems and opinions of the faculty and alumni has grown in the students on the committee, Dillon said.
Kleinberg said that he still considered the academic program of the University its largest and most important part.
"The students have seen faculty problems which must be solved," he said. "We also know how valuable the alumni are and that they should not be someone who they can work with."
"I have now seen problems the new chancellor must face in all situations whether it be with students, faculty or alumni," he said.
(Continued from page 1)
"But I also see the benefit of other
Dillon said the groups in the committee had not acted like groups. Situations had arisen, he said, when the students asked if they were at a university alumni might have asked and vice versa.
as a member of the committee "very pleasant despite the work load."
Students who attended the meeting said no decision was made to oppose AURH involvement in the controversy. They said that any other opinion from the halls on the matter.
dorms were official," Harmon said. "The advisers of the library in each hall were also invited to come to learn about the situation but not to influence the group's decision."
"I see us as being communicators to the bus
man, but we have to decide," Mason said.
dac, Satiana tataini, Lewis; and Lynn
Madras, St. Louis freshman, GP-Corbin.
Bassett, St. Louis freshman, GP-Corbin.
--programs such as the athletic program," he said. "The alumni members and I still have our differences but we understand each other much better now."
Meyer and Stokes also said the investigation of the use of the library funds had been clouded by such side issues as the future use of the funds and the value of the Women's Resource Library for which the funds were used. Taylor has said.
The remaining six were employees of the dean of women's office, Meyer and Stokes said. Besides Taylor, they were Walter Smith, associate dean of women; Terry Duffield, Pitman, N.J., senior, Oliver resident assistant; Cathy Leavitt, CMount city senior, Oliver resident assistant; Pam Brown, Oliver resident assistant; GSP-Corbian graduate assistant, and Kathy Harmon, Lawrence graduate student, Hashinger resident director.
Edwards said that explanations by the faculty and student members of their opinions had helped him understand their points.
AURH is still seeking an explanation of the expenditures in question, they said. A meeting between the executive board of AURH and Taylor has been tentatively scheduled for Wednesday. Taylor was to be out of town until late today.
All the members expressed the view that the attendant was working as a whole and not as an artist.
"The library representatives from the
"We have come down to a center line of thinking." Edwards said.
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Use Kansan Classifieds
6
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS
First Dav
Sale Sayers, the new assistant athletic director at the University of Kansas, began his job Monday morning in his office located in the Allen Annex, Sayers, a
former Kansas All-American and All-Pro running back with the Chicago Bears, spent his first day getting acquainted with the various athletic personnel and receiving numerous phone calls from well-known coaches said his first day was "very hectic."
The Kansas State Wildcats circled at least a tie for the Big Eight basketball crown Monday night by trowing the hapless Oklahoma State Cowboys at
the K-State victory, coupled with Oklahoma's win over second place Colorado Monday night, gave the Wildcats at worst a share of the championship. The Wildcats now own a 10-2 conference mark and a 20-4 overall mark.
Colorado, playing at Norman, was virtually eliminated from the conference race. The Buffaloes now have a 7-4 conference mark.
The Wildcats, shooting with deadly accuracy, built a lead of 15-2 early in the contest and the Cowboys could not recover. They scored a goal from the field in defeating the Pokes.
The Sooners boosted their conference record to 6-6 and still remain in fourth place.
K-State Blasts 'Pokes, Clinches Tie for First
Oklahoma shot a blistering 85 per cent from the charity strip, hitting on 28 of 33 free throws. The Sooners could manage only 37 per cent from the field. The Buffaloes finished with a 42 per cent field goal total and hit on eight of 14 free throws.
Scott Wedman, Gilbert and Jerry Wright tied for game scoring honors with 20 points each. Gilbert sank 14 of his points in the second half, scoring 15 points in the second half of play.
Missouri will tie Colorado for second
★ ★ ★
BIG EIGHT STANDINGS
| State | W | L |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| canaan State | 10 | 1 |
| Delaware | 10 | 1 |
| Minnesota | 6 | 8 |
| Kansas | 4 | 1 |
| Nebraska | 4 | 1 |
| Iowa State | 4 | 1 |
| Michigan State | 4 | 1 |
'Hawks Battle Powerful Missouri
Unfortunately for the University of Kansas Jayhawks, the Missouri Tigers, were nationally ranked in the top 10 teams earlier in the season, seem to have regained their early-season composure and desperately need a victory here tonight.
If the Tigers win their remaining league contests, they could receive a bid to the Cup.
Tipoff for tonight's clash will be at 7:35.
The preliminary junior varsity game with
Wilson will be at 7:35.
Jayhawk Coach Ted Owens said Monday that the game would be an important one for
"Missouri will certainly be up for this game," Owens said. "Their win over K-12 is going to be a big deal."
Missouri defeated first-place K-State, 80-
66, last Tucson at Alabama, John Brown,
the Tiger's possible All-American candidate,
scored 20 points for Missouri even though he sat out more than half of the contest because of foul trouble.
"The K-State game was one of the best games, we've played in our new field hockey team."
Norm Stewart, coach of the Tigers, said the Tigers played with more poise and confidence than they had since early December.
The Jayhawks will go into the game with back-to-back losses. The 'Hawks left a close game to Nebraska over the weekend and gave a decision to Colorado last Tuesday.
Earlier this season at Columbia, KU took the Tigers into overtime before loss, 75-21. However, the Tigers have not won at KU since 1969—last year a 50-point outburst by Bud Stallworth led the 'Hawks to a 93-80 victory over the Tigers.
"We will need as good as we had against K-State to beat KU at Lawrence,"
The Jayhawks will have a problem in
choosing the starting offense, the 6-2
Boston and forcing Al Eberhart.
"We'll stick basically to our man-to-man defense," Owens said. "We won't try anything new to stop Brown and Eberhard."
The Jayhawks will need a strong effort on the front line to contain the Missouri foul.
Both Brown and Eberhard are averaging in double figures. Brown owns a 19.9 average and Eberhard has been scoring at a 17.1 pace. Both players are good rebounders—Brown has grabbed more than 10 rebounds a game this season.
However, Owens plans to start both Rick Suttle and Danny Knight against Missouri. Owens said that he felt the sophomore pair had some back and give a strong performance.
Suttle, who owns a 17.2 scoring average,
scoreed only four points against Nebraska.
Knight finished the game with nine points
and 13 rebounds.
Wooden Predicts UCLA Will Win 7th Straight Title
K tom Vivoit and Dale Greenlee will start at the guard positions for the Jayhawks. Greenlee pumped in 16 points in the second half, but Tom Vivoit added 14 points in the losing effort
"UCLA is my pick."
That's not Jimmy the Greek talking. It's Johnny Wooden, the supercoach whose Bruins have won 68 in a row and who had the most straight NCAA basketball championship.
Freshman Nino Simul will start at the other forward spot for KU. The 6-5 Saimun competed in his first varsity contest for KU in Columbia earlier this season.
New 23-4 for the season, UCLA waits as the National Collegiate Athletic Association assembles another group of challengers to play the annual beat-the-giant game.
Ton Gaughan, a former offensive guard on the University of Kansas football team, was sentenced Monday for a drug violation and reckless driving.
St. Louis is the site of the NCAA semifinals on March 24 and the finals on March 26. The NIT runs from March 17 through the finals on March 25.
The National Invitation Tournament also eagerly awaits the NCAA selections since the Madison Square Garden event picks up the left overs.
Long Beach State is a fixture in the top five, but must contend with the Bruins in the West Regional, where it was wiped out the past two years.
The reckless driving charge stemmed from an accident Dec. 8, four miles west of Lawrence on U.S. 40. Witnesses testified in the trial that Guahad had pulled out to pass in a no-passing zone and had struck an oncoming car as it came over a hill.
Douglas County Court Judge Mike Elwell pronounced a sentence of 90 days in jail and a $350 fine. Gaughan was released on a $750 appeal bond.
North Carolina State, 23-0, running second to UCLA in the Associated Press poll for most of the season, is blacklisted from the NCAA playoffs due to recruiting violations.
Football Veteran Given Sentence
Gaughan was taken to Lawrence
Memorial Hospital where a nurse found a drug in his wallet. An analysis indicated it was amphetamine, commonly called MDA.
That leaves Minnesota of the Big Ten Conference and independent Marquette with the warmest hopes of shooting down the Bruins.
Technically, UCLA isn't yet qualified to defend its NCAA title, but that should be taken care of when they meet California Friday night. The Bruins are 11-0 in the Pacific Eight Conference and can eliminate both with victory No. 69 against the Bean.
With N.C. State ineligible, either North Carolina or Maryland are favored to emerge from the Atlantic Coast's chain of coastal states with a bid while the loser goes to the NIT.
The Tigers are 6-4 in conference play and are overall. KU is 4-6 in the league and 8-4 over.
Memphis State will represent the Missouri Valley Conference and Miami of Ohio at the NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships.
Tennessee's lead in the Southeastern Conference is anything but solid since the Vols, 12:2, play their final four games on the road. Kentucky, Vanderbilt and Alabama will face teams with the champ ticketed for the NCAA and also-rans possibilities for the NIT.
San Francisco and Santa Clara, both 10-2,
are in a fight for the West Coast Athletic
League. The Bay Area has its own Western
Athletic, it is a scrape between New
Mexico, Brigham Young, Arizona and
Oklahoma.
Long Beach State, 22-2, has locked up its NCAA spot champion of the Pacific Coast Conference.
Pennsylvania is leading the Ivy League's race for an NCAA spot since Princeton lost back-to-back games last week. The Tigers would be welcomed by the NIT.
Minnesota controls the Big Ten with an 8-2 record. If the Gophers keep rolling and make it to the NCAA, Purdue and Indiana are likely grabse for the NTP.
Like the ACC, the Southern Conference decides its NCAA representative with a tournament. Furman and Davidson are the class teams in that conference.
Nine at-large berths will go to independents, with Marquette, 22.2,
Providence, 20.4; Syracuse, 20.4;
Houston, 20.8; Houston, 20.8; western Louisiana, 22.2, the probables.
Kansas State, 9-2, seems headed to the NCAA from the Big Eight.
MAKE IT HAPPEN. Be on the SUA Board
CONCERNED about WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN NEXT YEAR?
Applications NOW in the SUA Office. KANSAS UNION
place in the standings if the Tigers defeat the Jayhawks tonight in Lawrence. The Jayhawks must win in order to keep alive their hopes of finishing in the top division.
Missouri, with an 18-4 overall record, will be in good position for an NTI bid if it wins a key qualifier.
The second place team in the conference usually receives an invitation to the National Invitational Tournament held in Madison Square Garden March 17-25.
Come into Shakey's for lunch. Eat as much as you want. And pay the ridiculously low price of $1.39. Even if you have 10 slices of cheese, 2 pieces of chicken, 2 orders of salad and 3 potatoes all you'll pay is $139.
Shakeys
$1.39
Bankrupt a Shakey's for lunch.
Shakeus
S1 39
SPECIAL
Mon. Feb. 26 thru Sat. March 3rd
We may go bankrupt but you sure won't go hungry.
544 W.23rd
842-2266
POLISH SAUSAGE
SANDWICH with horseradish $ 30^{\circ} \mathrm{C} $
BROOKS TAVERN & LUNCH
"Happy Hour Mon-Fri. 5.7 p.m."
BUD13 biscel Open 9 a.m.-Midnight
1307 W. 2th (A Michigan) 842-9429
PHOTO EXPERIENCE '73
The first lecture series of this kind in the midwest. Learn from the experts about composition, glamour, portraits, wildlife, and nature photography.
Have Peter Gowland, Brian Lanker, Mike Tatum, Reagen Bradshaw, and Rich Clarkson tell you their trade secrets.
HURRY! LIMITED ENROLLMENT Lecture dates, March 9, March 23, April 6, April 20, May 4, May 18.
All sessions are on Friday nights starting at 7 p.m., each seminar will last about 3 hours.
MIDWEST'S MOST COMPLETE CAMERASTORE
Wolfe's camera shop, inc.
116 WEST EIGHTH TOPEKA, KANSAS 66003
Telephone 913 - 235-1386
Use Kansan Classifieds
RAY AUDIO
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842-2047
The finest in Stereo—at the lowest possible price. Stop in and see our A.R. line of products. They are the highest quality, and a standard that all companies measure against. Their warranty is one that offers the most protection of your dollar investment.Authorized Service right here in town.
A. R. Warranty
5 years—parts, labor, shipping on Speakers
3 years—parts, labor, shipping on Turntables
2 years—parts, labor, shipping on Electronics
A GOODBYE TO FEBRUARY SALE
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A STOREWIDE*SALE WITH TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
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Carol M. Carson
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The Cover of *Rolling*
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"The Best of the Birds"
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THE BEST OF THE BYRD'S
GREATES THRAS. VOLUME 8
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FRAQUILITY
WINE
Eagle's Eye You're My Wine
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A collector's item and long unavailable, this album complements the changed the course of loop music.
LAURA ANYRO
THE FIRST SONGS
HOLIDAY
Wednesday, December 14th at 7pm at New York Public Library and Blackburn and Bluestone gallery.
S I
BILLIE HOLIDAY
THE ORIGINAL RECORDINGS
Cold War Records
Gold Record(s)
Songbook
Music Box
INCLUDES BONUS RECORD:
Miniature Vinyl Record(s)
Walt Disney's The Jungle Book
Walt Disney's The Lion King
This album is composed of the songs that
1930s and 1940s. 1958. All of these troubled
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way a little thirteen, always will be arranged.
All Columbia/Epic Albums Pictured 3.69
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O
- Import s not included
Use Your Mastercharge or BankAmericard
1420 Crescent Rd.
iscount records
842-4626
Store Hours: Mon-Fri. 10-8
Sat. 10-6
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Sticky Fingers Strip Local Marts of Profit
By MARIEL BIMM Kansan Staff Writer
Every retail grocery store loses money to shoplifters each year. The stores in Lawrence are no exception, but they do take measures to keep their losses at a low.
Every store asks its employees to keep an eye out for shoplifters. Some also employ off-duty police during busy periods. Options vary as to how much good these officers are able to do.
Jim Goddie, assistant manager of Failley's Gibson Discount Foods, said the store had used the officers during the fall, but had since discontinued the practice.
"We finally decided it wasn't worth their time. They couldn't catch very many," he
Charles Looney, managers of Kroger's, said they had had better luck with the off-road.
LOONEY, SAID THAT Kroger's used many different preventive measures, but that the off-duty police make the biggest difference.
Many Lawrence merchants are using a number of mechanical devices. Many use one-way or reflective mirrors or both. They may also have television circuit televisions with overhead cameras.
Jim Glenn, the store's manager, said, "The system has helped us tremendously. We have had them about 16 or 18 months and the shoplifting rate has decreased."
Glenn said that recently customers had turned in needle they caught shoplifting.
"they realize it is a real problem and that it may affect them in higher prices," he said.
Lawrence merchants could give no estimate of losses during the fiscal year.
GLENN SAID HE knew what the store made at the end of a fiscal year, but that he had no way of knowing what the profits might have been without shoplifting.
Kheit Ruprun, assistant manager of the Seven-Eleven Food Store on Iowa St., said he thought his store lost no more than $30 a week. "My store would not hold true for the larger stores.
"We seem to have more problem with people during the school year than we do during the summer," he said.
Joe Summer, assistant manager of A&P Supermarket, said the shifting rate is 10%.
Goddie said Falley's noticed the rise at the beginning of every school year.
Goddie said it was no worse this school year than the last.
"It has decreased in this store because we've caught a few people and word gets around to friends that this isn't a store to mess about with." Rupert said.
Glenn said Rusty's policy depended considerably on the circumstances.
BOTH LOONEY AND Rupert said their shoplifting rates were down because they had taken stricter measures against the offenders.
Goddie said Falley's prosecuted almost everyone.
Almost every store prosecutes the offenders it catches. While some store make exceptions for children and the elderly, Looney said Koroger's made no exception.
The workshop, which opened Feb.17, was
"But we're very dissatisfied with the court system," he said. "We'll catch somebody redhanded and tell the judge and let them off. It's pretty demeaning."
"We've had people come in that were actually hungry and we've given them food and they ate it."
Student filmmakers do not need to purchase costly camera equipment to launch their moviemaking careers. They can check out Super 8mm camera and projection equipment from the SUA filmmaking workshop.
SUAMovieEquipment Available to Students
Any student who is a member of the SUA film society may check out the equipment from the SAU office, Jim Millo, Hinsale, husband and workshop chairman, said Monday.
to become a member, a student must buy a $7 season pass to the film society film series. The student receives a workshop membership card with the pass, Millo said.
Whether they prosecute or not, most merchants agree that those shoplifters caught represent only the tip of the iceberg. There is no way to estimate how much is lost each year to offenders who are never apprehended.
Harakall suggested recently at a meeting called by local firemen that the sections be changed. Harakall appeared at the conference and requested the item he put on the agenda.
The two sections of the manual restrict city employees from publicly supporting or endorsing any persons running for political office.
The Lawrence City Commission will discuss two sections of the city personnel manual that relate to political activities of the commission's regular weekly session today.
Robert Haralick, city commission candidate and professor of electrical engineering, and Alvin Samuels, president of the local 1986, will appear to discuss the item.
"We just teach students how to operate the equipment," he said.
Political Rights Of Employes On City Agenda
established to help lessen students' expenses in filmmaking, Milio said. Super 8 equipment was selected, he said, because 16mm film and equipment is too expensive and because Super 8 is becoming increasingly popular.
Millo said the workshop was not a course about the aesthetic aspects of filmmaking
Last semester the workshop bought about $500 worth of equipment at a discount from a company in Illinois, Milito said. The company sold a one sound-on-sound Super 8 projector, one sound striper to put magnetic sound on film, one regular Super 8 projector, two film editing machines, one black and white microphone, one film splicer and two tape splitters.
Students must buy their own film and spiceer for pay for their materials in processing. Mine said.
Through a Chicago firm, the workshop is able to purchase and process a three-minute, 16-second roll of the Super 8 color film. The cost is about $1 less than the usual cost, be said.
Processing of black and white movie film
The workshop's dark room in the Kansas U-
iversity.
Students can check out equipment for 24 hours or during a weekend and may check it out again if there is no waiting list, Milio said.
There are about 30 members in the workshop now, Milano said, but the cameras are not checked out often. Most students are just practicing now, he said.
Milo said the workshop would meet 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Union. To give film ideas to other students, students are invited to show any of their old videos at the film festival and who wish to act in workshop films should also come to the meeting, he said.
Milo said he had made about 20 films
which he began making films in the eighth
SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SUA FILMS SU
ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE
3
Directed by Luis Bunuel
Woodruff Feb. 28
CLASSICAL 7:30
film Series 9:15
WED
HIMS SHE THAW
TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN Directed by
Directed by Carl Koch Animation by Carl Koch and Lotte Reiniger.
ANDY WARHOL'S CHELSEA GIRLS
Starring
Gerald Malanga, Ingrid
Superstar, Angela Davis
"International Velvet" and
main storyline
FILM SOCIETY
Voodruff
3:30, 7:30, 9:30
Tues March 1 754
WOODY ALLEN
SPECIAL FILMS
THE ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED
RAY AUDIO TOWER WAREHOUSE - The Gateway
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CARS BUYT AND SOLD. For the best deal in town on used cars, GJ Lois' Used Cars, Inc.
METROPOLIS
POPULAR FILMS
Woodruff 7:00 & 9:30
March 2 & 3 75c
Part Seven of Captain Marvel
NORTH SIDE SIDER Shop - 3-bikes. No. of Kaw River Bridge on Way 12 includes fur-ruled wagon bicycles and & kitchen cookware bicycles include 15 speeds, skis, old pot belly tote, a pair of old jeans, & %18 basket baskets & wooden crates. Fireplace cord price. Ballet afalas, brome & wheat straw. Open 9 to 7 days 424-325 Herb Allergened. If
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
1988 GTO 2-D HR HT, yellow with black virus ink.
1989 GTO 2-D HR HT, yellow with black virus ink.
cell condition 14:00 am / 5:09 after 5:09
2-27
MARTIN D-18, d-18 guitar with hard shell case, 6 months old. Ask for Clark: 842-4579. 2-27
Filers 202 Receiver Amp. 28 watt HMS per
Hub Filer 502 Receiver Amp. 28 watt HMS per
$600.00 $482.726
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
Mon. Mar. 5
Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to students at the University. PLEASE BEING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
Science Fiction Films
KANSAN WANT ADS
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
Available now at Canpus Madhouse, Town Grie-
5-8
Woodruff Tues. Feb. 27
Episode Five of PHANTOM EMPIRE
SUA JIMS SUA JIMS SUA JIMS SUA JIMS SUA
Either way it comes to the same thing. "New Analysis of Western Civilization."
2. If you don't, you're at a disadvantage.
FOR SALE
MINOLTA SRT for sale. Several lenses also. Call 403-566-1066
2-28
7:30
75c
1. If you use them,
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
-plus
Episode Five of
GT Barracuda, 50,000 miles. Good condition. Ra-
tionaire option. Offer valid on call. Best offer. Call 843-884-701, 5-p. 1pm - 6pm.
FLAT 142 SPORT COUPÉ-5-speed, map mug wheels,
Wheel trims, mat trims.
Clean and整洁, starts early in winter,
runs all day at 9 on 8PM. Recharging seats,
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INTERMEDIATE 2-8
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PHILIPS GAS213 GAR213 with Shure Y-15 amplifier, 180W conditional condition, Pay $225 will incur $490 call fee.
Three Days
4-Channel Siress, component system, AM/FM
player, player 500-channel charger, AMP Speaker on
the main desk, AM/FM speaker.
1966 CHEVY II 327. 4 speed, 5.13i, Lakewood,
diesel; 1967 Chevrolet Corvette II 327. 4 speed,
4.8l, more and more! Will trade or offer better
offer?
A good selection of vacuum cleaners, allure
oillover, Eureka, Electrolux, etc.
918 Mast 368
918 Mast 368
Stirrer component package -AMFM Stereo re-
reread 2 miR BSCH change headphones and 10 blanks
to BSCH change headphones.
RIP MRP OFF-MUF sell to finance. Florida HIQ
BTRACK PLAYER; HIQ CASS LINE hit 2-89
BTRACK PLAYER; HIQ CASS LINE hit 2-89
Super 8 movie collection $175 new - $100.00
Extra room with zoom lens 'Worth over $60.00 per week' with room size
$95.00
DISCOUNT FURNITURE We will quality, name
and customize all of our furniture. A few extra miles, you can save a lot. Armchair Furniture Co., Inc. Kansas Ave.
75th St., Arlington, TX 76010. Directions and directions, call 841-329-6198 between 6:45 and 9:30 a.m.
SPORTS CAR-1968 Sunburn Alpine Roll ball
balls left through Gilmour 841-399 before
through Gl
Such a deal! Used flute (Artrumto) in good condition with zip-grip $9.00. Call Saaney Event Planning at 212-345-7878.
For sale by owner. Small business currently
grossing $3,000/$3,000 per week. Open for business
only 1 day per week. Priced for quick sale.
Address replies to B. Tucker, 542 Winterborne
85 Buck Special 4 drs. 8 cylinders, excellent comfort, go tell声. $299.00. Call 424-3898.
For sale, 85 Kyrium Sport Sport Automatic
automobile. Must tire. Good quality. Demandable.
temperatures up to 65°F.
Give a tea party with a tea set from the HODGE PODGE, 15 W. 9th.
3-1
**80 SUZKI 1972 - 2,300 m³**. immaculate. Run and
ride to appreciate (2 inches also) Run & Ride
80 SUZKI 1972 - 2,300 m³**. immaculate. Run and
ride to appreciate (2 inches also) Run & Ride
Please give my watered a good home. The comfort is great and the quality is good for $30.00. Good condition, no leaks. Call 718-954-7236.
For Sale. 44, VW needs engine work. Cheap $200.
Call 842-7748.
Bella, Atala, 10, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 9, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 8, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 7, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 6, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 5, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 4, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 3, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 2, speeded, very nery, need grub-
ing. Bella, Atala, 1, speeded, very nery, need grub-
Get a car for Spring. 64 Corvair. Truly excellent car. Welcome to student car. C81-92-5358.
booked before 11:30.
Must sell Story and Clark piano. In excellent condition for school $590 Call a sales员 842-7933
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
& RAP
info_center 864-3506
tune-ups starting service
GAY COUNSELING
+ +
1606 Chev B-3a passenger Caprice Wagon One own-
er. Manage maintenance 824, 942-1754.
Manage maintenance 824, 942-1754.
Re Prepared!
New to sell fast. Ford Patterson 63. New clutch.
new battery--good running. 842-759-6300.
842-759-6310.
53. Gal Filt Tank, FL light, top, under graver
Filt filter, top filter, pump, graver fish included.
81 89-2177
AVOID SPIRING FEVER INFLATION 1986 250
SPRING FEVER INFLATION 1986 250
available up to 642-4368 M-F offer 0.00 F-M
available up to 642-4368 M-F offer 0.00 F-M
Lawrence Kansas 66044
FOR RENT
Tony's 66 Service
FOR SALE, 1967. VUF Squareback, radio. Good condition. $650. Call 842-8728
3-5
REMOTE HOME SALE
For the largest Lawrence Rental Exchange in rental property sales in Lawrence, $250.00 for 2001 home and $85.00 for 2000 home.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
TOO FAR from CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
Try 2 bedroom apts, directly across MAIN.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking parked fire. Free: Cable
and WiFi. Rechargeable power bank. rateables
rates, furniture available. ideal roommates
phone: 843-2116. Satisfaction Angels: 1823 Ipd. Apt. 9
phone: 843-2116.
These beautiful apartments surround a quiet bay, with two private bathrooms. Fierce Hotel is only 10 blocks away, the spa, tennis court and more.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE APARTMENTS
Come by and see their quaint apartments. Rent
walls will be paid. Water bills will be paid. Lenses of various lengths are
available.
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. New leaving 1 and 2 bedrooms, furnished and comforted with high ceilings, heating and air, pool and laundry. Most utilities paid to use. Call 843-8250 or see at 1414 S. CALIFORNIA AVENUE.
Evaluations call 862-1631
2411 Louisiana 842-5552
2434 Iowa
2. bedroom house unfurnished $100 Call 842-
6088
Sleeping rooms with Kitchen privileges 55. Call
842-608-2
2-28
If you call now, we have a 1 and 2 bedroom
room. Call 850-437-6921.
WOOD APARTMENTS 843-116-1
2-28
Large unfulfilled apt_ utilities stored—swee
retig $500. Call 842-808-0
2-28
NEEDS A SUMMER PLACE at Midwinterbrook Hall (it's
never rainy.) The building is located in a county
hall since it was built. Come see us!
Directions: 403 W. 19th St, between Greenwich and
Westchester.
Apl. for Renit, 1022 Ohio St. NO CONTRACT Ala.
4853 for Tour, Bee anytime Call 845-369-
3044 for tour
Ninety-five furnished apt, for 1 or 2 students. Close proximity to Student Center and additional stairs adjacent to Campus Phone 843-858-3410
$99—one and two bedroom beds, e.g., electric kitchens,
drapers, carpeting, color. $49 available, air condition-
ing mounted, dormitory space. For 4 a.m. or 4:90 p.m. weekends from
12:30-5:00. 1745 W. 25th. W. 25th. Hillview Alps 893
Furnished apartment for rent. Single bedroom at 19 W, 14th. Call Steve re: 1 p.m. 845-19-318.
Sleeping poems (for men only) and early night poems (for women only) are downright. For further information, phone 617-452-0388.
TRAILRIDE by the Country Club Summer and Fall planning Plan about a bedroom, bedroom suite, living room with study, Drapes and deep carpet fitted fully equipped kitchen, excellent management, furniture available. Excellent amenities.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.03
Furnished room for rent. Sharah kitchen etc.
close to campus. $50 month. call 842-836. 3-50
NOTICE
315 Michigan St. Bar-H-Q. We Bar-H-Qu in an
bathroom on the right of the house. A slab to abat
the stairs. Large rib large plate in the
bathroom and ice cube. Lound of beef $2.1 chicken
plate in the kitchen. Phone VIe 310-926-3156. St. It
on the left.
counsers, apartments, farm all areas,
causes, 311 E. 7th St. 892-6101. Home if
fired. 311 E. 7th St. 892-6101.
THE PUB INC. IS IN KANSAS NOW. THE newest concept in young people entertainment lounges if you are interested in becoming a PUB OPERATOR in your city write a resume for the Center, Kansas City, 316-727-5701, $5,000 deposit All reps strictly confidential. 2-28
YARN--PATTERNS--NEEED POLEIN
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10.5 Monday-Saturday
Casa de Taco
Delicious Nutritious
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
DATSUN
IT SURE BEATS
WHATEVER'S SECOND
TONY'S
500 E.23rd
IMPORTS-DATSUN
842-0444
No charge, but your business, apartments, duplexes
and condos may be required to come in for any
waiting. For more info call Home Locator
at 800-726-9411.
Discount prices with savings up to 48%. on some items. Discounts may not apply to Country Shop, 709 North End, 2nd Floor, 9-7 days.
(Earn 500-1000) This spring, as campus coordi-
tion to P.O. Box 2158, San Jose, CA
(718) 643-2900
For birth control information and abortion counseling and referral call the Information Center, 1234 Broadway, Suite B-109.
Why buy a landlord's property for him with your money? You can save money by going along with your letter of credit, 36 to 48 hours, rent can be more expensive than it would be once again. Why not check into a way to save money by buying the landlord's property? You don't need to nibble on the details of the loan agreement.
FUN FACTS ABOUT VENEERAL DIESEASE
We are a wonderful welcome to CAY LIBRATION-bus-
ness.
Monday, 7:30 p.m. union; Socialization-Prima-
tory 8:45 p.m.; Socialization-Prima-
tory 11:30 p.m.
Union, Box 242, Lawrensburg, MN-6428-2-08
Union, Box 242, Lawrensburg, MN-6428-2-08
25% off all clothing at the HODGE PODGE 15-3
W. 9th
Just arrived new shipment of earrings at the HODGE PODGE. 15 W. 9th. 3-1
Need a Hard Man? Mag Commute Being formed for next fall; hit问话副马Rattly at 841-3250
Wait, is it "Hard Man?" or "Hard Man"? It's "Hard Man". The 'H' in "Hard" is capitalized.
The 'M' in "Mag" is lowercase.
Let's re-read the whole thing one more time.
Need a Hard Man? Mag Commute Being formed for next fall; hit问话副马Rattly at 841-3250
Wait, is it "Hard Man?" or "Hard Man"? It's "Hard Man".
The 'H' in "Hard" is capitalized.
The 'M' in "Mag" is lowercase.
Original Lawncare Antique Show, Annual
Armory, Lawrence, March 2. 3 & 4 Show Hours
9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Thursday. Exhibits
exhibits for four days. Admission $10 or
all days. Sponsored by Pilot Club of La-
wrence.
Coin & coin supplies. Also buy gold and silver coins, India, head in销商, Traders. R468.
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture 1f
842-7998
Need 1 to 2 roomsat 4 bdmr. double duplex
Rent $150 + umf. tel (843-6464) 2-27
Departed deeply need ride from Kansas City in KU
the last week. I am in no position to provide
expenses IF interested call 462-3084 or 613-3084.
Wanted. Experienced painter (who really grows up)
with color and texture. Please email RONALEAS HOTEL, Harper West, 1-1066
922-835-1047.
Cocktail waitresses waited affection & evenings. Call 834-9800. The Flaming Chair. 2-27
Pinekiewicz for our picnic baskets. HODGE
DOGE, 15 W. 9th. 2-1
To sell Gibson EB-2 below-bass guitar bass or guitar with a 10-speed bicycle. Call 964-6823 - 627 for Rake.
Wanted: Furniture refiinder to share Mass. Ave.
location with related business. 842-7098 2-27
One female to share 3 bedroom house. Close to the airport and shopping center. Free FREE ferry, 9 was Call 841-2915. EOE.
Wanted: Girl in adobe. my part of Jawahir
would be a programmer/macroman, having to be with iPhone
and Macroman, having to be with iPhone.
Vocalist for band, Delire true-tone and high enrichment for 12+ band. (Hits or Runs) Audition: 3-5
Employment Opportunities
Consider College Men interested in part-time
work. Write O. R. Bennett, 2407 West Hill
Rd., Atlanta, GA 30315.
Due to our expanded business we are in need of both man and female help, Apply in person, by phone or online.
Young lady over 21 to work in our club area. Will be interested in attractive and enjoy meeting people. Will prepare materials for meetings. Must be in Lawrence year around. Experience must be in Lawrence year around. Phone 862-161 6 after 6 P.M. 3-5-58. Phone 862-161 6 after 6 P.M.
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent intervent in part-time commercial work for TV-radio. Agr range 16-40 Interview Thursday and Satellite Friday 8-9am City Kaitlin 42-580 (please bring pictures)
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
Auto Service Center
23rd & Ridge Court
843-9694
PEUGEOT
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
Pougeot uo-s $117.50
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
RIDE ON BICYCLES
401 Mass. 843-8484
LOST
One brown wallet vicinity McColum Hall Impatient to owner. Finder please. Call 802-757-3941.
LOST. Intelligent, sensitive girl_ blood male _
Lost
Last Tuesday near Gibbon's friendly tail-lawgung
at The Twinings in New York. We are
momentious to Tipper Bank. Please call
me at (212) 354-8077.
HELP WANTED
Black and orange mottled female kitten 82,
months, Feb. 18, Park 25 area 82482-1482.
Nesting box, Nook, 6 acres.
Gold wedding rings: free form filigree design
Wedding rings: free form filigree design
Feb 2-8
Wardle phone: 841-3237
People interested in electronics to work part
of the company are required to have
fundamentals as part of work. Phone:
(212) 678-9543.
The Sanctuary is now hiring cocktail waiters
Weeknight and weekend hours. Hours 93-616
Weekend and weekend hours.
SERVICES OFFERED
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer or permanent. Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa, etc. all protection in job vacancies. Mail resume to TWRE-01, Dept. H. 2250 Telephone Ave., Berkeley, 94704-8. Dept. H. 2550 Telephone Ave., Berkeley, 94704-8.
*JOB'S IN ALASKA* Available now. This hand-
tunnelization. Plan YOUR VOYAGE $2,00 JAX.
Box. Travel with our 4-star Alaska hotels.
Searing and altering for the college girl Pick up a book on how to cook well, six- day week heals himself and reines - b- daily.
Have trouble waking up? Try our wake-up服套.
Have trouble waking up? Call 842-3241 or 842-7590.
For information call 842-3241 or 842-7590.
PERSONAL
Handwritten belts, purse and sandals from the
handcrafted bellies at the mall or from the
tourist accommodations.
MISCELLANEOUS
MEN- WOMEN JOBS ON SHIPPING No experience required. Excellent job. pay worldwide travel. Perfect summer job or earn $250 P.O. Box 249. Port Angeles, Washington 88382 m 3-26
Need Money? Traders have the fastest $buck $ buch
$22.50 Mass. Buane on items of value. Trade $3
99
Come down and enjoy PINNALL, FOOSBAL and POOL—take your beer at the Oroad Street Arcade incarnate on the Mount Olive Ban 1414. Oroad, arcade open 2 p.m.-4:30 daily; Sunday 6 p.m.-1.
TYPING
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mite type. Have electric typea; nite typea. Accurately and prompt service. Provide well-recognized spelling corrected. Ph. 845-854. Mrs. Wright.
FOUND
Slide rule in O zone on 2-19. Describe it and it in yours.
Call 843-1379, 5-9 p.m.
ADVERTISE U
ADVERTISE
UDK
ADVERTISE
D
Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
Organization requests money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73.74 must pickup a budget request form from 1048 Kaukun Union, 8:40-3:40 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
8
Tuesday, February 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Commission Promises Fewer Signs
Rv CHUCK POTTER
By CHUCK POTTER Kansan Staff Writer
Although the Lawrence City Commission has granted 17 variances from the city sign ordinance during the past 13 months, city officials said Monday that the commission was tightening up on the number of variances allowed.
"The basic idea when we passed the sign ordinance six or seven years ago was to tighten up on signs to some degree. But now that we didn't just want signs up thrown up here and there,"
Mavor John Emick said Monday.
"Since then we've gotten rid of a lot of unsightly signs in the five-year phase-out period. I'm sure that everyone has complied with the new ordinance."
The city sign ordinance states that each business is limited to two wall signs and one ground sign. The wall signs may not be larger than 25 per cent of the area of the building. Signs must be at least eight feet off the ground but not extending over the building's roof.
Students Ask Support In Pearson Petition
THE GROUND SIGN may be no taller
Of the 268 freshmen and sophomores currently enrolled in the controversial Pearson Integrated Humanities Program offered by a petition in support of the program.
Ed Rolfs, Junction City freshman who is enrolled in the program and who announced the petition, said Monday that he hoped to present the petition to the College Assembly at their regular meeting at 4 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium.
Speaking of the petition, Rolfs said, "We hope basically to point out student reaction to the program. We feel there has been a lot of misrepresentation of student opinion." He said the petition was not aimed specifically at the College Assembly but was to explain the Pearson students' opinion to everyone.
The petition, which was circulated for two weeks, also was signed by 36 students who have been enrolled, have audited or have been teaching assistants in the program. The signers of the petition affirmed the following six points:
- PIPH has shown as much respect for personal freedom and intellectual independence as any course I have ever taken.
- Plato distinguished induction from teaching. The former assures the will by dictating concrete goals and addresses the intelligence, encouraging it to consider, judge, distinguish, compare and finally, to conclude for itself. This principle is both taught and practiced
The emphasis of PIPH is upon the challenge of understanding and understanding of the assigned tests.
-Efforts to protect freshmen against alleged brainwashing are paternalistic and condescending. It is in effect a form of censorship which shows contempt for unnaturalness.
—We value the opportunity afforded under classmen to be instructed by senior teachers.
The academic standards of PHP are as busy as any we have encountered at the university.
The program, which has been in existence for three years on an experimental basis, has consisted of a four-semester series of six-hour courses that fulfilled all English, mathematics, geography, fertilization and unitaries distribution requirements for freshmen and sophomores.
The Pearson courses received permanent approval by the College Assembly with a 96-62 vote on Jan. 23, but the assembly has yet to give them permanent approval as substitutes for the freshmen-sophomore requirements.
On Feb, 21, the assembly voted to place on a mail ballot a motion that would end the Pearson courses as substitutions for freshman-sophomore requirements. A yes vote
Insane Liberation Theatre, a self-styled fusion of insane humor, drama, satire, music, stage action and vaudeville slapstick, will perform Wednesday and Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The group started performing together last year while they were students at Oklahoma State University. Their act determined that the troup decided to go professional.
The seven-member troop will present two one-hour shows at 7:30 and 9 each night.
Insane Lib To Unleash Mad Humor
“These people will put on a truly bizarre and side-splitting show which should be unlike anything ever seen around here,” an award-winning director, Neb., senior and SUA board member.
"The Forum Room provides an atmosphere which is intimate enough to significantly involve the audience with the topic. In general, words, these people are so perceptive and versatile that they can effectively feel out an audience and cater to it with those elements of humor which the audience effectively responds to the most. Pierce said."
Prof Cited
Charles Sidman, associate professor of history, has been recommended to succeed W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history, as chairman of the department of history.
Robinson, who will complete his five-year term as chairman this summer, plans to continue full-time teaching, research and committee work.
Six of the 17 variances granted in the last 13 months have involved businesses located in the Malls Shopping Center at 23rd and Louisiana streets.
than 30 feet and the total area not exceeding 90 square feet, unless approved by the city
All six variances granted were connected with the part of the sign ordinance stating that signs may not extend over the roof of the building. Emick said that those variances were approved because otherwise the signs would have been unsightly.
on the ballot would allow the courses to be taken for credit but not for substitution; a no vote would not mean that the courses would be approved for substitution but would merely be returned to the assembly for further discussion.
"The old sign ordinance was pretty lenient, and it allowed signs that wouldn't be allowed now." Emrick said. "Those old non-communion signs changed, they're non-communion signs."
"What we have done is that when businesses with non-conforming signs have changed hands, we've made the new owners conform to the current ordinance."
COMMISSIONER Nancy Hambleton admitted that the sign ordinance should be changed to cut down on the number of requests for variances from businesses in Mackenzie.
"All the ones that deal with the Malls can't be bung any other way," she said.
Hambleton denied the notion that the city commission was attempting to remove ordinance barriers in order to attract businesses to Lawrence.
"The kind of sign you need varies with the area you're in."
"We would like to have Lawrence an easy place to do business, but not at the expense of our time."
Both Hambleton and Emick agreed that the preponderance of signs on 23rd Street
"I IT LOOKS TERRIBLE," Hambleton said, "and there is a grave danger we have to consider that the same sort of thing may happen on other streets. There are a lot of problem areas visually we have to consider, like North Lawrence."
Emrick said that 23rd Street had been zoneed before he was elected to the city commission and that the street was improving visually.
ITALIAN PIZZERIA
843-1886
809 W. 23rd
TUESDAY NIGHT
is
SMORGASBORD
NIGHT
5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
All the Pizza $144
You Can Eat
—Plus 1 FREE Coke
Use Kansan Classifieds
Midnight
MADNESS
Wednesday
Night
Look Out!!
MISTER
GUY
Two Carryway Conventions
GARDEN GUARDIANS
MISTER GUY
Five Centuries of Convenience
KIEF'S
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREOS
The Malls Shopping Center
PIONEER TEAC UBL Dual disc preeners
reg. $5.98
EACH NOW
$299
Island Records
TWO TRAFFIC LP's
Always 25 top selling LPs $2.99
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
THE SCOOPERS
$299
Reg. $9.95-$10.95 Diamond Needles $5.95
'73 ROCK CHALK REVUE
HOCH AUDITORIUM
March 2 and 3, 1973
8:00 p.m.
This Friday
and
Saturday Nights
Tickets NOW on sale:
Town Crier, downtown
Town Crier, the Mall's Shopping Center.
SUA ticket office, in the Union. (8:30-noon and
1:00-5:00)
Friday night $2.00 & $2.50
Saturday night $2.25 & $2.75
Saturday night tickets almost sold out! Cost of tickets $.75 less than last year.
MOTHER MARY'S, 2406 IOWA is giving a FREE BEER to all Friday night ticketholders.
---
STILL WARMER
KANSAN
83rd Year, No.100
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
City Orientation For KU Students Is Proposed
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
See Story Page 3
4,020 Rooms Now Filled In KU Halls
BY LARRY GOLDSMITH Kansan Staff Writer
For the first time in five semesters, the number of occupied rooms in University of Kansas residence halls has passed 4,006, J. K., director of housing, said Tuesday.
Wilson said that 4,920 rooms in halls were rented this spring, compared to 3,900 occupied last semester. In the fall semester of 1969, 4,596 students were living in residence halls, but only 3,841 rooms were occupied that spring.
The rentals this spring represent an occupancy rate of 85 per cent, a 2 per cent rise.
Wilson attributed the increase to adjustments and added variety in the facilities and operations of the halls, economic advantage of the school, enforcement and enforcement of full-year contracts.
Wilson said that the halls were becoming more varied, and that more options were being offered to residents. He cited Hashinger Hall as an example, saying it was now for students interested in two creative arts. Although it is more expensive to live there, he said, many students are interested in it.
Part of the increase might be due to 15 or 20 options available to residents, Wilson said. The options allowed the students to change their rooms as they saw fit as long as they did notifluff on the rights of the next occupant.
The use of full-year contracts was another reason occupancy in the residence halls was lower.
Although some students might be bothered by the fact that they have to pay a penalty fee if they decide not to live in a hall for a full year, he said, the contracts make
PEPSI
Kansan Photo by LESLIE ROSS
See 4.020 Page 12
Credit Cards Have Limited Uses Ellen Reimners, St. Louis junior, will agree
Halt In Releases Slows Withdrawals
SAIGON (AP)—The United States slowed down the withdrawal of its remaining forces from Vietnam Wednesday and may halt it altogether unless North Vietnam resumes the release of American prisoners of war, high-ranking U.S. authorities reported.
The sources said no troop flights left Vietnam Wednesday, as they have every day since the cease-fire began Jan. 28. The troop had been withdrawing about 400 troops a day.
The U.S. Command would neither confirm nor deny the report.
Maj. Gen. Gilbert H. Woodward, the senior MU delegate to the four-party Joint Committee, will attend a mount side in a stormy commission meeting for "clarification on an urgent basis" of the POW dispute, in which Hanoi and Paris expected to be freed early this week.
The United States also pressed its demand for the immediate release of more American prisoners of war and told North Vietnam to dismantle missile sites below the demilitarized zone or face action Washington "deems inappropriate."
He said failure of North Vietnam and the Viet Cong to release POWs at the time indicated by the Jan. 27 Paris peace agreement "is a clear violation of the agreement and all that the agreement is about."
Woodward also said the installation of missiles in northern South Vietnam by Hanou was a "clear and direct violation of the agreement."
He warned the Communists that if they refused to withdraw the missiles and
"We consider the construction of the missile base at Khe Sanh since Jan. 28 not only a violation of the agreement but a provocation to the U.S. government," he
It was the first time Woodward assailed the Communist side for installation of the Soviet-built surface-to-air missiles, which were deployed by U.S. sources and the Saigon government.
dismantle the base, "my government takes such policies as it deems appropriate."
The POW issue flared up Tuesday in Saigon and also in Paris, where Secretary of State William P. Rogers suspended his participation in the current 12-nation Vietnam peace conference pending action on the matter.
As Wednesday's meeting of the four-party Joint Military Commission got under way, the president said the government has a top deputy in the North Vietnamese delegation, was on his way back from Hanoi to Saigon with "new instructions" and possibly a list of American POWs to be sent.
Vietnam and the Viet Cong have released 163 American prisoners, and the United States had anticipated that about 140 more Americans would be killed. The Communist count, 422 remain to be freed.
The North Vietnamese said the second regular turnover of POWs would be postponed until resolution of Hanoi's complaints of cease-fire violations.
The spokesman repeated a statement made in Washington by the White House earlier saying the release of American President Donald Trump's principal obligation of the cease-fire agreement.
He said the agreement clearly stated these prisoners of war were to be released at a rate no slower than the rate of American troop withdrawals.
"We have now withdrawn over one-half of our forces," the spokesman said. "It is now time for the other side immediately to release the next group of U.S. POWs to total the all of those released up to at least two thousand." The total number scheduled for release."
Credit Cards Bittersweet Bargain
But Tin Tic, chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegations, said before Wednesday's Joint Military Commission meeting:
By DANGEORGE
Editor's Note: This is the last story in a three-part series dealing with credit cards. Today's story examines the advantages and drawbacks of cards to the consumer and to the merchant.
Kansan Staff Writer
The chief spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegation said Hoa "certainly will have new instructions for us and perhaps he will have the list."
Undoubtedly the benefits of credit card use outweigh the disadvantages. The big plus is convenience: credit cards give the consumer instant buying power, consolidation of all his charge purchases on a single monthly bill and simpler record
Perhaps the problem is not really nec,
just magnified. But since the boom in
card use began in the last five years, many
Americans have slowly discovered that
they are spending more money—and enjoying it less.
At the same time, however, more and more people are finding that credit card use is not always the easy, worry-free system it's usually denoted as being
For the businessman, the use of a bank credit card system provides a relatively easy way to pay for customers, and he doesn't have to worry about checking credit, making monthly billings, carrying slow payers or absorbing high volume of the concern of the card-less company.
THE MOST COMMON consumer problem is overuse. Many people simply are not
At the same time the chiefs of the American, North Vietnamese, South Vietnamese and Cambodian missions meeting, another full-scale conference of the subcommission on captured persons was under way in a separate room at the base of Saigon. The Tan Son Nhan Air Bass ground on Saigon's Tan Son Nhan Air Base.
The businessman, on the other hand, takes a discount on the cash he gets from the card companies when he turns in his credit sales slips, but this loss, technically, is made up by the time he saves in not having to do as much paperwork.
aware of how much they're spending until it's too late. And others do not realize that if they take a year to pay for an item, they may have to pay in interest charges almost 20 per cent more than what the item originally cost.
The most worrisome problem, not only to the customer and businessman but also to the management.
Although not the major trouble that it was
Candidates' Pact Questioned
By ERIC MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
Three Lawrence City Commission candidates who are running as a team in the March 6 primary may be violating a Kansas law against local partisan elections, City
The candidates, Bob Elder, Gene Miller
and Fred Pence, have been endorsed by the Lawrence Support Your Local Police committee. They have formed a joint committee for Responsive Government.
Kansas School Bill Gets Tentative OK
Rose said the Support Your Local Police might midt qualify as a political party.
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas State gave tentative approval Tuesday to a Republican state's system finance plan to distribute the state's system allocation state and to local school districts.
The measure, approved on an unrecorded voice vote, comes up for a final vote today, with Republican leaders predicting that they have the 21 votes needed for approval which would forward the measure to the House.
In debate Tuesday, Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City and Democratic floor leader, and other Democrats attacked the bill as "fiscally irresponsible" and "the embodiment of the philosophy of 'spend the money,' then scramble to finance."
The bill would increase state aid to schools by $17.18 million distributed through a "power equalizer" formula to grant more "rich" districts than to "rich" districts.
Republicans asserted that the bill would fulfill the requirements laid down by a Johnson County District. Court to provide relief in the case, for all pupils in Kansas public schools.
The bill includes an optional 50 per cent income tax surtax to allow local voters to
Since the cease-fire agreement, North
requires that all municipal elections in cities of Lawrence's size and governmental form be nonpartisan. The controversy has been spawned by "nontapartisan" and "political parties."
decide whether to shift part of the burden of schools from property taxes to income
Other programs he listed as facing cuts were a 5 per cent pay raise for state employees which would cost about $10 million, and a 40 per cent reduction in retirement benefits costing $7 million, junior college aid of $10 million and capital improvements at state colleges and universities.
"I'm somewhat interested in how a group is tested to determine if it is a political party," Rose said. "That's something to my knowledge, has never come up before."
One program that would face a cutback, Steineger said, is the $28 million appropriation requested for the expansion of the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"IVE NEVER heard of an organization telling a state candidate," he said. "It's in the past."
The enactment of the bill would “apparently limit or eliminate other programs which have been recommended and are very badly needed.” he said.
However, Sen. Robert Bennett, R-overland Park and president pro tem, said that the state general revenue fund would be made up of mediate years ahead were ample for fun-
Steninger said that nobody had yet expained the details of what was going to be from to fund the plan.
See KANSAS Page 6
"I'm sure the three candidates would not intentionally violate the law, but I'd like to see it."
"It's just a citizens' group that's interested in good government," he said. "The only reason we're running three candidates is because that's how many it would take to make a majority on the commission."
The challenged candidates say they do not believe they are breaking the law.
William Lemesany, 900 Arkansas St., will also running for the commission, drums,
"TVE NEVER seen the Support Your Local Police party listed in a political party text," Lemesany said, "but it's a party just the same.
"If they really came right out and said they were running as members of the John Birch Society, there'd be a distinct liability they're violating the law," he said.
According to Miller, 35 Arrowhead Dr. the group is not a party.
Miller and Elder, who lives at 1821 W. 21st Ter., have said that they belonged to the John Birch Society. According to Miller, the John Birch Society does not support one
in the early stages of the credit card boom,
illegal use of cards is still a thriving
industry.
See CANDIDATES Page 7
In 1970 it was estimated that credit card fraud cost Americans $200 million each year and that mail fraud alone was up 700 per cent from 1965. About 1.2 billion cards are lost each year, and between 300,000 and 500,000 are stolen.
A 1971 FEDERAL law put a $50 ceiling on the amount of money for which a person can be held responsible if his card is stolen. If he notifies the company before any debts have been fraudulently incurred, he isn't required to pay anything. Most companies are not very strict about taking to get their workers they are entitled to it. Even if the were strict about paying, the till wouldn't be the biggest problem for the consumer.
That problem is the one encountered when one's card is used illegally again and again. The owner's credit rating can plummet, and it's no easy task to reestablish the credit rating after that happens.
An obvious reason for the growth of credit card fraud was the increase in the number of cards available, especially bank cards which BankAmericard and Master Charge
WHEREAS OWNERS of travel and entertainment type cards numbered only two per cent of the credit card population, the bank cards were issued to nearly every customer of each participating bank, which owns a marketing control, but on marketing and expansion.
As a result, illegal use of the cards mounted. In 1971 retailers lost about $15 million due to misuse. About 25 per cent of all money charged off an uncollectable was lost through intentional mistreatment. The losses were due to overextended accounts.
The bank card companies took action to halt mishaps, but their first step soon proved to be something less than practical. They regularly issued lists, or "hot sheets," of stolen or bad-risk credit card account numbers to participating merchants and
Btt no retail store of any size could check the list every time it received a card, much more quickly.
PERHAPS THE MOST effective method of eliminating fraudulent use of credit cards is one that has seen only limited use: the computer.
when a computer system is used, a store is connected to a central office with a computer center. A card presented at the store is inserted into a small terminal near the cash register, and the code number is checked automatically and is either cleared
See CREDIT Page 2
The disputes broke out after a morning in which the United States and Hanoi reported they had reached agreement on one important aspect of the 13-party meeting here to seal the Vietnam peace agreements signed a month ago.
PARIS (AP) - Disputes over a U.N. rule and North Vietnam's halt in the release of American war prisoners imperiled the international Vietnam peace conference Tuesday. U.S. Secretary of State William P. Pompey suspended all his activity conferences.
U.N. Role, POW Disputes Imperil Peace Conference
At the same time, the work of conference drafting experts also came to a halt because of a refusal by Communist delegates to sit in the main representatives of the United Nations.
These developments came as North Vietnam and the United States traded bitter charges over breaches of the uneasy ceasefire deal signed in Paris on Jan. 27.
Rogers sought an urgent meeting with Foreign Minister Nguyen Duy Trinh of North Vietnam in order to have the intelligence verified over the prisoner release program.
rogers was under President Nixon's orders to shelve all other conference business until the issue was resolved with Trinh.
At once this injected an atmosphere of concern, if not of crisis, into the conference programme.
Rejecting Hanol's charges that Americans are breaching the cease-fire, McCloskey returned the fire with an accusation of his own.
Robert J. McCloskey, U.S. spokesman, told newtown the Washington-Hanolie peace agreements had stated specifically that the conditional prisoners must proceed unconditionally.
In Saigon earlier the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong authorities on the Joint Military Commission announce their joint decision to quite free the prisoners.
"We have continuing evidence of gross violations by the Communist side, including the infiltration of several thousand North Vietnamese troops since Jan. 28 and the use of explosives in equipment such as 85mm artillery, trucks and other heavy equipment," he said.
McCloskey was asked if the prisoner issue could break up the talks.
"We did not come to Paris to see the conference fail," he replied. "We hope we can settle the question of the prisoners in talks with the North Vietnamese here."
Defendants Disclaim Discrimination Charges
By JOHN PIKE
Kansan Staff Writer
The parties charged with discrimination in a suit filed with the University Judiciary by the Black Student Union (BSU) denied permission in their formal answer filed Tuesday.
The Charged Parties also filed motions to dismiss charges against the individuals involved in the case.
The suit asked judiciary to order Martin to approve BSU purchase vouchers that were proper on their face and a declaratory judgment against the defendants.
The suit, filed Feb. 14, named the Student Senate as well as Roger Martin, Lawrence third-year law student and Senate treasurer; David Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president; and Kathy Meldonja junior and student body vice-president.
The BSU suit charged the defendants with discrimination and violation of the laws of equal treatment and due process in a Dec. 6 action of the Senate to take away $3,000 of the remaining $2,500 to the remaining $3,250 who submit a new plan for operation of the co-op.
The response, prepared and filed by KU second-year law students Frederick Stewart, Lawrence, and Harold Matney, Ottawa, claimed that the Senate had acted completely within its established powers and that the BSU had not acted within
the response also alleged numerous technical errors and errors of fact in the IBM system.
Senate guidelines in expenditures from their allocation.
The defendants requested that any further proceedings in the case be handled by former counsel.
Matney and Stewart, listed as Counsel for the accused, also a filed motion to dismiss the charge in its entirety, claiming that the Judiciary was without jurisdiction in the case. The BSU did not be exhausted. The dismissal motion contended that the BSU was required to attempt to regain its funds by submitting a plan for re-organization of the food co-op to the Student Executive Committee before it could be eligible to appear before the
The dammsal motion further alleged that the charge was vague and failed to state an
A separate dismissal motion to drop charges against Martin, Dillon, and Allen was approved.
The motion contended that Dillon and Allen were not named in the body of the charge and that no charges were in fact levied against them.
The motion also stated that Martin was listed in the charge only in his capacity as treasurer, a position which the dismissal motion contended bound him to any action of the Senate regardless of his presence or actions.
2
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Credit Cards Bittersweet
(Continued from page 17)
or rejected in a matter of seconds by the center.
(Continued from page 1)
Such systems, however, because of their cost, are rare outside larger retail stores.
Despite the limited use of computer systems, the amount of theft and fraudulent use is now dropping, said Gene Mahaffa, assistant manager of the BankAmericard
center at Commerce Bank in Kansas City, Mo.
"Nationally," I'd say it occurs in less than one-tenth of one per cent of the whole
In Lawrence, most merchants reported no more than two or three incidents a year in which someone attempted to use a credit card fraudlessly.
BUT EVEN WITHOUT actually stealing
Ellsburg, Russo Claim No Crime Committed
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A defense attorney, opening the defense case in the tenth circuit of a federal trial, the Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo would not seek to prove that they had the right motives for committing crimes, but rather would stress that no crimes were
Attorney Leon Winglass, delivering his opening statement in behalf of Russo, said: "The government, in bringing this case, is attempting to bend and distort the laws."
He said the defendants would prove that espionage, conspiracy and theft statutes currently in law books did not cover the act of espionage and Russo were alleged to have committed
Weinglass concluded his opening statement by revealing to the jurors that Russo would take the stand in his own defense and that witnesses would include members of Congress who sought to gain access to the Pentagon Papers in 1969.
The defense then called as its first witness retired Rear Adm. Gene LaRoque, now director of the privately funded Center for Defense Information in Washington, D.C.
"The defense will present evidence that Mr. Brown's conduct has been committed which you should excuse because you agree with the motives. Our case rather will be that no evidence was found."
Ellsberg, 41, and Russo, 36, are charged in connection with the release to news media of the Pentagon's top-secret study of the Vietnam war. The government sought to halt the release of documents could have harmed national defense and aided a foreign power.
Weinglass told jurors the defense case would prove that the Pentagon papers had no relation to national defense when they were copied in 1989 or any time thereafter.
He said the defense would call various
a card there are several ways a person can be hurt by credit card crooks.
PHILADELHIA-Mayor Frank Rizzo announced Tuesday the settlement of the eight-week-old strike by public school teachers with tentative agreement on a new four-year contract hammered out by President Nixon's top labor troubleshoot.
A clerk may be able to make a duplicate impression of a card on a blank sales form while recording a transaction. He then returns the card and a carbon of the sales slip. Later he buys another card, and signs off, creat forms, forges the first customer's name on it and keeps the money.
Hunger Strike
Bargaining for a new contract to replace the pact that expired last September began in 1975.
News Briefs By the Associated Press School Strike
LEAVENWORTH—Immates of the U.S. Penitentiary in Leavenworth were fed meals in groups of less than 200 Tuesday as a six-day hunger strike diminished, but work details were halted for a second day. The food strike, by about 75 per cent of the inmates, started a week ago over complaints the food was poorly prepared.
A list of grievances by inmates was given to the warden and published in the Kansas Canal Journal.
Warden Samuel Britton said that only the essential services such as the kitchen, laundry and hospital were operating as normal.
The announcement apparently scuttled labor plans for a general strike Wednesday to support the embattled teachers by removing business and transportation in the city.
WASHINGTON-Hitting at segregation in private recreation facilities, the Supreme Court Tuesday denied a whites only policy to a 16-year-old boy preferred status to nearby residents. The unanimous decision expanded a 1989 rule that a black family that buys or rents a residence division must be allowed to use recreational areas that come with the property.
Supreme Court
--ire may boost the sales figure on the slip and hope the customer doesn't notice. It's a real possibility.
Libyan Airliner
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.-The U.N. aviation agency agreed Tuesday to look into Israel's shooting down a Libyan airliner last week, and Arab delegates proposed a resolution condemning Israeli action in the tragedy.
Egypt's call for a debate won quick agreement at the opening session of a four-day assembly of the International Civil Aviation Organization.
One hundred and six persons perished when the jettliner was downed by Israeli warplanes Feb. 21 in the occupied Sinai Desert.
A clerk may palm a customer's card and give back one listed on a hot sheet. Again, it's a mistake if it is noticed. But otherwise it's not. A clerk must schedule weeks before its loss is noticed. Meanwhile, additional problems may develop when the customer tries to use the card.
Thieves and less-than-honest merchants may work together to sell goods charged to hot credit cards, or they may use them to charge-fictitious items and then pocket the money received from the credit card. They may even turn them in for rewards.
HERE IS A LIST of things to do to avoid
possible misses of any credit cards you may
experts in four to five weeks of testimony to talk about the content of the papers and to show that the information did not concern among military program in Vietnam."
- Make a list of all your credit cards, their account numbers, and the addresses where you make purchases.
The government itself," Weinglass said, "treated these documents for what they are—a history." He said witnesses would testify that the Pentagon Papers were never sent to military officials running the Vietnam war, nor to the Central Intelligence Agency, nor to the State Department.
panies. Keep this with your records, not with the cards. You'll need it if you lose
- Your cards are as valuable as cash so treat them that way. Never leave them lying around. When destroying a card, even if it's expired, make sure you always cut it in half. You throw it away. If it still valid, notify the company to close your account.
WASHINGTON(AP)—Showing more harmony than they enjoyed in years, Democratic governors and senators Tuesday accused President Nixon of destroying his own revenue-sharing program and state and local budgets.
Democrats Attack Nixon On State, Local Budgets
The President has impounded more than **88 billion appropriated by Congress for assistance to the states for social programs.** The President uses contract authority—apheron 6 billion.
Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter disclosed his state was considering a Supreme Court challenge to Nixon's impoundment of funds intended for state and local projects.
Sen. Walter Mondale, D-Minn., testifying before the Senate Intergovernmental Relations subcommittee, suggested that Congress respond with a counter-impoundment of the money Nixon did want to spend.
Democrats were virtually unanimous in their objection to the los of federal grant money and to the quickness with which it is used in testimony before the subcommittee.
"if they won't obey the law for the farm programs," Mondale said, "then I think we ought to impound the money for the Defense Department."
-Only sign once for each charge transaction. Never sign a blank sales form, and if a slip is incorrect, have it destroyed before you sign another.
"What you've built up over forty years, you're expecting us to pick up in four months," said Kentucky Gov. Wendell Ford.
—Present your card only after the sale or service is completed. Watch the transaction carefully and examine the sales slip before you leave the store.
- MAKE CERTAIN the card you get back after a transaction is your own.
- Examine all monthly statements and check that they coincide with your sales slips. If there is a discrepancy, notify the credit company at once.
it difficult and will force rises in state taxes.
- Check periodically that your credit cards are still where they should be. Carry them so that they aren't exposed to view when you open your billfold.
Ford said Nixon "is shifting the federal deficit to states while increasing the costs of health care."
Ford said the President's argument that his budget sought to avoid a tax increase was "perhaps the most deceptive of the stated objectives of his proposed budget."
Owen Outlines Economic Plan
ABILENE, Kan.(AP)-LA. Gov. Dave Owen outlined Tuesday night a 12-point economic development program for Kansas in 1973.
Owen said his programs and goals covered basic concerns, "all tailored and designed to present a better life to all Kangas citizens."
"I want to generate more jobs for a singular reason: 135,000 more persons moved from Kansas than moved to Kansas during the past 10 years." Owen said.
"I will not be lulled to sleep, nor will I allow other Kanis to be, by claims of a low unemployment rate in Kansas and about all the jobs that have been created."
Owen's remarks were prepared for an appearance at the annual meeting of the Overseas Development Bank.
—Never leave your card at a store for repeated purchases and be careful to whom you entrust them. Make sure whoever uses them realizes their importance.
Owen said his program was geared to reverse the out-migration of Kansas people.
- Notify the issuing company at once if there is any change in your billing name or address. Renewal cards may inadvertently be sent to the wrong address if this is not done. Also, check with the company if the account has been within a reasonable amount of time.
Carry only the cards you need and eliminate those that duplicate benefits offered by other providers.
-Always notify the company im-
mediately when one of your cards is lost or
infected.
Plans Underway For Commencement
Plans for commencement are under way, according to Steve Clark, assistant director of the Alumni Association. Commencement is planned for May 20 and 21.
Postbaccalaureate degrees will be awarded May 20, and bachelor degrees, May 21. Both ceremonies are planned for 8 p.m. at Memorial Stadium but will be moved to Allen Field House in case of bad weather.
Seniors who complete their degrees by August 1973 may participate in community programs.
Information concerning commencement will be sent in early March to all seniors who indicated during enrollment that they would graduate in May or August, Clark will be sent to the persons they listed as their closest relatives, he said.
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Student organized ski trips, canoe trips, special interest tours, "Let's Travel Series," going-home flights, check-list of things to do before leaving the States, work abroad information, individual trip counseling, etc. Phone 864-3477 or visit us in the Union for more ideas of how, when and where to travel.
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Brochures published for students visiting:
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
Commissioners Support Plan
3
City Orientation Week Proposed
By CHUCK POTTER
Kansan Staff Writer
Kathy Allen, Topek junior and student body vice president, proposed Tuesday that the University of Kansas and the Lawrence community orientation week for KU students.
Alen made the proposal to student leaders and city officials at a luncheon at the Ramada Inn. She said that the orientation week could be aimed at acquaintances with students, and law students new to the city could be included in the program, Allen said.
City commissioners agreed that the idea was sound.
"It's just a matter of working it out," Commissioner Jack Rose said.
Dave Dillon, Hutchinson senior and student body president, opened the luncheon meeting by saying that the student vote would have an impact in the upcoming commission election, and that students should be aware of candidates' views.
Dillon then asked the commissioners questions about revenue sharing, the halfcent sales tax, the Neighborhood Tax Dollars, and pay parity for firemen and policemen.
Commissioner J. R. Pullam told Dillon that the commission had not decided how revenue sharing funds would be used, but that the money probably would be used for social programs and capital expenditures and to relieve the mill tax levy.
"How we spend the money the first few years is very important," Pullman said. "We're on the carpet now right so far as the federal government is concerned."
Dillon asked if revenue from the half-cent
sales tax had been applied to the police and tax departments as originally planned by
City Manager Burger Watson replied, "The city decided in 1970 that we would have a tax that would finance and expand the police and fire departments.
Commissioner Nancy Hamberton said the downtown improvement represented a major achievement.
"We feel we've followed the sales tax the wav it was sold, to the letter."
"People must see a change or there's an incentive to move away from downtown," she said. "It's part of the total picture of how you keep a town healthy."
"That application, for $500,000 in federal funds, was made 1925 ago." Rose said. "I think that's not a good idea."
Dillon then asked why there was a difference between the salaries of firemen and police officers.
"That's apples and oranges," Commissioner Chuck Fisher said.
Dillon asked if Neighborhood Development Program improvements to Massachusetts St. represented where the commission wished to spend the city's
Rose agreed: "The qualifications are different, the working hours are different and the schedules are different. There's no real reason why they should be the same."
Allen said that she had been reading in the library, but not creating a committee to create a citizen's advisory board. She said she was concerned that students had not been mentioned as possible.
"The University and the city should be reaching out to each other," she said.
Rose said that the proposed board would
Some Faculty Positions Lack Budget Foundation
"These appointments were made before hard line funding was provided," he said. "The people are physically visible, but budetearly invisible."
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Tuesday that an addition of faculty to some departments without a provision for funding salaries had created an "invisible budget."
Last week the University reported that it would lose about 21.2 more faculty positions than the 23.5 positions it will cut because of decreases in enrollment. The additional faculty cuts are a result of expected losses next year in federal aid.
Nichols said that some faculty appointments were made with a dependence on federal funds to provide salaries. He said he had appointed appointments created the invisible budget.
Ambrose Sarick, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said last week that under ordinary circumstances, the University could absorb the positions. Because of the expected federal money loss, he said, KU is preparing to reallocate the 21.2 positions were replacements for faculty members on leave and those working on research projects.
Nichols said Tuesday that some departments hired faculty to enrich the teaching experience.
"They now want to keep these people and understandably so," he said. "But then we will have to cut comparable positions in some other area."
Nichols said he hoped that the entire invisible budget could be absorbed and that an additional 10% would be needed.
Campus Briefs
Free Recital
Richard Reber, assistant professor of piano, will present a piano rectal at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Rectal Hall. He will play Bach's "Prelude and Fugue" in C Sharp Bass, the "Piano Sonata" in Brass, "Intermezzo" in O Major, and "Rhapsody," Op. 119 No. 4", and Gutschalk's "The Last Hope" and "Union", Admission is free.
Radio Club
The KU Amateur Radio Club will meet at 7 tonight in 118 Learned Hall to discuss public service activities of the club. All members in amateur radio are welcome to attend.
KU Dance Clubs
Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity, will have its formal initiation at 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the Law School Courtroom. There will be a presentation by Dr. Ian Imra in 2097 W. 6th st., followed by dinner speaker, Jack Potcuck, 1979 graduate of the KU School of Law and Summer County at-large will speak. The special guest will be John Port, Province IX President of Phi Delta Phi.
Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, and the KU Folk Dance Club will present an informa studio dance rectal at 7 p.m. (5:30-8:30 Gymnasium. There is no admission charge.
Fraternity Rites
still will have to be made, he said.
"The departments want to keep these people without any commitment concerning money," he said. "The deans must set up their priorities."
Faculty with tenure must have a year's notice before they are let go. Nichols said that this action probably was being taken already.
When Nichols came into office there was a deficit budget caused by this problem. He has said that he didn't want to burden his successor with it. To solve the problem, he, deans at KU must go back to using a sound budget process in hiring practices.
"I suspect that some staff members in our unit have been given notice for next year," he said.
Fisher said that the commission was attempting to establish a broad-based, continuing group, and that a problem would require students "moving on" in a few years.
be composed of 15 former commissioners and other citizens selected by the City
"It was mentioned that students should be represented," he said.
"How can you keep a continuing group like that?" Fisher asked.
Allen replied that students were not as tranient as they used to be, and that a student representative was a necessary means of improving communication.
Allen briefly discussed the possibility of a downtown busing system to be financed by the KU Student Senate and downtown merchants.
Mett of the commissioners said merchants would probably be reluctant to help finance the system because a downtown system had proved unprofitable in the past.
Alien told the commission that the campus reclamation center was planning a "Whomper week" in the near future in hopes of promoting volunteer action for the center. Alien told each of the commissioners a letter outlining the center's ideas for the week.
Politicking Denied To City Employes
Should city employees be allowed to participate in political campaigns?
The Lawrence City Commission answered that question with a qualified "no" answer.
The commissioners agreed that city employees should be allowed political activity in some elections but not in city commission elections.
The issue arose when Robert Haralick, commission candidate, and Alvin Samuelis, president of the Firefighter's Local 1596, appeared before commissioners to request that a section of the city's employee manual restricting political activities be changed.
City employees' participation in city elections could lead to the development of a spoils system, most of the commissioners said.
THE MANUAL states that city employees should not publicly support or endorse any candidate.
Commissioner Nancy Harbleton agreed that the manual was somewhat outdated and could be replaced.
Haralick and Samuels also objected to a statement in the manual that prevents a city employee from talking to a city commissioner expressed approval of the city manager.
Mayor John Emick said the rule was intended to place disciplinary powers over city employees in the hands of the city manager as required by state law.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli Premier Golda Meir combined rest with work Tuesday before a round of meetings with U.S. government officials.
Meir arrived Monday afternoon. Embassy sources said she had arranged her schedule for the day of rest and conferences with her aides.
Haraldik replied that city employees should be able to talk to commissioners about matters unrelated to their jobs, such as sidewalks, annexation and zoning.
THE COMMISSIONmitted unanimously to authorize City Manager Buford Watson Jr. to prepare revisions for the manual to allow city employees to participate in non-city elections and to approach commissioners about matters unrelated to their jobs.
In other business, the commission authorized an increase in city cemetery rates to $50 for adult burials, $120 for child burials, and $35 for child burials and for cremations.
D--D & Tire, 1000 Vermont St., for passenger tires.
The commission also awarded bids for several items to:
-Gregg Tire Co., 814 W. 23rd St., for tires and tubes.
- Burpum Equipment Co., Independence,
Mo., for a new street sweeper.
-Arnoc Oil Co. Bulk Plant, 846 Penns-
vania St., for gasoline
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"Widuct? Vintol a chicken?" — Groucho Marx
"No shoes on the gym floor." — Knute Rocke
"Even he who is pure in heart and says his prayers by night can become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the autumn moon is bright!" – Wolfman
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"Stay the you are and you'll go far." — A Friend
-John Wayne
"Stay the way you are and you'll go far." – A Friend
"I love you. I love you. I love you." – Tiny Tim
"I love you. I love you. I love you. xoxooxo" -- tiny time
"This whole area is radioactive." -- Buck Rogers
"The police are not there to prevent disorder . . . they are there to maintain disorder." —Mayor R Daley
"And this little piggy said: Wee, wee, wee, wee all the way home"
— Everyone's mother
"And you must be Dopey."
—Snow White
"2791yb ichdi-odni fo tuo eb ll'eW"
—noxin thediserP
"Let your school!"
—The Beach Boys
4
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN comment
Editorials, columns and letters published on this page reflect only the opinions of the writers.
Town-Gown Politics
Upon entering the University of Kansas students are told that they form an integral segment of the Lawrence community. Students are told that in Lawrence no "toowing all" this so as to rationalize the exploitation that occurs by some sectors of the business community.
Last week the City Commission said that a commission advisory committee should be established to help make important decisions. No mention was made of a student committee, which is dishearning for it reflects the attitude we have been told is nonexistent.
Students should be involved in a commission advisory group. Perhaps the greatest reason is that students have an opportunity to guide the city in a new direction through their votes. This is the first year that students may vote in city elections.
It is no secret that many "city establishment" types are very concerned that the same effect on a fall will be repeated this spring.
There will be 14 candidates vying for the student vote in the city primary election March 6. The six survivors of the primary will seek the student vote in the general election. Who makes it through the primary could very well be determined by the "gowns."
Students continually make attempts to come closer to city activities and the Lawrence community in a positive manner. These attempts should be hailed. The KU Interfraternity Council has joined the Chamber of Commerce in order to increase student participation in the business community. The Student Senate has spent some funds
wisely for the development of services such as the Consumer Protection Association, the Chapman and Volunteer Clearing House.
What attempts can we list by members of the city's official body to draw students closer to the community? Few, if any.
Students are no longer as transient as they once were. Many more students are staying in Lawrence beyond four years. A large population of graduate students, most of whom are married, bring their families to live in this town. All this supports the statement made in a paper on the economic impact of the University on Lawrence. The University is the primary financial resource of this city.
Let us not listen to the idle promises of the candidates, for we know too well that many will be made. Let us express our discontent with city officials, two of whom are up for re-election to the commission, who have not included students on their advisory committee. Let us understand the reasons officials toward students and then vote for those who have demonstrated a true concern for the University community.
Students gave Douglas County new faces on the county commission last fall. Students changed the personnel in the courthouse. Students can and must elect city commissioners who will represent the University community as well as the business community.
The primary is March 6 and the general election is April 3. If you are registered, vote and help bring about constructive change in city government that will benefit all segments of Lawrence, "town and gown."
—R.E. Duncan
WASHINGTON—In the constant campaign to separate the customer from his cash, small businesses pigs to find out how to whet their appetites and, through the children, to influence the buying process.
Millions are spent on motivational research to stimulate youngsters, so they will pester their parents into buying advertised brands. A typical research group, describing its
Ads Aimed at Children Attacked
sophisticated operations, boasts:
sophisticated operations, boasts:
" our new offices have four
laboratories, laboratories, rooms with one-way
mirrors for observing children,
video tape and recording
images at the museum, an
immersion viewing room, etc."
One outfit even uses moisture detectors, placed in contact with the children's hands, to measure infectious responses to advertising.
Jack Anderson
Explains another research group, which claims to have special insight on how to aim advertising at children:
"Remember if it is a multichild family with a child in preschool, there is an awesomely greater chance that there would be in a family where there is a six-year-old just starting school."
Consumer advocate Robert Choate is asking the Federal Trade Commission of investigate the child-manipulation techniques as an unfair business practice. The Federal Communications Commission to investigate the possibility that the commercials, in their very preparation, violate the fairness doctrine, since few parents understand the aids aimed at their children.
"The average child," Chatee tells us, "sees about 25,000 commercials a year and so spends four hours a week watching commercials, but this four hours is much more sophisticated and intrusive upon a child's mind than we had ever guessed."
Incident in Havana
The bizarre story can now be told of what happened in Havana after Pat Gary, the bullet-headed boss of the FBI, ordered his agents to shoot out the tires of a skyjacked Southern Airways plane. The authorities attempt to keep it from taking off from Orlando, Fla.
The details were gathered by Rep. John Murphy, D-N.Y., as part of his research on skivelling legislation.
The story revealed that FBI sharpshooters punctured all the trespass on the mose wheel. They shot it into the hole of a shot copilot Billy Harloyd Johnson and held a grenade at the head of chief pilot William R.
Despite the flat tires, Haas was迫于 attempt to take an靴. On "act of God," he told murphy, provided an airpocket that lifted the crippled car into the air just as the runway ran out.
In Havana, Cuba's mercurial dictator Fidel Castro heard the news and hurried down to the bridge where he was under the control tower. He ringed the area with combat troops, 27 ambulances and seven firetrucks. Thousands of Cubans also gathered to watch the drama
Hass miraculously brought the huge jet to a shuddering halt at the end of a long slide. "I though we would wind up in a fire ball at the fire pit," he said. The skypackers, meanwhile, piled out of the plane and raced in opposite directions for the nearby woods. They left behind $2 million in money, which they had handed out to the patrons with abandon.
The air pirates didn't get far before they were collared by Fidel's finest. At first, they wore white gloves and with hand grooming. Castro himself was close enough to the action to have been killed or injured. They were subdued, the compartment of cheering Cubans.
Then the jubilant Castro grabbed the chief pilot, hugged him, and lifted him into the air.
Shield Laws and the Constitution
EUGENE, Ore.-Everywhere a newspaperman goes these days, he falls into shop talk on "shield laws." This was the main topic of discussion at this month's annual meeting of publishers, held in cooperation with the University of Oregon's school of journalism. In Washington, both House and Senate are conducting hearings on the problem. Dr. Frank CBS, is issuing manifestos.
hurrying away at bills to protect the newsman. I wish they'd stop t, and leave us alone.
The problem, to restate it
One mistake we often make in our business is to suppose that few persons care much about the newspaper business. We cover the affairs of everyone else far better than we cover our own. On law, we may have laws, however, we may have hollowed too much. Not only the houses of Congress, but a score of State legislatures as well, are
---
print, but this is perhaps the most important two or three per cent. When a newspaper undertakes to expose corruption or insecurity, it often tells the people what they have a right to know of crime in their
briefly, stems from the necessity (as we see it) of a reporter's being able to predict his sources. We use three per cent of the news we three per cent of the news we
James J. Kilpatrick
--communities, the newsman usually is working from sources that have to be kept in confidence.
Until a few years ago, this was seldom a problem. Then the picture changed. Law enforcement to cope with black
revolutionaries, student disruptions, antiwar conspiracies, the drug culture, and new ventures in organized crime. Newsmen often developed experiences in area areas. Prosecutors wanted testimony. The newsmen balked. Along came the Nixon administration, understandably hostile to the press, and now subpoenas, like rainbowes, keep falling on our heads. CBS and CNN broadcasts, so spenons in the first 2½ years of the Nixon administration.
Thus has arisen the clamor for a federal shield law, intended to provide "absolute" or qualified "protection" for those at risk. Two dozen sublugs are being discussed in the House and Senate now.
All these bills, in my own view, should be quietly shelved. We ought to rely solely upon the Constitution, and upon its reasonable interpretation by the Supreme Court, in order to prove that courts, including the Supreme Court, have failed in the past to understand our problem, but judges are not immune to education. The high court's disappointing decision last June was a 64 decision, with Justice Sotterloff having issued the ordinance of the majority's view. This was not the last word.
struggled in vain to define the newsmen and the media subject to protection. their purpose, to borrow from a bill by Sen. Lowell Weicker (R-Con.,) is to grant exemption only to "a legitimate member of the professional news media in order to declare a particular reporter 'legitimate' is the power to declare another reporter 'illegitimate.' And while congressmen regularly make these unkind determinations in casual speech, it is a different matter to define legitimacy and the right to be on the effort smacks of licensing, a folly supposedly behind us two centuries ago.
If a shield law is to pass muster under the First Amendment, it cannot exclude any reporter or any kind of "press." A sympathetic Congress might be agreeable to protecting, say, Jeremiah O'Leary, Latin author and expert for the Washington star-News, but one doubts that Congress truly would want to shield Timothy Leary, Algerian correspondent for the Berkeley Bar.
We will be better off, in the long haul, if we fight each case on its merits, as it comes along. A defective statute, no matter how well intended, is paper protection. For an enduring shield and buckler, we must look to the Constitution itself.
Readers Respond
crying "Magnifico, magnifico!" Haas was driven to a Havana hotel in Castro's private jeep by Army aides. Asked what would happen to the skijagers, an aide said: "We don't need bandits in army custody. These two will put into a 48-hour prison cell for life."
The pending bills, as I see them, are fatally defective. Drafters of the bills have
Editorials Draw Fire
attorney general. If you don't like the enforcement of your laws, Mr. Riel, then I suggest that you change them, and that you refrain from chastising a man for his role in the lives of people of Kangan's pay him to do.
perts, including ordained minister Richard L. Fullerton of nearsey NY, who nearly made the funding has made the funding of old people's homes so complicated and expensive that cuts are made in construction, including a $28 million
Witnesses will blame the Baptist towers fire in Atlanta partly on FHA officials who winked at their own regulations and permitted construction under fire protection equipment.
It will be alleged, for example, that the door knobs in Baptist Towers were small metal knobs difficult for the elderly to turn and not the levers recommended for nursing homes. The fire alarm was also so inadequate, it will be testified, that one resident
who barely escaped with her life told rescuers she thought the warning system siren was an alarm clock.
This will be charged at
hearings, which Sen. Harrison
Williams, D-N.J., has scheduled
for this month to begin a
bone construction. Housing ex-
Atlanta Tragedy
a tragic Atlanta apartments - for the - elderly fire, which cost the lives of 10 residents last fall, could have been avoided by a simple smoke detection device costing about $8 per apartment.
The FHA manual on property standards requires that buildings such as Baptist Towers "of eight or more stories having more than two stories built equipped with an automatic fire detection system." The requirement, however, was waived for the Atlanta construction. Excavators later: "We didn't have enough money for everything."
(C) 1973 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Tom Merkel
Topeka Junior
The devices, which could have saved the lives of the Atlanta victims, would have cost the companies total of $13,000 it will be charged.
State of the Union Declines; Students Aren't Far Behind
Copyright, 1973 by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.
At this interval, this morning for instance, the progress and direction of many of the facets of reported be fairly to the public.
By KEVIN SHAFER Features Editor
" NEVER MIND THE PURSE ----GIMME YOUR STEAK AND HAMBURGER/ "
At certain times throughout the semester, many students might think that they would like to know just "what's happening" at the University of Kansas. Certain students may also want someone else to know about the frequency of functions of many parts of this University.
JUSTICE
I come before you this morning to report the condition of one of these facets in my annual State of the Union address.
Lawrence (Bopper) Deyton Lawrence Senior
The Kansas Union, as you know, is a facility for students to enjoy during the holidays or to meet you at that very moment this same facility is becoming a place in which students may goof off or simply run.
Way down in the subsubasbement level (where the Pershing Rifles become subsubmarines), students have found a bowling alley. Here male students watch female bowling students and female students may watch male bowling students.
becoming more human. Men,
start thinking and feeling,
instead of being Robert Duncan
robots.
Luckily the infection transforming the Union into a “place to goof off” has not penetrated the skin, and is the most serious level of the Union.
In the basement, or SB, the Union Bookstore has become a haven for wandering students. The security lockers in front of the library are also able to repel the student goof off. Their method is simple.
The hungry students' services,
or the vending machines by the
Hawk's Nest, as they are coming
to school. Infection Goof-Off. Of the
available machines in the area,
two require correct change only,
one has nothing in it and one
has completely out of order.
But in this case that I have administered as a student, I am proud to tell you now that the bathroom in this section of the Union has accumulated some of the best graffiti on campus. Students are reminded, circulation is up over 80 per cent from last year.
A recent survey, done on an ordinary Sunday night, revealed that out of the 110 lockers
In B, or the basement level of the Union, is the world's "thickest noted" bulletin board. More messages, advertisements, named posts and even letters are posted anywhere where else on this campus.
Robot Thinking To the Editor
available for use by the students using the bookstore, 48 or 43.6 per cent were locked or out of order.
Some of the most noted sections of the board include the ad for someone trying to sell an item on a discounted buying discount rent to any female who will be his roommate and a photographically-present power of a lost cat who an attached man says the cat has been eaten.
During my term as a student, a color television set was provided in the classroom to happy to report to you that the popularity of the television has become so great that many, and our students have been added to the room.
lounging chairs and daydream or sleep.
On Floor 1, the goof off madness has reached dangerous proportions. Here students stand around looking at the travel board searching for a name anywhere in the United States that they recognize. Lines have formed at the check cashing line, and lines for nine hours prettening they are trying to cash a check. Some students have even acquired the notion that they can sit in the
We will, I am sure, figure out some way during this term for someone to be able to see the screen on the television.
I thank the commission, the Women's Coalition, the February Sisters and all women's groups for helping start us on the road to
So the next time that you, my fellow students, are in this state of our University, you will be on watch for this enemy of our institution. Be aware of students goofing off.
I am afraid to admit that R.E. (Robert) is an all-tootypical male. However, it encourages me to think that in his fear of the women's movement he moved against it at least thinking. He can see a good thing in the women's movement and says, "Why can't I enjoy that too?" Unfortunately he has taken out his anger by blaming it on her and by lashing out at the Commission on the Status of Women.
After all, it is our Union and they can love it or leave it.
Robert Duncan, you can become aware of yourself, how you react to others, and this sexist society. You can enjoy the same togetherness with men that women are sharing with them when happening right here in River City.
I am sorry that Duncan chose the Commission on the Status of Women as his whipping "boy." Perhaps he should look to himself, to his society and to other answers for his anger and fear.
Thank you, my fellow students.
Men are becoming aware,
"raising their consciousness"
and meeting with other men,
talking about and sharing many of the absurdities suggested in Duncan's Feb. 23 editorial.
Doing His Job
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
An All-American
college newspaper
Miller must support all the statutes of this state. I would say that he is doing just that. This "Big Drought," as Riel puts it, was brought on by Kansans themselves, and not by their
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--UN-4 1810
Business Office--UN-4 4358
Published at the University of
Kansas at Kansas City, and in
year exact holidays and examination
periods. Mail submission rates: $5
per mail, for fees charged by the
paid address at Lawrence, KA 60044.
Accommodations, goods, services and
students without regard to color,
race, gender or ability are not
pressed are not necessarily those of
the University of Kansas or the State
We don't see Carry Nation reborn, but to come to the head of our "Carry Nation" laws. I for some reason didn't know that drink and bingo completely legalized within this state. It's not the attorney general who should decide which alcohol is enforced and which should not.
To the Editor:
In the Kansas of Feb. 22,() again read an editorial criticizing the actions of Atty. Gen. Vern Miller. Steve Riel compared Miller to the ax-wielding Carry officer in a movie, and seemed to think that the attorney general's "elastic arm" was again reaching into places where it did not belong. First Miller confiscated liquor from an Amtrak train, then he raided bingo halls and now he is taking it to himself himself to remove liquor from the skies over Kansas.
1 1
NEWS STAFF
News Advisor Susanne Shaw
Editor Joyce Neerman
Associate Editor Silly Carlson
NEWS STAFF
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Adviser Mel Adams
Business Manager Carol Dirks
Ant. Bus. Mgr. Chuck Goodwin
Griff and the Unicorn
I am not a musician. I just like to play music.
SPANG!
WHAT A TIME TO GET A CRAMP
SEKLEFF
SPANG!
©1973 Universal Press Syndicate
By Sokoloff
WHAT A
TIME TO
GET A
CRAMP
Sekeleff
Wednesday, February 28.1973
5
are out for see the
u, my state be on our students
n and t.
uiversity of
academic
institution
n.a.
and class
n.a. 66044.
pieces and
tacks
color,
orange,
chose of
the State
Shaw
Neerman
Carlson
Adams
Sol Dirks
Goodsell
off
FF
Rodney Stuart, LHS Junior Becomes City Commissioner
By ERIC MEYER
Kenneth Staff Writer
The newest member of the Lawrence City Commission is still in high school.
The new student commissioner, Rodney Stuart, junior at Lawrence High School, is one of several high school students chosen to serve as representatives to Lawrence governing bodies.
Stuart says he views himself both as a representation of young people and as a leader for others.
There are youth representatives for every organization from the Local Housing Authority to the Douglas County Commission.
"I attend all of the meetings," he said,
"Learning and observing and being asked opinions. I even sit up at the desk with the other missioners. Of course, I can't interact."
He said his position of the commission was somewhere between that of a full-time commissioner and that of an average commissioner. He said the commission meeting to complain about something.
Stuart says he does not believe he is the commission's "token youth."
"They go along with this program." he
ROD STUART
Rodney Stuart
said, "not just primarily to get an input from young people but to give us an option" (Nicolai 2013).
Being part of the commission has not changed Stuart's opinion of it.
"I was lucky in getting on the city commission. It deals with some really interesting things like the school board. But I feel sorry for the guys that got the Local Housing Authority and the county commission."
"I attended my first meeting last Tuesday (6)," he said, "and it was pretty much what it is."
Stuart describes himself as a "conservative radical" politically. At Lawrence High School, he participates in debate and is junior-class treasurer. He and his mother, Mary Stuart, 2010 Clara Road, have lived in Lawrence for 14 years.
Stuart said he would like to run for mayor some day. He plans to major in sociology and law at the University of Kansas after he graduates from Lawrence High School. He says he hopes eventually to set up his own private law practice.
Stuart was selected to serve on the commission by a committee composed of the Student Council, the junior class, and the principal of Lawrence High School.
A new plan of operation for the campus bus system and a major proposal for major revisions in the allocations system of the Student Activity Fee fund are slated for discussion when the Student Senate meets (July 16-17). The meeting is scheduled for 7:30.
To be considered for the appointment, he had to obtain 15 student endorsements and a recommendation.
The Senate Transportation Committee will present a report on the bus system and on the results of a survey conducted during the past week to determine student reaction to proposed plan for bus operations next year.
Senate to Hear New Bus Plan
The committee has proposed the institution of a pass system which would allow a student to have unlimited use of the bus system for a $1$ a semester fee. Under the new plan single fares without the pass would be raised to 25 cents.
The survey was devised by students from the School of Business. It was conducted by teachers.
The appropriations bill is sponsored by Gus Dilzergea, Lawrence graduate student, and Robert B. Hare, a distinguished scholar.
KU Law Students Aid Inmates With Problems
As an example of the effect the proposed bill would have, the Athletic Department would be eligible to receive from student funds a maximum of the activity fee paid by only those students who participate in the athletic department, such as those who purchase tickets.
individual group allocations, a requirement for student government of all organizations receiving funds and a requirement that the school be in compliance with all students without additional cost.
Since 1965, law students at the University of Kansas have provided legal services to more than 1,000 prisoners in Lansing State Prison and Leavenworth Penitentiary. They have done so in a pioneer program called Kansas Defender.
Meyer said about 15 second and third year
students participated in the two sessions.
He said, "It was a very enjoyable
The program, which is the first modern post-conviction program in clinical corrections in the United States, was begun by Paul Wilson, professor of law at KU.
The program works with both state and federal prisoners, Meyer said, but its procedures vary. The clinical program has formed a corporation, Legal Service to Prisoners, Inc., and has hired a full-time and a part-time lawyer to handle state cases. Meyer said law students could not give legal advice.
When a prisoner thinks there are irregularities in his conviction or sentencing, he can apply to the clinic. He is frequently asked by students who travels to the prison to interview inmates.
2 Groups Apply For Fee Funding
Only two organizations have filed requests for Activity Fee funding for next year. The deadline for budget requests is 5 p.m. Friday.
To qualify for aid from the program, the inmate must not have a lawyer or be able to arise one at a time. You can determine whether he is eligible for aid and to discover whether he has a legitimate complaint. He then petitions the court to appoint a lawyer and help him draw
Roger Martin, Shawnee Mission third-year law student and senate treasurer, said Tuesday that only the German Club and the estate had filed budget requests for next year.
In addition, after the Athletic Department accepted funding from the Activity Fee, governance of that department would be assumed by students, and all departmental activities, such as athletic contests, would be free of charge to all students.
Gary Taylar, Lawrence third year law student who helps run the program, said the program helped inmates attack sentencing officers in a case and improved handling of their cases.
Taylor said that there was usually a backlog of over 50 cases and that sometimes inmates had to wait more than four months before they could be interviewed.
Martin said that requests submitted after the deadline would not be considered during the review process.
The program aids about 200 inmates each year, he said.
CONCERNED
Dizreza's bill will come to the senate floor only if it is released by the Finance and Auditing Committee, which will meet at 6:30 tonight.
about WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN NEXT YEAR?
MAKE IT HAPPEN. Be on the SUA Board
Two other bills are requests to the chancellor and the Board of Regents. One contains a request that spouses and their spouses may attend a treatment by University Health Service.
The second requests that plaques noting the financial contributions of students toward construction be placed in Wesco Hall and the new Student Health Center.
Applications NOW in the SUA Office.
One other bill requests that the present bus fares charged for the downtown route and the Malls Shopping Center route be equalized, either by raising the Malls route to 25 cents or by lowering the downtown route to 10 cents.
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New Programing Plus
All KU Sports Action
STEREO
1973
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SUA and the Anthropology Department
"BEHIND & BEYOND THE TEWA WORLD: NATIVE AMERICAN VISIONS OF LIFE"
present
Alfonso Ortiz
Alfonso Ortiz, professor of anthropology at Princeton has published and lectured extensively concerning the Indian anthropologist's perspective on anthropology and the American Indian in society.
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Monday·Vonnegut's "Happy Birthday, Wanda June" Tuesday·Robert Moog and the Moog
1973
Festival of the Arts
---
festival of the arts
April 2-7
Festival coupons available at the SUA office for 6.00
Tickets available March 5-9 to coupon purchasers only, beginning 8:30 a.m. Monday Kansas Union. KU-ID required
eeris Thursday· drama critic John Lahr Friday· Eleo Pomare black ballet troupe
Casuals for Spring
SHOE
synthesizer Wednesday· David Steinberg· Jimmie Sph
Bass Saddles and Treks by Clark's of England head the collection of foot fare this spring. Take your pick soon.
Arensberg's = Shoes
819 Mass. 843.3470 Where Styles Happen
6
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kansas School Bill . . .
(Continued from page 1)
ding the program without any tax increases.
Sen. Joseph Harder, R-Moundridge and chairman of the Senate Education committee, said the bill would not only tend to increase the financial burden for Kansas students, but would also provide "meaningful property tax relief" amounting to $144,9 million statewide if he were re-elected.
total property tax bill would be reduced by $10x million, or a reduction equivalent to
Even if no school district enacts the optional income tax, Harder said, the state's
Senate Democrats charged, however, that the bill would require an 111 per cent increase in state expenditures for primary and secondary education this year.
Steiniger said school budget increases allowed under the bill would escalate the cost of school finance by $15 million in 1975 and by another $90 million by 1979.
The main beneficiaries of the property tax reductions provided by the government are the large corporations and utilities "who would save at least $9 million in property taxes" the first tax increase since 1994.
The final version of an Affirmative Action Plan for the University of Kansas is now in effect although its contents haven't been made public, according to Shirley Gilham, the director of the Affirmative Action. The plan calls for equal hiring practices for women and minority groups.
The Office of Affirmative Action will be responsible for the operation of all affirmative action programs and its director will be appointed by the chancellor.
By LINDA DOHERTY Kansan Staff Writer
The completed document contains a section about the administration of the University's affirmative action program that the revised versions did not have.
Canceller Raymond Nichols said Tuesday that he had not appointed a per-
The plan is a broad document, Gilham
because it contains two kinds of
statements.
Final Draft of Action Plan In Effect but Unannounced
"My intention is to do it soon," he said. According to the document, equal opportunity statements will be included in all publicity and correspondence to encourage applications by women and members of minority groups for available positions.
Another guideline states that whenever two or more candidates for a position are equally qualified, an attempt will be made to ensure that the goals of affirmative action (further the goals of affirmative action).
Other guidelines specify provisions for equal retirement plans for both men and women and the employment of minority and women advisers for students. Statements concerning promotion, tenure and student admission policies are included in the plan.
"The executive order upon which the Affirmative Action Plan is based called for an end to discrimination and inclusion of all students not mentioned before." Gilham said.
Prohibitive statements in the plan, those specifying things that shall not be done, are usually omitted.
"Then there are prescriptive statements that call for action and apply to groups
$16 million to $20 million in fiscal 1974 and about $92 million in fiscal 1975.
Steineger said that if the school finance plan and other programs recommended by Republican caucuses of the legislature were approved, the state would go into debt some
The Affirmative Action board began
festelling the last March and
completed it.
mentioned specifically in the plan," Gilham said. "Everybody should benefit from it."
The Board submitted the proposed plan for review to the Senate Executive Committee, the Council of Deans, director of divisions and other groups. It was then returned to the Affirmative Action Board for further changes.
A revised proposal was studied by the Alternative Action Conference Committee last year.
However, Bennett retorted that the state has "more than adequate funds from revenue-sharing measures and projected to fund this measure without any tax increase whatever."
Funds Available For Study, Work In Administration
Beginning in June, fellows will serve a 10-week internship with a department of the state government in Alabama, Kentucky or Florida, or with a federal agency in the South.
An opportunity for a fellowship is being offered students interested in a career in public administration on the national, state or local government level.
The deadline for submitting applications is March 1. For information and applications, students should write to Coleman University in Southern Regional Training Program in Public Administration, Drawer I, University of Alabama, 35486.
Each fellowship for single fellows has a total value of $4,600, and a fellowship for married fellows offers a total value of $5,000. The stipend for a single fellow is $3,300 and for a married fellow $3,700, with the remainder of the grant consisting of the remission of fees and tuition at the cooperating universities.
Candidates for the fellowship must be American citizens who will have completed the program.
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Wednesday, February 28,1973
7
Candidates' Pact . . .
(Continued from page 1)
didates in elections and, therefore, could not be considered, a political party.
Lemessan compared the issue to Miller's candidacy.
"MILLER IS RUNNING, but he won't be合格 to serve if he's elected, because he hasn't lived here long enough. he said." He was not asking for an election, but you don't do things that way."
Team-candidate Pence, 413 E. 145th St.
said his group's campaign, organized
candidates.
"It's just like a union backing a candidate," he said. "Or look at (Lawrence Mayor John) Emrick. He supported by some sort of fund-raising organization, at least that's what it says at the bottom of his newspaper ads. Is this considered against
City Commissioner J. R. Pulliam, a
election-electre refused to con-
compose on the con-
"I do not think this issue should be put before the public like some opinion poll," he said. "This issue rightfully belongs in the court. I am aware of the law, but I am also not a court, so I can say whether they are right or wrong."
TWO OTHER candidates offered a dif-ferent view.
"They may be within the letter of the law," Mory Miller said. "They don't have to follow the intent of the law, but that means the voters have to approve their actions."
Gale Finegau, 148 Minnesota St., said, "If it's illegal, they should stop. If it's just some loophole they're using, it's up to the people to decide."
candidate Tola M. Ross said the attacks on Miller Pierce and Elder may be due to an infection.
"The commissioners must be pretty afraid of those men," she said. "They're afraid maybe they'll lose their jobs to them."
JAMES W. DRURY, director of the Legislative Research Department of the Kansas Legislature, said the controversy stemming from differing uses of the word courtship.
"The group we're talking about is neither Republican nor Democratic, together to a group of candidates affiliated to run as a team.
"In Wichita they had parties—I hate to use that word, because they weren't allowed by the state of candidates for several years," he said. "In mayor-council cities candidates can be listed as Republicans or Democrats in the ballot." He manager form as in Lawrence, they can't."
"The CITY manager concept is based on a nonpartisan commission, meaning nonRepublican and nonDemocratic. The law requires nonpartisan elections in these cities, but that doesn't prevent candidates from running together as a group," he said.
"I would not expect there to be any ballot designation of these candidates as being supported by the group. That, to my understanding, would make it illegal."
D. E. Mathia, Douglas County clerk and
Motion to End Pearson Credit Solidly Fails
A motion to cancel permanent approval of six hours of credit for four courses in the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program, or two hours of credit for College Assembly earlier in the semester.
If the attempt to cancel the previous vote had passed, the course credit would have been reduced.
During the last three years, some freshmen and sophomores have been allowed to substitute the four six-hour courses in the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program for requirements in Western Civilization, speech, humanities and English.
Robert Fraiw, professor of physics and astronomy, introduced the attempt to rescind the vote. He said he introduced his measure to allow a vote to include a ballot on a mail ballot which will be mailed to all members of the assembly later this week.
The motion not affected by the mail ballot stated that persons participating in the program would continue to be selected by the Board, and they have been during the last three years.
The only recommendation in the program that was not affected by the mail ballot was tabled early in the meeting to allow Friauf to introduce his motion.
On Feb. 2 a mail ballot was authorized for a second motion stating that the Pearson program would not satisfy any of the requirement requirements for the College Board's tests, especially English, speech, humanities and Western civilization requirements.
ers
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Lawrence City Attorney Milton Allen said he considered the Support Your Local Police committee to be a political party and, therefore, not in violation. He said the office would probably have to issue an opinion on the legality of the campaign.
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8
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
22
Kansas Photo
MU's Jerman (32) Confronts KU Freshman Nino Samuel.
The muscular forward ended with only 2 points . . .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress moved Tuesday to involve itself in the running power struggle between the titans of the nation's amateur sports—the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the American Athletic Union.
The House Special Education Committee announced the beginning of hearings next Monday into the jurisdictional dispute between the NCAA and AU which many are accusing of a series of basketball games between the United States and Russia this spring.
Congress Set To Arbitrate Sports Feud
The AAU has billed the series as a chance at revenge for the Americans' controversial last second, 51-50, loss in the Olympic final at Munich last summer.
The NCAA move officially stripped the series of such possible participants as Olympians Tom McMillen of Maryland, Tina Blanding of Hawaii and Henderson of Hawaii and Tom Burleson of N.C. State, plus such other undergraduates as UCLA's Bill Walton and Kilkees, of whom declined to play in the NCAA. The NCAA moved to the C. State and Campy Russell of Michigan.
The NCAA announced last week that college coaches and undergraduates under its jurisdiction would not be permitted to participate in the AAU-sponsored games with the Soviet Olympic basketball team and the Japanese federation between the two amateur federations.
MU Rally Crushes'Hawks
Committee chairman James G. O'Rara, D-Mich., said, in making the announcement of the hearings, he was disturbed that the dispute threatened the series of games.
By TIM WINTERS
"These games could do much to channel at least some of the competition between the world's super powers—the USA and the UK, for example, in a positively peaceful arena of sports," he said.
The NCAA said it acted because the AAU did not contact the NCAA before making a Feb. 13 announcement of a seven-city U.S. tour by the Russians starting April 28.
No one can accuse the University of Kansas Javahaws of bein's greedy.
Tuesday night in Allen Field House, the Jayhawks again dominated the first half but gave the game away in the second half to the Missouri Tucars to lose 79-63.
Jayhawk Coach Ted Owens said that the squad simply did nothing on offense in the second half and gave the Tigers a chance to pull even.
"We lost our pose." Owens said. "We were taking it back on defense and offence, but we didn't have it."
Playing before a noisy crowd of 12,300, the Jayhawks quickly took a first-half lead on a layup by Kovivi and did not stop until they found within two points the remainder of the half.
"Losing an 18-point lead and letting it go to 18-points hurt our playing more than anything else. We were dribbling too much and not passing enough on offense."
But in the second half it was a different story. The 'Hawks appeared to be tired and Missouri began to score on easy layups. The Hawks scored twice, compared with five in the first half.
"We were hustling as good as any time during the season the first half," Owen's coach said.
Missouri's John Brown and Al Eberhard came alive in the second half, scoring 17 and 16 points respectively. Brown finished with 24 points, the game, Eberhard ended with 24 points.
At one point the Jayhawks stretched their lead to 18 points, 34-16. Rick Suttle and Kivisto provided the scoring punch for KU in the first half as Suttle popped in 14 points after doubled it 10 more. During one score spree, Jayhawks scored 12 unanswered points.
Owens said that the squad put up too many poor shocks in the second half after the first.
"They were more aggressive and outrebounded us in the second ball." Owens said. "We needed to find some offensive shots, but we just couldn't get the shots to drop."
"We needed to establish control in the second half," Owens said, "but we just lost one."
The Jayhawks also got into foul trouble early in the second half. Knight was called for his third foul with less than eight shots against the host team out of the outest of the half. Missouri was put in
BANANA(S)
Samuel FG FT R F R Pts.
Suttee 15 14 1 1 1 21
10-22 12 13 1 1 21
Greedies 4.7 1.1 10 7 0
Greenies 4.7 1.1 10 7 0
Haase 1.6 0.0 1 1 2
Haase 1.6 0.0 1 1 2
Pidelide 1.3 0.0 1 1 2
Pidelide 1.3 0.0 1 1 2
Smith 2.0 0.1 0 2 0
Smith 2.0 0.1 0 2 0
Tayner 0.3 0.1 0 2 0
Tayner 0.3 0.1 0 2 0
**28** **27** **26** **25** **24** **23** **22** **21** **20** **19** **18** **17** **16** **15** **14** **13** **12** **11** **10** **9** **8** **7** **6** **5** **4** **3** **2** **1** **0**
MISSUCHI (79)
| | PG | FT | R | R | Ft. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gunther 18 | 45 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 10 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
MISSUCHI (79)
| | PG | FT | R | R | Ft. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gunther 18 | 45 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 10 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
MISSUCHI (79)
| | PG | FT | R | R | Ft. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gunther 18 | 45 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 10 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
MISSUCHI (79)
| | PG | FT | R | R | Ft. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gunther 18 | 45 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 10 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
MISSUCHI (79)
| | PG | FT | R | R | Ft. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gunther 18 | 45 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 10 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Eberhard 22 | 38 | 10 | 36 | 15 | 7 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Salmon 19 | 3.9 | 2.3 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Blind 18 | 3.1 | 1.1 | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 3.4 | 1.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Ring 17 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Alten 19 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
MISSOURI 26 53-78
KANSAS 26 71-48
Officiates: Iv. Brown, Gerald Meredith and Roy Clymer.
Attendance: 12,300 (17,200 sold).
the one-and-one situation with 13 minutes remaining in the half.
KU again received fine performances from its guards. Kivisto totaled 19 points for the game and Greenlee added nine. Suttle was high for the 'Hawks with 21 points.
The Jayhawks had 48.7 per cent from the tield in the first half but ended the contest with an eight-over eleven victory.
47. 1 per cent from the field, after shooting at a 29.7 per cent in the first half.
KU has lost three straight conference games. The Jayhawks now stand 4-7 in the conference and have three games remaining.
Saturday the Jayhawks battle the Oklahoma Sooners at Norman. The Sooner
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The Paulist is a man on the move. His mission is to people, particularly the people of North America. The issues and problems we face today—injustice, poverty, peace, war—must be the concern of the Church.
If you think the Seminary is a place of study and meditation,
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We were founded with the belief that each man has a place. Each man has a job. Sometimes, many jobs. And each contributes his own unique talents and is given the freedom and the support he needs to achieve his goals.
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As a Paulist you became involved from the start.
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415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019
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Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
9
KU Swimmers Favorites for Title
By TIM WINTERS
By TIM WINTERS
Kanson Sports Editor
The University of Kansas swimmers will be heavy favorites in the Big Eight Championships that begin Thursday in the Robinson Natatorium.
The events will begin at 1 p.m. Thursday.
The trials will be in the afternoon with the finals to start at 7:30 p.m. each day. The meet is the *1st Big Eight Championship*, and since 1937, either Iowa State, Oklahoma or Kansas has won the swimming crown.
The Jayhawks have won the last five Big Eight swimming titles. Last season, the 'Hawks outscored Oklahoma, the second-place team, by 184 points. KU finished the meet with 501 points compared with Oklahoma's 317.
"We are now just concerned about how well we swim," Reason said. "We are fortunate in that we don't need help from another team to split the points.
Dick Reamon, coach of the Jayhawks,
said the squad had good quality and depth
This season the Jayhawks have won all six of their dual meet and have only been outscored in the larger meet by New Mexico, Air Force and Southern Methodist
*We work on the mechanics and paces of the different events and a attempt to show the effect of this.*
"I try to help the swimmers as much as possible with their mental attitude," Reamon said. "We make them aware of our physical abilities and he stands on the basis of the seedings."
Reamon said that the squad was physically ready and that the rest was up to them.
The Jayhawks will be helped, if they need any help, by the fact that they will be performing before a home crowd. The meet is in the home meet of the season for the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawk swimmers have the fastest regular season times in nine of the 18 events and could possibly sweep some of the final events.
"The home crowd will help the team," Keanan said. "I hopes we have a large and enthusiastic team."
Tom Kempil, the Big Eight swimmer of the year in 1972, holds two Big Eight singles and one Big Eight freestyle. He will be joined by his younger brother, Gary, who has the top time in the 400-meter individual medley, the 500-meter freestyle and the 200-yard backstroke.
U.S. Stars Run In Soviet Meet
NEW YORK (AP)—American track stars Wiley Davenport, Robert Taylor and Fred Newhouse will compete in the Soviet Indoor Championships March 3-4, it was announced Tuesday by the Amateur Athletic Union.
Taylor is expected to have a rematch with Russian spinner Valerian Borzow, who edited him for the 100-meter gold medal at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich.
Stan Sapin, manager of the three-man United States contingent, said the Americans would depart Thursday for Moscow.
Borzow was one of four Russian track and field standouts who recently toured the United States for a series of meets. He failed to win an event.
Davenport was the high hurdles gold medalist at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City and Newhouse was the world's second fastest 400-meter runner last year. Newhouse won the National AAU's 600-yard dash last week at Madison Square Garden.
The three athletes were specifically invited by the Soviet Union's sports ministry for competition against the finest performers from Europe.
KU also has strong links in breast-
broker Roger Neugent and Mike Inflower in the US.
The 800-yard freestyle relay team of Steve Ingram, Tom Kempf, Richard Hedlinger and Tom Hodgson set a conference record to lift the baton. They are expected to do well again this year.
Oklahoma State, Iowa State and Colorado could provide the Jayhawks with the best
The Cowboys are led by Dave Biddick, who has a clocking of 47.69 in the 100-yard freestyle. Biddick is the defending champion in the 100-yard freestyle and has the fastest time this season in the 50 and 100-yard freestyle races.
Iowa state has Rick Burnett leading the 202-yard freestyle and two excellent divers in Steve Spikes and Rick McNally. The two Cyclone dives have scored the most points among NCAA divers, and is defending one meter champion and McNally a fourth place finisher last year.
★★
Thursday 1:00 p.m.—March 1
Thursday 1:00 p.m.--March 1
1. 500 lfd. Freestyle: Time Trials
2. 280 lfd. Individual Medley: Time Trials
3. 280 lfd. Time-Trials
15. 15 minute
4. One Meter Diving—Preliminaries & Semi-finals (Dives 1.3 and 2.6)
Thursday 7:20 p.m.—March 1
Earlier in the season the Cyclones were edged by KU in a dual meet, 82-51, with the score being decided in the last event. The Cyclones finished fifth in the Big Eight Belays.
1. 200 yd. Freescale-Finals
2. 400 yd. Individual Medley-Finals
3. 200 yd. Freescale-Finals
4. 200 yd. Individual Medley-Drive
5. 400 yd. Medley-Relay-Finals
The Colorado swimmers put together their first winning season last year and this year's team has been one of the highest teams in Colorado swimming history.
10 p.m. - Marathon
10 p.m. - Marathon
10 p.m. - Marathon
6:400 yd. Indoor Training - Time Trials
5:200 ft. Freestyle - Time Trials
4:300 ft. Backstroke - Time Trials
3:500 ft. Backstroke - Time Trials
15 minute interval
15 minute interval
15 minute interval
answer2
6. 100 Individual Medics--Finals
7. 600 Freshface--Finals
8. 100 Backtread--Finals
9. 100 Breakstroke--Finals
10. 100 Backstroke--Finals
Friday 7:30 p.m.—March 2
Friday 1:00 p.m.—March 2
Saturday 10 p.m. | Monday - m.p.m.
12. 100 yd. Fri. Backtread - Time Trial
14. 200 yd. Fri. backtread - Time Trial
15. 200 yd. Fri. breasttread - Time Trial
16. 200 yd. Butterfly - Time Trial
Pete Muiseveld of Colorado was second last season in the 1,650-yard freestyle and this year holds the fastest clocking in the 200-yard individual medley.
80 400 yd. Freeride Rally-Time Trials
80 400 yd. Freeride Race Finish finals
80 400 yd. Freeride Diving-Formal & Semi-finals (Diveballs 1-8)
Saturday 12:00 p.m.—March 3
Denny Bush and Ray Schlachter lead the Missouri Tigers. Bush competes in the breaststroke events and Schlachter in the 50-yard freestyle.
1600 yd. Freezy-Flat - Finals
1600 yd. Freezy-Flat - time finals
200 yd. Backbrace-Finals
200 yd. Backbrace-Finals
200 yd. Butterfly-Finals
200 yd. Butterfly-Finals
Three Meter Dividing-Finals
Three Meter Dividing-Finals
Tickets are still available for the championship and can be purchased at the KU athletic ticket office. The student ticket office is located at 1209 East 3rd Avenue, section $1 and $1 for the evening competition.
man Bill Hough and his performances in the 100-yard backstroke. Nebraska's attack will feature Terry Seymour in the 100 and 200-yard freestyle. In the 100 and 200-yard freestyle events.
Note. A conclusion final shall immediately precede the final touch event except the 1829 yard freely trotted.
The Oklahoma Sooners are high on fresh-
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DO YOU WANT TO CHANGE OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM TOO?
Myth
Yes, some want to change the way business is done in the United States. Maybe you are one of them. Mostly, they want to redistribute the wealth and get higher wages. They're not sure how to accomplish it, but they want it done.
Fact
For whatever faults business may have, do we really want to change a system where more people have more money with which to do more things than in any country in the history of the world. Are you willing to pay the economic penalty of the people living in a socialist state to change our free enterprise system?
got an idea...got a gripe...got a problem...got a solution...
got a misconception...got something to offer
LET'S TALK BUSINESS.
This message produced in the public interest by Phillips Petroleum Company, Public Affairs Dept., Bartlesville, Okla. Okla. 74040, (918) 651-5424 and the Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce, 621 N. Robinson, Oklahoma City, OK. 73102 (405) 239-2471.
10
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Week Scene
Curtain Rises On 'Rock Chalk'
MOVIES
CHELSEA GIRLS: Andy Warhol is back, accompanied by another cast of lovers, dope addicts, homosexuals, heterosexuals and other assorted miscreants. It features such famed stars as Ingrid Superstar and International Velvet with musical accompaniment to the Underground舞台 on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. We threw Wednesday in Woostriff Auditorium.
ADVENTURES OF ROBENSON CRUSEO: A 1954 classic by Luis Bunuel, one of the world's greatest directors. The film comes complete with additional sexual fantasies as well as Friday, Crusso's faithful servant, in costume. Showes at 7:30 and
Neil Young Earthy, Fine In Concert
By BOB GILLUM
Kansan Reviewer
Monday night, Neil Young walked on stage in workboots, a blue plaid shirt and jeans. He sat on an old wooden chair and beat out the most down-to-earth music since the "Stones" passed through last summer. The total image of the music, Young on stage, and the old arched dome of Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium was perfect.
Young is on a tour of the states—69 concerts in 90 days—and with Linda Rontstadt and four backup musicians, Jack Nitzsche, Ben Johnny Drummond and Johnny Barbotti.
Ronstadt's short set was at least satisfying. She was tense at first, and the songs were not her best; but "A Long, Long Time" corrected everything. Belting seven songs and an encore of the yet-to-be-released "Love is No Crime," her magnificent voice awed this Ronstadt fan. She deserved more than second billing.
Young started his concert seated with an acoustic guitar and harmonica. His legs stomping out the beat, he soled "On the Way Home" and "Tell Me Why." The sound was clear and steady. He continued with that performance for Weekend. The backpack group joined him to give full treatment to "Harvest," "Old Man," and "Heart of Gold."
Standing with his electric guitar, Young did "The Loner" and a new song called "Time Fades Away" 'Oh You Ma' 'Alabama' 'Lookout Joe' 'Cinnamon Girl' and 'Southern Man' completed the set at full volume. At the piano, Young did "Are You Ready for the Country" for his only encore.
Reprise will release an album of live
songs, the best of the tour.
Young had total stage control throughout the performance. Although he seldom talked or moved around, his techniques were masterful. His guitar work was crisp and vocals were letter perfect; they approximated his records.
sax songs were from the "Harvest" LP. Backup was great on the album, but merely adequate Monday night. Jack Nitzsche's guitar sound was good, and an electric, Ben Keith's steel guitar occasionally clashed with Young's own finger work. The drums seemed to have a bad echo. They did work together, though, and they added "Time Fades Away" and "Cinnamon Girl".
The concert was both relaxed and dazzing. Young seemed pleased, and he said that the audience was very engaged.
Civil Strike Stuns Ports In Britain
LONDON (AP) -- Employees at air and sea ports joined other civil servants in a 24-hour strike Tuesday, Tunisia temporarily customs-free have laen and smuggler's dream.
Then as the 280,000 customers officers and civil servants ended their long anti-government action, train drivers began a new way of traveling that brought the nation's railroads to a standstill.
The strike at ports of entry caused chaos in transportation, suspended baggage inspection and made it possible for a contractaband field day. Scores of flights were grounded and thousands of travelers were stranded.
At midnight, two hours after that nationwide shutdown ended, 29,000 railmen began their strike, paralyzing passenger and freight services.
Half of London's subway trains also were expected to be halted. But ferries run by the state-owned railroad system were expected to operate to Europe and Ireland.
The strikers were protesting the government's anti-inflation pay and prices freeze that has put pay demands from a dozen unions on ice.
Some 750,000 workers are now challenging the government's anti-inflation strategy.
The disruptions were part of a concerted effort by labor unions representing mainly low-paid workers against Prime Minister Edward Heath's attempt to limit pay hikes to about $2.40 plus four per cent of weekly base pay.
Uniones representing low-paid workers are campaigning to break through the government's latest pay ceiling because of a rate of inflation which they claim has made their members poorer than at any time since World War II.
9:30 p.m. tonight in Woodruff Auditorium
9:30 p.m. tonight in Woodland Park. A
visit to the Museum of Art in
Alan is back again with his incredible
brand of humor working shows. Shows at
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in
MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY AND THE FRENCH THEY ARE A FUNNY RACE: The first film of this double feature is the original version of the most famous mutiny in the history of the British Navy. The film contains great performances by Clark Gable and Charles Laughton. It even won an Academy Award for best picture in 1955.
The second film is a tale of a married couple, one English and the other French, who develop a very bad case of culture shock. It is the last film made by the legendary cinema director Prost Sturge. The double-bill starts at 7:30 p.m. Friday, at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. Admission is a donation of $1.50.
THE RULING CLASS: Shows at 7:10 and 9:50 p.m., starting tonight at Chelestrant 1.
THE POSIDION ADVENTURE: This giant Hollywood extravaganza with its stellar cast in its contender is many times as spectacular: 7:20 and 9:30 am, starting tonight at Hailrestreet C.
CABARET: A story of pre-World War I German society set in a silvery nightclub scene. Liz Minnell, the star of the film, is a graduate student at the University Award for best actress. Shows at 7:15 and
THE GREATEST ATHLETE: A Walt Disney people pleaser that falls far short of the standards he set with his animated characters. Starting tonight at the Granada theatre.
JORY. A true story of a 15-year-old kid who hangs up his gun. Shows at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. starting tonight at the Varsity theatre.
THEATRE
1973 ROCK CHALK REVUE: KU's own talent will be presented in four musical skits in this traditional annual variety show. $5 p.m. Friday and Saturday in parked at the Student Union Activity office and the Town Crier Booksstore.
INSANE LIBERATION THEATRE:
Shows at 7:30 and 9 onight and Thursday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Tickets may be purchased at the Student Union Activities office. Admission price is 75 cents.
ART
BEHIND AND BEYOND THE TEWA WORLD: NATIVE AMERICAN VISIONS OF LIFE: a speech by Alfonzo Ortiz, professor of anthropology at Princeton University. Ortz will speak on the Indian nation in the course of anthropology and the American Indian in society, 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
SPEECHES
WATER COLORS OF ISADORA DUNCAN: A presentation by Abraham Wilkowitz. February 25 thru March 25 at the University of Kansas Museum of Art.
FLIGHT! This biobie band will provide entertainment Wednesday at the RIE.
MUSIC
FIVE STAR CADILLAC; From Springfield, Mo., a dancing or listening band. Friday and Saturday nights at the Barron.
RICHARD REEBER: A pianist in the continuing Faculty Recital Series. 8 tonight
JAMES STRAND: A guest organist who will appear at 8 p.m. Friday in Swartwout
Mon. Feb. 26 thru Sat. March 3rd
SPECIAL
POLISH SAUSAGE
POLISH SASAGE
SANDWICH with horseradish $30^{c}$
BROOKS TAVERN & LUNCH
"Happy Hour Mon-Fri. 5-7 p.m."
BUD 15c glass
80W 3 a.m.-Midnight
1307 W. 7th (A Michigan) 842-9429
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU
A Different Saddle Shoe on a Super Sole.
Joe Farnolene puts these together just for you, in Blue/White or Red/White.
Try a Pair Today
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
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---
'73 ROCK CHALK REVUE
Town Crier, downtown
Town Crier, the Malls Shopping Center.
SUA ticket office, in the Union. (8:30 noon and
1:00-5:00)
Friday night & $2.00 & $2.50
Saturday night & $2.25 & $2.75
Saturday night tickets almost sold out! Cost of tickets $ .75 less than last year.
MOTHER MARY'S, 2406 IOWA is giving a FREE BEER to all Friday night ticketholders.
---
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
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: $0.25
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 Dally Kannan are offered to the national origin. PLEASE regard to the national origin. PERMISSIBILITY CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE COUNTRY Shop 3-8kis. No. of Kwai for collectibles, gas heating & cooking cookware bicycles including special models, bicycle drums, new bushel and baskets烘烤 & wooden drums. Fireplace cord price. Baked alafia bread, brome & wheat straw. home grow bed furniture #84-3219 Horn Altemberg, tfr
CARS BUGGY AND SOLD. For the best deal
Vernor, 842-8608
Cars. G.I. Joe's Used Car
Vernor, 842-8608
RAUD AYUID STEREO WAKEHOUSE - The finest
in rated at least 50W stereo amplifier.
In stock at Koon. #6041. Phone #8342-3817. fax
8342-3818.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
Western Civilization Notes - Now On Sat Thirteen
1. If you use them,
2. If you don't.
3. If you don't advantage
Either it comes to the same thing—
"New Analysis on Campus Civilization"
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crie
Pitcher 202 Receiver Amp. 128 watt RMS per hour
52.6% 8' x 5' 3/4" x 3' 1/2"
$900.00 $847.726
MINGLTA SRT for sale. Several lenses also. Call 843-566 to see.
2-28
67 Barracaud, 50,000 miles. Good condition. Re-
quire a call. Call 843-8844. 5-10 p.m.
FLAT 124 SPORT COUPE-5-speed, map气移 wheels, air-conditioning, new engine, 42,600 horsepower runs all day at 8 on 28MPK. Interlagos seats, runs all day at 8 on 28MPK. INTERlagos seats, Chip Lenhman, 841-7276. **2-28**
A good selection of used vacuum cleaners, all available from Eureka, Eureka, Electrolite, etc. 2-128
FURNITURE
Furniture is a vast collection of items. The following are just a sample list. All are used and are available for purchase.
4-Channel Stero component system, AM/FM
player, player 528 with change's AM/ FM Speaker set,
amplifier with change's FM Speaker set.
1966 CHRYSLER 327. 3-4 speed, 5.13L. Lakewood.
Chrysler 327. 3-4 speed, 5.13L. Lakewood.
and much more. Will trade or offer best
offer.
RIP MR OFF--Must sell to finance Florida HPA
RIP MR OFF--Must sell to finance Florida HPA
RIP MR OFF--Must sell to finance Florida HPA
PLAYER, PLAYER, PLAYER, CASS HASE 610 --h.288
SPORTS CAR-196 "Sunburn Alpine. Roll Halt.
through the back. Glimpse at last through
the back. Glimpse at last through
the back."
Such a deal! Used ufl set (Armstrong) in good condition for $590. Nice big jig-ring $90. Call Susan evening.
For sale 85 Wyndham Sport Fiat automatic
wagon, nice paint. Good tires. Dependable trans-
port. Excellent condition. $149,000
DISCOUNT FURNITURE. We sell quality, name
brand furniture at a few extra miles. You can save a lot
with a few extra miles. You can save a lot in
Kansas City. Kansas (342-1128). For more information
and direction, call 811-2106 between 6:10
AM and 7:30 AM.
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Please give my watered by a good home. The com-
pany will not accept $100 Good condition, no Launch,
or $200 Good condition, no Launch.
Mexican Food
1105 Mass. with coupon 843-9880
Casa de Taco Delicious Nutritious Mexican Food
Tony's 66 Service
Lawrence Konser 66044
Be Prepared!
tune-ups starting service
2434 Iowa VI 2-1008
GAY COURSELING & RAP
for reference
8412506
info. center 864-3506
Give a tea Party with a tea set from the HODGE
PODGE, 15 W. w. 9th.
3-1
380 SUZUKI 1972 - 3,300 l. immaculate. See and
ride to appreciate (2 ballerinas) also. Ron
Miller's catalog of 4000 cars is available.
For Sale: 94 VAW needs engine work. Cheap $800.
Call: 842-7748.
Bilea, Alica. 18-speed, very nice, need grab-
ing. Fired around 6:00 P.M. 842-789-3900.
Fired around 6:00 P.M. 842-789-3900.
Get a car for Spring. 66 Corvair. Truly excellent
morning for students. Student car. 882
mornings before 11.30.
Open 24 hrs.
Must sell story and Clark piano. In excellent condition needed for school. $50 - Call any 843-798-7987.
1966 Chev. b-passenger Capacitor Wagon. One own-
er, Excellent. Certified. Batteries 875, 924-Valve
charge. Batteries 875, 924-Valve charge.
55 Gal. Fish Tank. Fish top, l upper, under gravel
881- 640 up-filler light, pump, gravel fish includes
881- 640
Need to sell fast. Ford Fairlane 62. New clutch+
new battery-good running condition. 824-7935.
911-7900.
AVOID SPRING FEVER INFLATION: 1968 250
avoid spring fever
$nologo, negligible. $nologo, after 40 min.
$nologo, negligible. $nologo, after 40 min.
FOR SALE, 1967 VW Squareback, radio. Good condition. $50. Call #842-7258. 3-5
For Sale -1971 Mobile Home, 12 x 64 furnished,
bedrooms, baths, kitchen, dining room, additions,
cabins, awning, call 842-7120. 5-967-2520.
WANT QUIAI Dame see in me. We've got son and my baby. She's not
Tree 40108 for sale. Reel-relay monitor recording
heads, etc. Marvelous condition. Call Budgerigar
heads, etc.
1952 Chevie pickup. Good body, run good. 864-
4847 or 842-2084. 3-6
Harmonic percussion for old Hammonds. Make any Hammond sound like a B-3. Better than 30-minute installation, all solid-state. Guard fast, easy. Call between 1-4 p.m., 8:08, 9783.
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE *10" x 2" bd,
furnished, air cond, wafer, the down cab,
gallery, kitchenette, laundry room,
inertie with a 2-car drive-way, $292.96,
be guaranteed for $80/month, $942.96-
3-4
Magnavox Fluor Samples 50 wait receiver with
carrier at $250.00 at Ray Stone Basement
based on the $150.00 at Ray Stone Basement
based on the $150.00 at Ray Stone Basement
Used RCA Stereo Record Player with remote speaker only 2 mins. Use the Storme-Stereo Record Player with Remote Room Rocket.
B. Goodrich DH - Brand new F14R (19-15-18)
C. Ford Mustang GS - Brand new GT500 (19-15-18)
as much as 48% Of liat Stone Backbone
Magnavox AM-FM Stereo Record with alpiment
sound. Built in, 189.90, now 110.60 at the
Saybrooke Motors, 189.90.
FOR RENT
for the latest data-driven data science in rental
for the latest Lawrence Rental Exchange, 8:35-
2500. 901 Kensington.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
BED. Try 2 bedroom apt, directly across Miasn.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking parked. Free: Cab
rate. Room size, furniture, ideal roommate
rates. furniture available. Ideal roomsat
phone: 834-213-6185. Sante Apts. 1123, Apt. 9;
telf. 834-213-6185.
DRIVE IN
AND COOP OI
LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANING
9th & MISS.
843-5304
NEEED A SUMMER PLACE! Meadowbrook has it. Studios, 1 and 2 bedrooms, great recreational facilities—two pools, backyard and tennis courts, outdoor kitchen, open floor plan, Open House, Sunday, March 11. 3-0
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
Alexander's
-Wide selection of gifts
-Cash & carry flowers every day
-Wide selection of gifts
Make Your Spring Break
Now in Stock—America's First Choice Ten Speed
PEUGEC
Peugeot uos $117.50
Let Maupintur
Do The LEGWORK For You!!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
Pougeot PX-10-E $225.00
Reservations Early
RIDE ON BICYCLES
If You're Planning on FLYING.
826 Iowa 842-1320
Independent Coin Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Maupintour
travel service
days per week
Coin-Op
COIN OP LAUNDRY
1215 W. 6th
842-9450
Laundry & Dry Cleaners 19th & La. 843-9631
Bike Ride
KU Union—The Mails—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
PHONE 843-1211
Make life a little more pleasant. Move to the
Come by and see these three apartment apartments. Rent
these beautiful spacious apartments with water wells are all pts. Leaves of various lengths are available. Call (800) 275-3169.
These beautiful apartment narrowed a quiet corner, but the large brick walls and 80 blocks enclose the sunny playground. Plenty of space for kids and pets.
OLDE ENGLISH VILLAGE ADAPTMENTS
COLLEGE HILL MANOR APARTMENTS. Now leasing at home, a 2-bedroom apartment for the. For living centers. Central heating and air pool and laundry. Most utilities included. Call 483-6258 or see at www.ltw.9th.apt.§1
Everings call 842-7851
2411 Louisiana 842-5522
For rent. Clean, quiet apts, with carpeting, dishwashing facilities, cozy office space, Campus Eastview 1023, 1023 West Avenue
If you call us, we have a 1 and 2 bedroom
one-bedroom apartment.
WOOD APARTMENTS 843-114-11
2-28
2 bedroom house unfurnished $100 Call 842-
6008 2-28
Sleeping rooms with Kitchen privileges $55. Call
842-608-9.
2-28
Large unfulfilled apt, utilities锁-steve and
refrig 1500. $Call 642-9083.
2-28
Apt. for Rent, 1025 Ohio ST. NO CONTRACT ALL
48-hour facility. Call 617-394-3641 for tour.
tour
Very small house—furnished and utilities paid
852. Call 842-6088.
2-28
Nice furnished apt, for 1 or 2 students. Close to campus, parking. Close to library. Private parking. Close to shopping center.
Furnished apartment for rent. Single bedroom at 19 W. 14th. Call Sieve住员 1 p.m. 843-94-10-18
$99 - one and two bedroom apts, electric kitchens,
draperies, draperries, color TV availability, air
conditioning, modern facilities and on the bus route
12:00-5:00, 1745 W. 25th, bd. 8142, Hillview Ave.
TRAILRIDGE by the Country Club. Summer and Fall openings. Play ahead, bedroom 1, bedroom 2, living room 3, Drapes and deep carpet carpet; fully equipped office; excellent management, furniture, available. Excellent management, furniture, available.
Sleeping rooms (for men only) and apts, Burton
downtown. For further information phone 212-569-0347.
Furnished room for rent. Sharah kitchen etc.
close to campus $50 monthly. call 842-8655
- 3-5
I have to submissive my apt. cost $75.00 one bedroom, nice price, piece with chemical enclosures, $285.00
**IHAPPENING** In living in the established ecosystem, students have a strong standing distance of campus. Call 842-9421.
SKI RESORT CONDIMINON for rent in Breckenridge, Colorado. Colorado, 2 b., sleeps 6. Complete kitchen, TV, close to lift, Calif. Calif. (403) 398-7480. L. R. Russell, SKI Arbor, Omaha, 714-855-3878. brake
NOTICE
ATTENTION RENTERS
Houses, apartments, duplexes, farms all areas,
home improvements. Homefairs.
311 E. 7th St. B4-8410. fh
No charge, list your business, agencies, duplexes,
street addresses and email for delivery and waiting. For more info call Home Locator: 614-258-3030.
ATTENTION LANDLORDS
FLY TO EUROPE HALF PRICE. Save up to $400 on special round-trip charter flights departing & returning this summer. Write *Eurotravel* at info@eurotravel.com or call Hill drive, Salt Lake City, Utah 847-228-5288.
Guitars
Amps
Recorders
Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 745-3007
1903 745-3007
Open Evenings
Fender MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Fender
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Sold EXCLUSIVELY
• Guitars
• Amps
• Recorders
• Accessories
Rose
Keyboard Studios
1903 Mass. 843-3007
Open Evenings
515 Michigan St. Bair-B-Q. We Bair-B-Q in an
8' Awn. We Bair-B-Q. Large, 240 lb. Ribs.
$9.00 A awn. $18.00 Large, 240 lb. Ribs.
B beef and sue. Pound of beef $1.5. chicken plate
$2.5. TV Phone VI-201-515, Michigan St. Bair-
df.
Discount prices with saving up to 40% on some items
Country Shop, 767 North 3rd. Open 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
Country Shop, 767 North 3rd. Open 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
(Karni 500-1508) This spring, as campus coordi-
tors write to P.O. Box 21588, San Joaquin Ca-
nada.
For birth control information and abortion counseling and referral call the Information Center.
FUN FACTS ABOUT VENEERAL DISEASE-
MENCED: 8:00 a.m. PORTO Renmin University—every-
Monday through Saturday, from 8:00 a.m. SOCIALIZATION—427-778-3041
CONSULING RAP: 8:204-206 for referral office,
CONSULING RAP: 8:204-206 for referral office,
Why buy a landlord's property for him with your own money? You can walk along with your diploma 36 to 48 msec. and amount to $5,000 or more you will never see again. Why not check into a way to save money by buying a custom-built home? Nothing to learn the details. C. E. Wheel Estates. 623 N. 2nd, Dave and Skin. 841-827. 3-1
25% off all clothing at the HODGE_PODGE. 15-1
W, 9th
Just arrived new shipment of earnings at
HODGE PODGE, 15 W. 9th.
3-1
Original Lawrence Antique Show, National Guard Armory, Lawrence, March 2, 8 p.m.-Sunday, 6 a.m.-6 c. Exhibits for this show include: Anissimov & all or all days. Browse by Pilot Club of Lawrence.
Need a Handy Man? Guy Communists Being formed
Interested in contacting a Mary at Mt. 428-
No Transmitters?
3-228
Coin & coin supplies. Also buy gold and silver coins, Indian head jennies. Trades 3/2
WANTED
Fair prices paid for good used furniture and
antiques 849.7008 11
Pleenickers for our picnic baskets. HODGE
PDOG, 15 W, 9th. 3-1
Wanted: Girl to sublease my part of Jawhacky
room for a week in order to keep me with husband
roommates 2 times in heating it with husband
One female to share 3 bedroom house. Close to New York and NYC. 2 bedrooms. One FREE FREER 9 person. Wife Call 841-291-5167.
Vocohol for band. Desire true-tone and high energy. Second instrument preferred. For auditory training.
Wanted—Secretary with experience in type and design, drafting, programming, and your own hours. Contact Pal Jolly - 855-283-646-6
Wanted: Secretary and bookkeeper. Must type and have not print. Prefer married between 21 and 40 years old. Year-round job with benefits. Phone 643-520-7400 or appointment before 6 p.m.
Employment Opportunities
Counselors-Resident Summer Camp counselor needed for all girls' camp. For further information contact: Resident Camp Director, Sunflower Campus, Resident Camp, 104 Armstrong Road, Kamie, K6102
Due to our curated business we are in need of
a full-time head office staff. Wed,
Friday, Saturday after 3:00, Bar Red 2;
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday from 10:30 a.m.
Auto Service Center 23rd & Ridge Court 843-9694
Craig's Fina and U-Haul
HARVARD MUSEUM
WHY RENT?
is Date Nite
Friday Nite
You and Your Date
RIDGEVIEW
SPECIAL
RIDGEVIEW
Mobile Home Sales
843-8499
3 games each
$2.00
3 games for $1.00
Daily-Noon
till 6:00 p.m.
3020 Iowa (South Hwy. 59)
EAGLE
KANSAS UNION
8 8 8 8
DISCOUNT
PRICES
WITH
PERSONALIZED
SERVICE
The Stereo Store
LUDIOTRONICS
--sirloin
843
8500
Youndly lift 21 to work in our club area.
Meet and greet members, attractive and enjoy meeting people. Will prepare materials for meetings. Must be in Law, routine administrative work. Must be in Law, routine administrative work. Phone: 850-343-1414
DRAMA STUDENTS - Male-female talent interned in part-time commercial work for TV-radio, range 18-40. Receive Thursday and Saturday classes at Thursday Center City Kaitlyn 842-350 (Please bring pictures).
LOST
Wedding ring: free; flower desig
wedding wedding: Friday, February 24,
Ward. Please call 814-3327.
Wedding planner: Irene Bray
Black and orange mottled; female kitten, 6 months. Feb 14, Mold parked. Area: 84282-1482, 2-488.
LOST, intelligent sensitive cat, blood rupture. A brilliant gift for his family by his family call: 862-7259 after 8am.
Vivareo Camera in brazen covering case on EH350. Cameras have a maximum value $值 Smault reward Call 82-513-4110 ATA 82-513-4110 ATA
Lost 4- two old towels, white with gray hair. Wrapped up in the middle of a large bed at 4th and Kentucky area. Rowward
HELP WANTED
*JOB'S IN ALASKA* Available now. This hand-
book provides tips on planning a VCOIUR adventure. $30 JIA. Hos
ton, WA 98056. (808) 742-1272.
Female help was needed. Mon, thru Fri- Call 840-
5:30 to 8:00 A.M. Men, thru Fr- Call 840-
5:00 to 6:00 P.M.
PERSONAL
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer or permanent. Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa, etc. all professions. 1250 more courses than TNK, Ca. paid. 1225 Telegraphage院, Berkeley, CA. 94704 $ 8,750 TELEPHONING院, Berkeley, CA. 94704 $ 8,750
MEN! - WOMEN! JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience. Excellent. Job speed. Worldwide travel. Perfect morning. SSAFAF - D.F.- F.O.- P.O. Bord Port Angeles. WATNSAIR 98362 3-26
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
DELICATESSET & SANDWICH SHOP
open until 1 a.m. - Phone Order
843 785-798 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
THE HIDE in the WALL
RUSSIA-SCANDINAVIA
5 weeks, $287 inclus. London depart-
ment. Travel (ages 18-30). Atio Europe,
Africa, India, 3-11 weeks. Write Whole
Roll Travel, Lift, Box 197, K.C., M.O.
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu. Serve your guests Shrimp, to K. Steaks Our motto is and has always been "There is no juice for you."
11. Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843.1431
Open 4:30 Closed Monday
Handcrafted bolts, pulses and sandals from the leather feathers made at the HODGE POCKET 341
SERVICES OFFERED
Sewing and altering for the college girl. Pick up a piece of fabric, cut it into a rectangle, wear it, coats him and relied on 6 days to make it work.
MISCELLANEOUS
We have trouble training up now? Try our wake-up serv-
ervice and see how much we can learn in a month. For information call 842-3541 or 843-7690.
TYPING
Need Money? Traders have the fastest $ bank * buk*
$22.92 Mass. issued on items of value. Trade $32.
822 Mass.
THE PUB INC.
THE PUB INC.
IS IN KANSAS NOW.
Typing-by me, Thesis. I.B.M. Selective, Pica type-
481-2568. Home, Dissertations, Citation 3-30
841-2568.
Come down and enjoy PINBALL, FOOSBAL and POOL- take your beer-at the Oread Street Arcade located right under the Mount Oreal Bear on a $3.99 arcade cake upon 1 p.m.-2 a.m. daily; Sunday 6 p.m.-1.
The newest concept in young people entertainment lounges. If you are interested in becoming a PUB OPERATOR in your city write RR1, Box 134, Valley Center, Kansas or call 316-772-5701. $5,000 investment. All replies strictly confidential.
Experienced in typing theses, disertations, term papers, other mime, typing. Have electric typewriter with pica type. Accelerate and prompt typesetting. Has scanned copied theses. Ph.8-143-9544. Mrs. Wright.
ARN-PATTERNS-NEEEDPOINT
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10-5 Monday.Saturday
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OFF any two handed sandwich with the purchase of one at regular price. You MUST present this ad.
The Bull & Boar 11 w. 9th
图
**Featuring—Raised Beef, BBQ Ham, BBQ Beef, Corn Beef, Grilled Cheese, and the Reuben**
Open 11:00 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat, Sun 12:70 to 13:00
[Oliver express mar. 31] 1973
07 13:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 3:00.
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Budget Requests
Deadline 5 p.m. March 2
organizations requesting money from the Student Senate for the fiscal year 73-74 must pickup a budget request form from 1048 Kansas Union, 83:04-4:30 Monday thru Friday. All requests MUST be received in 1048 before 5 p.m. March 2. No requests received after the deadline will be considered at the budget hearings this spring.
12
Wednesday, February 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
---
T-Shirt Promotion for Whomper Fizzles
By LARRY GOLDSMITH Kansan Staff Writer
If the sale of Whomper T-shirts is any indication of the acceptance and popularity of the recycling center, then it is small. If the Whomper has had financial difficulties.
Only 72 of 750 promotional shirts that were printed have been sold, according to Kathy Allen, Toplea junior and director of the center. Allen said the shirts were purchased with a $1,952 loan from the city of Kansas Endowment Association.
The loan was taken out in the spring of 1971, and came due June 1, 1972, according to Irvin Youngblood, executive secretary of the FDIC. He paid only $134 had been repaid on the loan.
"It was our understanding that the Endowment Association sort of agreed to provide."
But she added that, "It is the feeling of the Whomper staff that we will nail it all back."
Youngberg said that the Endowment Association would assume the loan on the recommendation of Vice Chancellor Maurice, but that it had received no such request.
Balfour said he hoped the center would pay back the loan.
The shirts were been sold in the Kansas Union Bookstore and in local shops
for $2 each, but Allen said that they were sold for whatever price they would yield.
She said that the recycling center still had over 400 shirts, and that another 200 were in use.
The Kansas Union Bookstore sold 56 of the shirts and still has 88 on hamb, according to a bookstore spokesman. She said the rest be picked up by the Reclamation Center.
“There’s a possibility we sold one,” said
Ryan McGrath, the Gran Sport bicycle shop,
refereeing for the U.S. Olympic team.
"We didn't have any luck with them at all." John Willhite, the owner of John Barleycorn, said. "We've had them for about six months and haven't sold a one."
These results were echoed by other merchants who tried to sell the shirts. Merchants said they even tried to sell the items sold at the store. Some merchant donated display snares.
Most of the money supporting the Whom comes from the Student Senate,
"Students have supported the Whomper long enough," she said.
She said she would recommend a budget of $2,500 next year and would include a recommendation that the center never come to the senate for money again.
"My immediate goal is to make it a
However, Lawrence City Manager Buford Watson said Tuesday that the center would have to expand its operations before city support could be gained.
Allen said he envisioned possible support from the city of Lawrence in the future.
Allen said she was concerned about the financial situation.
"It's going to have to make a significant impact on what we have to dispose of," he
"We're trying to piece things together," she said. "Our budget is looking at a lot better, but we still need more money."
She said a lack of publicity had hampered success of the Whomper. A "Whomper week" was planned, she said, but details are very, very hazy.
community service and a community responsibility," she said.
"She said the deficit was the result of poor handling by past directors, and cited a lack of proper bookkeeping and recording of expenses.
TACOS TACOS
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The reclamation center sells crushed glass, steel and aluminum to firms that process it further. Crushed glass and crushed steel are sold for $20 a ton; crushed steel is sold for $45 a ton. This money goes to pay staff members and maintain the machine, Allen said.
"Whomper days" also are planned at local grade schools. Allen said that participating students would spend several hours canvassing the neighborhood around their school for cans and bottles that could be recycled.
The city of Lawrence produces 90 tons of waste daily, Watson said. He said he foresaw a time when such a facility would be necessary, but pointed to problems of sorting the refuse and the prohibitive cost of a suitable facility.
Karen Harrower, Lawrence graduate student, has been granted a Phillips Petroleum Fellowship this semester, for outstanding work in the geologic sciences.
Casa De Taco 1105 Mass.
Parents were forced to walk on campus with their children when the chain was across the drive, she said. On icy days, parents had trouble walking to the center, especially when they had to take more than one child, Bencivengo said.
The UNIVERSITY SHOP
In the past, scholarship hall applicants were taken from financial aid applications, but Bencivengo said that a new, separate application was in use this year. This means that the form must be interested enough in the scholarship halls to fill out a separate form, he said.
According to Bencivengo, the school of Bencivengo did not belong to the School of Religion.
A chain had been put across the drive intermittently, preventing parents from unloading their children in front of the day after the excavation envojo had said earlier this semester.
"The School of Religion is unyielding and I am convinced they just don't care." Bencivengo said. "I don't even want to bother with them anymore."
Last week, staff members of the School of Religion met with Hilltop staff to discuss the parking problem, she said. However, they also complained by the meeting, Bencivengo said.
The UNIVERSITY SHOP
Clothing for the man who cares about the way he looks.
1420 Crescent Rd. West End of Campus
The School of Religion staff stated the incidents involved in the dispute, she said, and that no more than two people were involved.
He said that the system had changed its application form this year and this change would probably result in fewer applications, but he said that it will be more interested and committed people.
The staff of Hilltop Day Care Center will no longer meet with the staff of the Kansas School of Religion to try to solve a parking issue on campus. The city clerk, chicago, director of Hilltop, said Monday
Hilltop Instructors Give Up on Parking
When the day care center was established last fall, the parking lot belonging to the center was made into a playground to comply with state requirements. Since then, the building was to the front of the building through a drive that belongs to the School of Religion.
Parents' use of the drive and limited parking facilities behind the School of Religion had caused many problems, Taylor had said earlier this semester.
The scholarship hall system also showed a slight change, according to Frank Bencivengo, assistant to the dean of men in charge of men's scholarship halls.
Lynn Taylor, dean of the School of
Ballition, could not be reached Monday for
information.
The parents' cars in the lot had caused congestion and sometimes the School of Religion staff were unable to use the lot at all. Taylor said.
He said the congestion had caused automobile collisions in the lot.
(Continued from page 1)
4,020...
included train page 1)
the population is stable and allows housing to do more for the bells.
She said that such an increase could help sororites and fraternities in financial difficulties, although some had full houses and still had money troubles.
Benciviego said Monday that she would try to make arrangements with the city to provide an area on Louisiana Street to be a home for parents for children attending Hilltop.
The slight increase was reflected in other organized living groups on campus.
Terry Edwards, assistant to the dean of women in charge of sororites, said, "We had an increase in January of 13 per cent in the number of people who registered for rush and an increase of 11 per cent in the number who pledged."
"There is the realization that the University is more than just what you learn in school."
She attributed the increase to a renewed interest in organized living groups and the support students could derive from such a living arrangement.
She said prospects for obtaining a loading zone for the day care center were not good. However, she said, receiving the cooperation of the School of Religion would probably be harder than obtaining a loading zone from the city.
To get permission to make a loading zone in front of the center, Bencivengo said, she must first talk to the Lawrence chief of police. She must then make her request for the zone to the Lawrence City Commission, she said.
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Tandberg products--receivers, amplifiers, radios, speakers, tape machines—are dynamic, active entities. They provide communication; they establish contact, disseminate information, and create inspiration through the gift of sound.
If better quality is to be achieved, the process of that achievement should be enjoyed as much as the end result. When it comes to products there must be as much pleasure taken in producing the best as there is in owning the best. Both producer and owner must share in the enthusiasm of the search for quality.
Tandberg does not make products for their own sake. Tandberg produces instruments to generate pleasure, enthusiasm and inspiration—instruments for enrichment, instruments for enjoyment.
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Exclusively at AMS Electronics
10-6 M-S 724 Mass. 841-2672
WITH TWAYOU GET EUROPE FOR ALMOST NOTHING NEXT TO NOTHING AND ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.
ABOUT $50.
on double occupancy) Continental breakfast, taxes and service charges. Plus 4 theatre tickets, admission to 6 discotheques, sightseeing, and more. Go before March 31 when prices go up.
This spring recess TWA has great, inexpensive city packages in London, Paris, Rome, Athens and Amsterdam. For example, for $50 plus airfare you get 7 days in London, including a room with private bath, (based
$4.30 A NIGHT.
Only TWA gives you Stutelpass* It's a coupon booklet that gets you a room and Continental breakfast in a guesthouse or student hotel in any of 52 cities for only
$4.30 a night, no reservations needed. Plus tickets good for meals and concerts and lots of things.
FREE.
When you land in London, Paris, Rome, Madrid, Amsterdam or Frankfurt, just turn in your boarding pass at the TWA city ticket office within 24 hours of your arrival and you'll get a brochure full of discounts up to
LONDON.
Free admission to any ten Greyhound Racing Tracks Free admission and drink at La Valbonne, one of London's most terrific clubs Free breakfast at your choice of 10 Quality Inns Free pint of Watney's Red Barrel in your choice of over 40 London pubs
50% off, as well as absolutely free things. Here, for example, are some of the absolutely free things in London and Paris. (Deals for the other cities will be available starting March 15.)
PARIS.
Free 2 hours of motorcycle rental
Free latest-fad gift from
Aux Eschelles de Saint Denis
Free silk tote bag from La Gaminerie
Free drink at Hippopotamus
For more information see your Campus Rep or call TWA
WITH TWA IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG.
*Stutelpass is a service mark owned exclusively by TWA*