2
Tuesday, June 5, 1973
University Daily Kansan
THE STORY OF JOHN C. BROWNE
Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED
Line of Duty
This Kansas high school junior gives a left-handed salute in a formation at American Legion
Boys State, which opened Sunday.
Dykes Mulls Tenure In Visit to Campus
The incoming chancellor of the University of Kansas says that being "tenured in" is no excuse.
Faculty exchange programs, earlier retirement and part-time employment are possible solutions to the problem of tenure, Mr. Dykes said in a Monday night interview.
Exchange programs with faculty of other universities, Dykes said, provides the opportunity for self-renewal in a new environment. Such an exchange program can be a viable alternative to the inflexibility that tenure may cause.
"Earlier retirement, a solution in some private universities, is not practical for a state university and probably wouldn't work in this situation." Dykes said.
"One method that we use at the University of Tennessee is what we refer to as 'teach and internship.' Under this type of program, graduate students are brought in during part-time basis and the University then has a chance to evaluate the teacher's potential.
Dykes said that any solution would be a combination of the many options that the faculty would be called upon to determine. In addition, the faculty administrators and students, he said.
"Percentages are deceptive and can lead to gross oversimplification of the problem. Dykes said "For example, because 76 percent of university is on tenure does not mean that
James Brown, 22, a Haskell Indian Junior College student, has been found not guilty of the murder of Jake Garcia, 19, a former Haskell student.
Jury Acquits Haskell Man
Brown was brought to trial on a second—degree murder charge, later amended to one of voluntary manslaughter. On May 31, the jury brought in the verdict of not guilty
Garcia was stabbed Jan. 24 in the 2100 block of Massachusetts Street and pronounced dead on arrival at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Brown was found in his dormitory room at Haskell and told police that Garcia and another Haskell student, Terry Beaver, of Oklahoma City, had beaten him with their belts.
Campus Parking Fine System To Change in Fall Semester
Major revisions in campus parking requirements will be instituted in the fall menu.
Lt. Edwin Fenstemaker, head of the Security and Parking Department, said the new regulations would be published in a pamphlet to be issued Aug. 26.
Fenstemaker noted that one of the changes would stabilize the present, "inadequate" fine system. Fines now are assessed on a graduated scale. There is no penalty for failing to meet the second costs $2, the third $4, the fourth ticket and succeeding tickets $16.
Other changes in policy will subject visitors to stricter regulations along yellow curbs. Fenstemaker said such violations were inexusable because yellow curbs were nationally recognized as no-parking areas.
THE NEW regulation will establish a single fine amount, which will remain the same regardless of the number of tickets issued to the same vehicle.
Also, vehicles with five or more unpaid tickets will be subject to removal from campus and impoundment until back fines are paid, he said.
Fensterman make he and his staff would continue to make extensive surveys of the students. He said the basic rationale behind present methods is "to make necessary space available for persons who run the University and to allow them to be reasonably close to where they attend classes."
PRESENTLY, THE KU campus has more than 5,000 parking spaces available. The department registers about 4,000 vehicles. Even with the excessive spaces in O' zone (south of Robinson Gymnasium) and V park (north of Memorial Stadium) as many as 450 tickets for violations each day. This has resulted in more than 4,000 unpaid fines to date.
Students holding unpaid tickets are not permitted to re-enroll, graduate or transfer credits. Faculty and staff members can lose their parking privileges and be subject to other university discipline for the same offense.
The Security and Parking Department employs 10 full-time officers and 25 to 40 students on a part-time basis to help issue tickets and operate the traffic stations.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 144
Telephones
Newsroom: 844-6410
Advertising/Circulation: 844-6358
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Friday during the winter semester, examination periods. Mail subscription rates are &a$4 per student at $a$4. Academic requirements are &b$4644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment codes. All students without regard to color, creed or national origin may be required of necessary by the University of Kansas or the State Board of Education.
new staff! Moraine Dodd, dothr. Zainal (dobh) associate manager, Khalifa (khalifa) associate manager, Cameran college. Rita Haugger, chief Writer, Michael Koch, chief Executive officer, Chuck Goodell, classified manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonial assistant manager, Jack Mitchell, matrimonio
EXPLAINING the major difficulty involved in handling campus traffic, Fenstemaker said, "We do have ample parking, but not at the front door."
Current parking regulations will remain unchanged until the new ones are issued for
the 1972-74 school term beginning in late August.
All-self propelled vehicles owned by faculty, staff or students that are operated on campus must be registered with the Parking and Traffic Office.
DONALD B. SCHLAFENBERG
85940 NO.1064
Archie Reese Dykes
The University of Kansas, like other universities, is suffering from severe financial constraints at the present time, Dykes said. Sertious deficiencies are reflected by shortages in the necessary materials and acquisitions and despatched materials
every department has 67 per cent of its members on tenure."
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"The major challenge," Dykes said, "is to maintain existing programs at the present state and to respond to new needs as they develop.
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To meet this challenge the University community must work as a team to articulate the role of the University to the people."
KIEF'S
Dykes interprets his leadership role as a catalyst for creating an environment where research can move forward and constant examination of issues can occur. Such a candidate should make it possible for students and faculty to take decision-making process of the university.
"inadequate resources to go forward may explain low faculty morale, if it is low," Dykes said "inadequate participation in the university is another explanation."
Dykes said that he had not sensed that morale was necessarily low.
"There are problems," he said, "but I have sensed confident optimism."
Siren Test Set Today
Testing of the disaster siren warning system in Lawrence is scheduled for noon today if the weather is clear. A one-minute blast on the air raid siren will be followed by a short period of a noise warning signal. The test was postponed from Monday because of the weather.
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
A
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It all began in the first grade.
The old "run", Spot, run" method
But don't blame your first-grade teacher. It wasn't her fault. It was the system she had to teach.
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And that's the way it was when you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
But you still said every word to yourself.
If you're an average reader, you’re prob-
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still said every word to yourself.
If you’re an average reader, you’re probably reading that way now.
Which means you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute.
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Tuesday, June 5,1973
3
comment
High Diddle Diddle, Here's A Cat That Asks Riddles
University Daily Kansan
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Associate Editor
When, late last semester, the Kansan acquired a feline descendant of Charles A. Dana's famous office cat, (and named it, in a burst of imagination, "The Office Cat") I sighed and resigned myself to having to read the inevitable editors' it would put out. Little did I know at the time that yet another new writer would speak, and insist on being heard on matters that a cat really has no business being vocal about.
But Jerry has proved to be no ordinary cat, as I have found out in the course of several late-night discussions. He is a cat fan. When he goes to Washington, to be precise—running like greased lightning till he was halfway across the country. The reason for such a precipitate flight from the nation's capital become known as Jerry's story unfolds.
FOR THE MOMENT, he appears to be feeling quite secure, locked in a corner of the room. He doesn't want attention.
comment Don Wright
NATIONAL SECURITY
in the navel of the United States from what he expects to be a cascade of water from some mysterious gate above, "the nation tries to rid itself of the grime of recent years or of two that has taken up residence in various caskets and scams of its structure."
Until today, much of what Jerry has been saying has sounded both incoherent and incredible. But most of what I have been able to piece together from his Eastern-delivery seems to be borne out by things I read in the newspapers a day or two before I was born. (I am very smart, is either a very smart cat or, as he claims, a very unsmart one who, until recently, lived “in this great, big, white house on top of a hill.”)
Carousel
WHAT JERRY PROMISES to reveal could be momentous, unlikely, or even outright fabrication. A cat that has already gone through its quota of nine lives can speak. I am preparing myself for night-long conversations with him with some trepidation.
I plan to put down here only what appears to be truthful or interesting. Otherwise, cats are best kept in their place, especially presumptuous ones. For Jerry, that means the confines of my room. To let him invade the Kanas's newsroom would be risky. For, although no two yet reacted to the news about the death of the editorials, the sight of two cats at the typewriters might evoke comment or upset the night security men.
Riddles--that's what he likes. "If you were given the choice," he says, "would you rather ride an elephant or a donkey?" Ever-conscious of my image and dignity, I assure him I would blindly, unquestioningly, choose the elephant.
And I can only guess at what Jerry would have to say in his editors. Some of his comments I can understand and agree with.
JERRY FORGETS this is the world's greatest democracy, and that Americans vote every four years to keep it so. And when I tell him so, he knows he's corned and changes the subject to something grossly trivial.
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Such as when he says that high meat prices are part of a Communist plot to deprive all good Americans protein. But when he says that Americans have been culled into a sense of passive submission to everything around them, that's when he's going too far.
"What if it was a 7-foot elephant and went charging under a bridge with an 8-foot couch?"
I assure him that I would get off faster than he could say, Jain John Cooke, and let the man go.
"WHAT IF the elephant were to start wallowing around in a muddy stream, covering itself with muck and slime?" Jerry wants to trap me into saying again that I'd jump off, but I am too smart for him.
"Hah. You won't get me that way," I tell him, "I'd stay with the elephant. I've seen elephants washing themselves in streams and you wouldn't couldn't get round to washing itself, too!"
Jerry smiles, nods several times, says "That figures," and goes on to sleep. I bet you that's the last time that that damned cat pulls any riddles on me.
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4
Tuesday, June 5. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Study Says Colleges 'Adequate'
NEW YORK (AP)—America's colleges and universities are doing a generally adequate, though somewhat uneven, job of fulfilling the basic purposes of higher education, the Carnegie Commission of Higher Education said Monday.
But the commission observed that a review of the purposes of higher education was necessary.
Gov. Lucey Asks Nixon To Resign
STATELINE, Nev. (AP)—Gov. Patrick Lacey of Wisconsin urged President Nixon Monday to resign because of the Watergate scandal, but another governor said Nixon still was capable of leading the nation and should stay in the White House.
Lucey, a Democrat, that because of Watergate Nixon could no longer lead the country effectively and should resign rather than risk retaliation to go through the pains of impeachment.
"I think that for the good of the country, the President ought to resign." Luey told reporters at the 65th annual National Legislature on this lake at Lake Tahoe gambling resort.
"The evidence, including his own 4,800-word statement, is so conclusive, not that he had knowledge of the cover-up, but that he cannot be rehabilitated." Lucey said.
In a news conference a few minutes earlier, Virginia Gov. Linwood Holton, chairman of the Republican Governors Association, said he would lead the nation and should stay in office.
Lucey said he was reserving judgment on whether to call for impoachment if Nixon chose the wrong man.
"The trouble with impachment," Lacey said, "is that the cure may be worse than the disease because of the long, drawn-out procedure.
"I don't think Nixon should force the country to that alternative," he said. "We ought not to be put through the traumatic experience of impeachment."
Art Museum Alters Hours
in brief
Beginning this month, the KU Museum of Art will close its galleries to the public each Monday. Offices and the switchboard will remain closed in business operations.
New gallery business operations
Office Seeks Assistant
Tuesday-Saturday—9 a.m.-4:45 p.m.
Sunday—1:30 p.m.-4:45 p.m.
A part-time position with the Dean of Men's office will be open July 1. The position is for a graduate student and will be for a year. The job will entail working with minority students. Candidates must have a knowledge of student personnel and academic services and be familiar with "affirmative action" goals.
Arts Subsidy Defended
Corporate and governmental support for the arts will be discussed by writer and cultural activist BarbaraJardine Dianstonen at 10 a.m. on Wednesday at WTWU-TV channel 11 p.m.
The program is the fourth in a series of discussions exploring the artists world televised nationally by the Public Broadcasting Service Diamonstein is a former director of cultural affairs for New York City and the author of "Open Secrets: 94 Musical Shorts" which she has also written for Review Vogue. Harper's Bazaar, Ms. McCullough
The National Endowment for the Arts will be discussed. Less than 10 per cent of the endowment's funds go directly to artists, playwrights and composers.
Animal Study Offered
Summer Workshops for Young People and a program for teacher education in natural history are being offered by the Natural History during the summer session.
Special groups of animals will be studied each week, including fossils, insects, birds, reptiles, fish and mammals. Youngsters aged 12 years old are enrolled in the 15 sessions. To participate practical knowledge and experience in the field of natural history and ecology, the teacher-education program is being offered. Two sessions will be offered as part of the biology summer curriculum, one in the second half of the teachers interested in the program should contact Ray Ashton, coordinator of public education at the Museum of Natural History.
Crime Council to Meet
The Douglas County Chapter of the Kansas Council on Crime and Delinquency meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the large auditorium of the public Library at 7th and Vermont streets.
that there could be continued conflict about them during the remaining quarter of this year.
The main point of conflict is likely to be whether higher education should serve as a base of action against existing society on behalf of a different future society, the result of a new report, "Purpose and Performance, Higher Education in the United States."
Officers will be elected and bylaws to the constitution will be considered. Future corrections policy in Douglas County, such as a new jail, will be discussed.
THE 134-PAGE report was issued at a news conference by Clark Kerr, com-
Until now, the commission said, American colleges and universities have done a superior job in enlarging human capital in society and in forwarding pure research.
The institutions' performance in advancing educational and developmental skills is reported.
BUT THE commission said that more attention should be paid to the general education of students, to opportunities for them, and to their social well-being as the enhancement of their creative skills.
On two other purposes of higher education—expanding educational justice and assisting critical evaluation of society for the sake of society's self renewal—the institutions got poorer marks from the commission.
The commission said that educational justice could be improved by determined action.
IT ALSO recommended that special efforts be made to find qualified members of minority groups and women for consideration for faculty positions.
people from low-income and minority groups-with adequate financial assistance
The commission viewed higher education's role in the critical evaluation of society as "quite uneven in the past and uncertain for the future."
It said that individual members of the campus community, but not the institution
or its corporate bodies, should engage in such activity.
HOWEVER THE commission cautioned such individuals to keep in mind that "they are not the only people in society with a right to evaluate society."
The commission said that American higher education had become "heavily loaded with functions" over the years, ranging from providing financial support to advising and instructing persons and organizations outside the campus.
Beame Wins N.Y. Primary
NEW YORK (AP)—City Comptroller Abraham Beame won a four-way Democratic primary for mayor Monday, but failed to win 40 per cent of the vote and faces a runoff June 28 against Rep. Herman Badillo.
The results assure New York a four-way general election in November, with different candidates on Democratic, Liberal and Conservative ballot lines.
Badillo, a reform Democrat and the first Puerto Rican elected to Congress, came in second, ahead of Rep. Mario Blaggi, a conservative, who had the Conservative party's nomination.
State Assemblyman Albert Blumenthal
was last in the Democratic voting, but won a place on the ballot as Liberal party leader.
With 4,301 of 4,659 districts reporting—
per cent of the total—the vote was Beame
250,760 or 34 per cent; Baddalion 269,333 or 29
per cent; and Blumenthal 116,788 or 16 per cent.
The four were competing to replace John V. Lindsey as mayer of the nation's largest airport.
A veteran of city politics at 67, Beame-
campioned on *knowledge* of city
politics.
Bingg is a much-decorated former police lieutenant who was chief architect of the city's emergency response system.
Survey...
FROM PAGE ONE
said they didn't trust the information in the media about the shortage. About a fifth of the students said they thought the crisis was genuine.
"Small cars are coming into their own again," one student observed.
Some students who said the shortage was
The Kansan survey was compiled by five persons attending KU's Publications Adviser's Workshop, which began Tues., May 29. Those interviewing KU students as part of enrollment were Marion Pike, Pike Houston, Linda Stocker, Wally Lights and Jim Lester.
real comment on waste at the University.
"Gas is wasted by B&G (Building and Grounds Department) and the police," said another researcher, rather than the university washed electricity.
a car. Twelve per cent said they walked, and eight per cent said they traveled by bicycle or motorcycle. Others used the bus and hitchhiked.
One woman commented that she didn't have a transportation problem because she had a job.
Almost half the students said they were living in an apartment this summer. Eleven persons said they were renting houses and an equal number said they were commuting. Others are living in a residence hall, a house they own, a duplex, a trailer.
More than half the students said they were cooking for themselves during the summer. One said, "I cook, but we go out to eat a lot." Another student, who is living in a residence hall, said, "I'm happy I don't have to cook."
Students interviewed did not include any freshmen. Almost half of those questioned said they were seniors, about a quarter said that they were graduate students and about half said they were junior students. Eight sophomores and one special student were also included.
Summer Enrollment Up 273
Tentative enrollment figures for the University of Kansas 101 summer session begin in August.
Summer Fee Use Unaltered
On the first day of class, 5,010 students were enrolled at the Lawrence campus and 1,311 were enrolled at the Kansas City campus, making a total of 6,321 students.
University usage of summer session students' fees is no different from that of similar fall and spring income, a university finance officer says.
Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, says that most of the money under the category of incidental fees goes into general university operations "to provide most of summer-session salaries plus some tail salaryes plus some department costs."
An undergraduate student taking six hours this summer pays $80.75 of his total $101.50 enrollment charge for those incidental fees.
As examples of typical costs covered by incidental fees, Nitcher cities address the costs of the chancellor, registrar and loans), supplies, travel and computer expenses.
"Summer fee-income will not be as much as summer-session salaries." Nitcher said in stressing that use of summer fees was the main use of fees in the fall and spring semesters.
As with regular-semester income, the difference between summer fee income and salaries is covered by the state legislature, Nitcher said.
In addition to incidental fees, summer-session students also pay a student activity fee and a health service fee, as do regular semester students.
The Kansas Board of Regents recently lowered the summer student activity fee from $4 to $3.50. The regular semester activity fee also was lowered, from $14 to $12. This fee is allocated by the Student Senate to "student oriented" University organizations.
However, the regents also took concert action raising the student health fee and the session fee was raised from $12.50 to $17.50 a semester register fee went from $23 to $30.
Those payments entitle students to classroom instruction, necessary ordinary health care, special health care at nominal rates, the use of the Kansas Union, free or reduced lunch, participation in activities and participation in daily activities and a copy of each University daily Kansan.
Ultimately, the various three non-optional fees paid by full-time students in summer session or a regular semester provide the same services.
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The overall figure shows a 273 student increase from last summer's total of 6,048 students. The number of students on the Lawrence campus is down five from last year and those enrolled at the Kansas City city number 278 more than last year's total.
The general trend in enrollment since 1969 shows an increasing number of summer session students through the years except during 1971, when it showed a slight decline.
Overall enrollment in 1971 was 5,861, a drop from 1970's total of 5,886. Enrollment declined at both the Lawrence and Kansas City campus. Enrollment at the Lawrence campus in 1971 totaled 4,953, compared to 4,964 in 1970. At the Kansas City campus, 908 students enrolled in 1971, compared to 922 in 1970.
In 1969 total enrollment numbered 5,844,
with 4,681 students at the Kansas City
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Tuesday, June 5, 1973
5
University Dally Kansan
KANSAS
KANSAS RELAYS
Larry Robinson's High-Stepping Style Came Through in Manhattan
Officials OK Skylab Salvage Job
HOUSTON (AP) - Skylan 1's astronaut will conduct a space walk "no earlier than Thursday" in an attempt to deploy a broken solar power panel and boost the electricity available to the crippled space station, officials said Monday.
The space walk salvage job go-ahead came after a meeting of top space agency officials at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville Ala.
A spokesman said that after careful study it was observed that "no unusual safety risks were found" in the space walk repair job and that "the potential gain outweighed the risks involved" in attempting the 'repair.
DETAILED techniques on how to perform the job of snapping into place the jammed panel are ready for relay to Skylab astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., Paul J. Weitz and Dr. Zuse P. Kenwer. K
Officials said the astronauts probably would practice the trick job on Wednesday and perform the work "no earlier than Thursday."
THE STATEMENT said that without use of the power wing or some other type of "power augmentation" the complete experiment schedule of Skylab could not be
If the power panel can be successfully deployed it can almost double the available power.
performed and that 'a 36-day mission would not be possible' for Skylab 2 and 3.
Mission Control officials said Connau, a four-mission veteran who has spent more time in space than any other man, would make the final decision on which of the astronauts attempts the job and how it is done.
On Monday, the 11th day of their scheduled 28-day mission, the astronauts performed earth resources studies and aerial photography as it orbited 270 miles over the earth.
Sports
Although the academic part of college line stopped on May 18, the athletic part continued.
By GERALDEWING
Kensan Staff Writer
The most notable event for KU was the Jahyawks' victory in the Big Eight Outdoor Track and Field Championships May 18-19 at Manhattan.
THE TEAM received outstanding performances from Mark Lutz, Delario Robinson and Terry Porter in coating to its tight conference outdoor championship.
The Jayhawk track team, considered the pre-meet favorite, easily outdistanced cross-state rival K-State by the score of 137-119
Lutz, a junior from Rochester, Mmm., finally whipped his rival, Dean Williams of Columbus, 220-yard dashes. Lutz was clocked in 9.2 seconds in the 100 and 20.4 seconds in the 220.
Robinson, who has been finishing second to teammate Greg Gandev most of the season, finally beat Vandever in the 120 yard high jumped in 13.4 seconds. Robinson, who was the defending conference champion in the high jumped, also placed third in
PORTER, who is the reigning king in the NCAA and Big Eight indoor pole vaults, added another accomplishment by winning the outdoor championship with a meet record vault of 17.4. The old record, 16-8 was held by Chuck Rogers of Colorado.
Jayhawks Win Big Eight Track Meet, Sign Players
Porter was also the winner of the Henry F. Schulte Award, which is given to the meet's outstanding performer as voted by the coaches.
THE FINAL meet of the season for the Jayhawks will be the NCAA Outdoor Championships, Thursday through Saturday in Baton Rouge, La.
KU basketball coach Ted Owens announced the signing of seven stellar basketball players to national letters-of-credit to bolster the asking篮球队 program.
The seven players are: Bob Emery, 6-5,
from Lyndon High School; Reben Shelton,
6-4, from Northwest High School in St.
Louis; Donnie Von Moore, 6-9, from Kenwood
High School in Chicago; Dale Hare,
6-4, from Northwest High School;
Jack Hollis, 6-4, Aurora, III,
East High School; Norman Cook, 6-9,
from Community High School in Lincoln, III;
the 220 and fourth in the triple jump.
The most outstanding performance of the meet was turned in by Rick Wohlhuter, who won the mile run in 3:58.8, his fastest time ever. Wohlhuter, who runs for the Chicago Track Club, had vowed he would break Jim Ryun's six-year-old record of 3:51.1
The only other KU athletes to place were Randy Smith, who tied for fifth in the high jump, and Gregg Vandeveer, who finished sixth in the 120-yd. high hurdles. The University of Kansas as a team finished fourth with 36 points.
WOLHULTER's pledge was believable.
He recently broke Ryun's 880-yd. world
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Kansas City's new National League Hockey team will be named the Kansas City Scouts, it was announced Monday.
Team Called 'Scouts'
The golf game was won by Oklahoma State University. KU finished seventh
Kansas Team Places Fourth As Lutz, Colson Clear Field
The announcement was made by Edwin Thompson, team president, in a Kansas City park in front of a statue called "The Scout."
OKLAHOMA ALSO won the tennis title;
Colorado was second. KU finished fifth.
University of Kansas track stars Mark Lutz and Sam Colson turned in impressive performances at the 11th Annual United States Track and Field Federation Meet held last weekend at Wichita's Cessna Stadium.
Three other Big Eight Conference championships were decided in the break between the spring and summer sessions. The University of Oklahoma, KU finished seventh.
Lutz, who has improved with every meet, easily outdistended a star-studded field in the 250-yard dash. He was timed in a windy race, and ended third in the 100-yard dash with a time of 9.2.
OTHER OUTSTANDING performances were turned in by Wes Santee, the former KU great who won the Masters 800-yd. run in 2:08.7, and by Tad Scales of the Lawrence Track Club, who set a new record of 15-1 in the high school division pole vault.
After winning the Big Eight meet two weeks ago, Colson turned in his second impressive performance in a row with a win over Rudy Valiente. He won this meet with a throw of 290-2.
OSU won the Big Eight Conference All-Sports Championship, having finished first in wrestling, golf and cross-country running. Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas, Kansas State and Iowa State. KU's sixth-place finish was one of its worst showings in the years. The Jayhawks were hurt in the football in basketball, golf and baseball.
mark of 1:44.9 with a time of 1:44.6 at a meet in Los Angeles.
Wohlfuhner, who competed in the 800 meter run at the Munich Olympics, also helped lead the team.
At the King Freedom Games held in May at Durham, N. C., Wohlhuber anchored his Chicago Track Club二-mile relay team to a world record time of 7:10.4. His time of anchor leg matches Peter Snell's 1980 man, the fastest recorded 880-yd. relay leg.
Ryan, the former KU star, is currently running for the International Track Association, the newly formed professional track tour.
Summer...
FROM PAGE ONE
received her bachelor's degree in journalism from KU in 1971.
Rita Haugh, copy chief, is taking graduate courses in education before returning to teach journalism and English to high-school students this fall. She received degrees from KU in 1972 and 1973, and edited the Kansan last summer.
Collectively, the editorial staff has 19 semesters of experience on the Kannan. We of the staff will, nevertheless, make sure we will strive to avoid and to eliminate them.
We'll try to use our energies and experience to publish an informative, effective blog.
If you see something in the Kansas that you don't like, call us at 864-4810 or write us at 112 Park Hall. When the Kansas makes a correction, I will acknowledge it and publish a correction.
SOME OF the uncertainty surrounding the athletic program will be resolved with the appointment of a new athletic director to succeed interim director A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, who has held the position since Wade Simson's resignation. Jan. 15
Letters are welcome and groups of letters will be published from time to time.
Festival of Bard to Mix Theatre, Film
Kansen Staff Writer
By CATHY Q'BRIEN
The second annual Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute began Sunday with a concert of Elizabeth vocal and instrument chamber music.
The concert sounds of harpsichord, recorder, guitar and voice blended to create a mood intended to last throughout the festival.
The total feel of an era will be captured in the concerts, lectures, films and theatre productions that deal with Shakespeare's works, his life and times.
SHAKESPEARE festivals and institutes are now held throughout the United States, but until last year, there were none in this part of the country. According to Tom Rea, associate professor of speech and drama and assistant director of theatre, this led to the development of the Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute at KU.
KU's program is built on the cooperation of the English, music history, art history and speech and drama departments. Classes and lectures this summer will feature the features of Shakopee and the effect of the Renaissance-composers and painters on him.
There will be a weekly radio series featuring
storing, recording and broadcasting structures.
Their plays and interviews.
"The State of Man" will feature extractions from plays and will be performed by members of the cast.
THERE WILL be four theatre productions this summer: "The State of Man," "Julius Caesar," "Shakespeare's Women" and "The Taming of the Shrw."
Segmentes of the theatre productions will be filmed for local television programming.
"Shakespeare's Women" will consist of scenes from various plays featuring women. William Keeler, assistant professor of theatre and speech and drama and director of "Shakespeare's Women," sees the production as a "polarity of exuberance." The production will consist of two acts, "Women in Love" and "Women in Power."
and performed at the theatres as Stratford-on-Avon Memorial Theatre and the Phoenix Theatre. In 1984, he was the guest speaker at House, where he performed "Hamlet."
Jerome Kilty. In 1957, when Murphy Hall was opened, the first production was "Henry IV," in which Kilty as guest actor played the part of Falstaff. This summer he will be the guest director of the play, "The Taming of the Shrew."
A graduate of KU, Sawyer has studied and taught at the London Royal Academy
all performances for the plays will begin at 8 p.m., with a pre-show at 7:30 p.m. in the Murphy courtyard. There will be "Elizabethan" singers, dancers, flower girls and book sellers. Elizabethan's sweets and "Tudor" cookies will be sold at booths.
ANOTHER GUEST of the institute will be
And Tuesday will be held at 13:30 p.m. today in the rehearsal room of Murphy Hall. Readings will be for "Shakespeare's
Women," with Jack Brooking, director of the institute and of the production "Julus
IT IS POSSIBLE to get one hour of credit for any work in performance, production or crew work. Undergraduates should enroll in course 95 and graduates in 320.
There are also openings for flower girls and book and candy vendors.
Ticket prices are: $2, general admission;
$1, student tickets; and $6 for summer season coupons. Tickets for the film series can be obtained at the SUA Box Office in the Kansas Union or at the door. The price is 75 cents.
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Tuesday, June 5, 1973
University Daily Kansan
In the Interim
A Review of Events Since May 8...
FROM PAGE ONE
Members of KU's Class of '73 Walk Down the Hill to the Stadium
Nichols said he intended to include representation from the Senate Committee on Faculty Rights, Responsibilities and Privileges on a tenure committee.
The School of Social Welfare Promotion and Tenure Committee met with Nichols to seek tenure denied by three faculty members. The school's memorial school would lose some excellent teachers.
IN A COLLEGE of Liberal Arts and Sciences Assembly meeting May 8, members approved a proposal to consider members of committees who become tenured as holding their new positions, not their old ones. Membership on committees is allocated by faculty rank, which means they are most likely promoted to the tenured position of associate professor would then be classified as an associate professor.
Members of the College Assembly approved the revised requirements for the bachelor of arts degree in a mail vote, 335-131. Also approved in the mail ballot, 286-191. The college also accepted of the KU Curriculum and Instruction survey to members of the College faculty.
OTHER ACTION by the College Assembly increased the total number of student representatives in the assembly from 20 to 25 per cent of the total number of regular faculty of the College. The undergraduate representation will remain at 20 per cent and the additional students will be graduate students.
The University Council approved a motion May 10 to allow the College to give a grade of incomplete to students who took the course. The University Council also discussed classes but hadn't passed the Western Civilization comprehensive exam. The Council also approved a resolution providing for a 25-day enrolment in spring classes and a 30-day enrolment in study decrease enrolment time to 2 days.
Commencement Marked By Honors for Nichols
The May 21 Commencement of KU's largest graduating class, 3,054, was threatened by rain. Chancellor Raymond Nichols told seniors to look to the stars in his farewell address, and the seniors looked at the ominous grey sky and laughed. The ceremony was shortened by not having seniors walk across the stae.
Nichols received one of several honors at Commencement when Regent Jess Stewart of Wamego announced that Nichols would become KU's first chancellor emeritus on May 15, in addition. KU's Space Technology Building was renamed Raymond Nicholls Hall.
NICHOLS received an honorary "K-card" and "K-jacket" from the Athletic Board and an honorary life membership and a piece of Steuben glass from the Alumni Association. His wife, Clytie, got a painting from the Endowment Association. He is also survived by Sigma Chi fraternity, of which Nichols is a member, and the Endowment Association.
The auditorium of the new Nichols Hall will be named the Ron Evans Apollo Room, in honor of the KU alumunis, who was a member of the Anello 17 flight to the room.
Meanwhile, KU scientists in Nichols Hall worried about problems encountered in the Skylan space mission because of information that the space station's "Radcat," a sensing device developed by two KU professors, was not functioning. The
"Radscat," is a combination of a radiometer, which measures the temperature of the earth and the atmosphere, and a radar signal reflector. A radar signals reflected back from earth.
SCIENTISTS working on the Radcat are R. K. Moore, director of the remote sensing laboratory at the University of Wisconsin, associate professor of electrical engineering on the Radcat, the scientists are measuring the "antenna pattern" of the radar directed toward Earth, one of the only in the U. S. capable of measuring it.
NASA officials and scientists discovered that the Radastat instrument was turned on at the wrong time, which seemed to indicate a connection, but have since received good results.
During Commencement activities, Irvin Youngberg, executive secretary of the Endowment Association, said the resources needed to make a difference during the past year, bringing the total book
M. BERTELLI
value of the Association more than $39 million.
Chancellor Nichols
Faculty members chosen to receive awards for good teaching at Community College.
associate professor of English, Barbara Craig, professor of French and Italian; Frank Pinet, associate professor of geology and systematics and ecology.
EACH AWARD is accompanied by $1,000.
Casagrande won the H. Bernard Fink award
and the others won Standard Oil Company
of Indiana teaching awards, Casagrande
has been at KU since 1967, Craig since 1947,
pinet since 1949 and Rowell since 1967.
THREE NEW members of the Alumni Association Board of Directors are Robert L. Brock, Topeka businessman and attorney, Dr. George B. Burket Jr., Kingman physician and Glee S. Smith, Larned attorney and political leader. Brock was graduated from KU in 1960 and received his bachelor's degree from the School of Medicine in 1987 and Smith graduated from KU in 1943 and received his law degree in 1947.
Seniors recognized as the outstanding members of the class of 1973 were Mary Mitchelson of Baxter Springs, and Les McLaughlin of Dallas, Tex. Both majored in English at the Agnes Wright Strickland Memorial I-Library in the KU Alumni Association
They were chosen by an anonymous committee, and the selection was announced at the senior luncheon by Chancellor Nichols.
Evaluation of the problems in the operation of KU's Computation Center will be announced soon by Nichols. Computer experts from California and Illinois came to KU for consultation on its management and organization as "an effort to improve the quality of production of the Computation Center," according to Nichols.
Local Health Services To Have New Leaders
Lawrence, campus and county health services experienced a change of administrators. Charles Denniston, administrator of Lawrence Memorial Hospital, will leave June 15 for Marshfield successor has not yet been announced.
Coffee, Egg Prices Rise in Survev
By the Associated Press
Coffee and eggs for breakfast? Get them while you can, for their costs are rising alarmingly, along with the costs of such foods. Can stamps as hot dogs and hamburgers.
An AP survey of the prices of 15 food and nonfood items in 13 cities over the past three months showed 35.4 per cent of the products went up in cost in the last three months. Another 41.5 per cent remained the same; only 29.6 per cent were unavailable on one of the survey dates.
The total market basket bill was up in 10 of the cities surveyed, with increases ranging from a fraction of a cent in Chicago to R.I., to almost seven per cent in Chicago.
Coffee and eggs led the list of more costly items. Coffee was up in 11 cities checked, stayed the same in one and was unavailable in one. Most of the increases came between May 1 and June 1 and averaged about 7 or 8 per cent.
EGGS WENT up in 10 cities, down in two and were unavailable in one. Increases from March 1 to June 1 ranged from 2 to 20 per cent.
The higher prices at the checkout counter mirrored earlier boosts in the wholesale price.
Experts in London, headquarters of the International Coffee Organization, said world coffee prices had been rising because of crop failures in Brazil caused by droughts and leaf rust disease; artificially high temperatures; and damage for their exports; and withholding of supplies by growers of the robusta variety of coffee, produced mainly in Africa.
WHOLESALE PRIORIES for eggs during the first quarter of the year rose sharply. The Agriculture Department reported that egg prices decreased during the month May 15, but there was no sign that the savings had been passed on to the consumer.
All-best frankfurters roose in 10 cities from March 1 to June 1 and chopped chuck went up in seven cities. Almost all the increases came in the first two months, however, and between May 1 and May 1, despite higher wholesale prices and short supplies of livestock at market.
The Agriculture Department said last week that livestock supplies in April were down 12 per cent from the previous year, mainly because of the April-17 consumer meat packers to hold back on buying and to withhold their animals from market.
GOV. ROBERT D. Ray of Iowa says that the night notice taught a "meat crust" in 60 states.
The items on The AP's checklist were:
chopped chuck, center cut pork chops,
frozen orange juice, coffee, paper towels,
butter, eggs, peanut butter, detergent,
The careful shopper still could find a few bargains. Buryer and pork chops declined in popularity.
THE CITIES* surveyed were Albuquerque, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Providence, Salt Lake City, and Seattle.
fabric syriac, tomato sauce, chocolate chip cookies, whole milk, all-beef branka
The same supermarket was used in each city for all the price surveys. Standardized brands and sizes or their nearest equivalent were selected for the checklist.
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★★★ANNOUNCING★★★
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MIXED LEAGUE: Starts Wed. Nite June 6 Sign up today! Entries
New director of the Student Health Services at KU will be Dr. Martin Wollmann of Glenside, Pa. He will begin Aug. 1, and replace Dr. Raymond Schwegler, who is retiring, Wollmann, 46, received both his B.A. and M.D. degrees from KU. He spent two years as assistant director and four years as director of the University of Pennsylvania, since 1989 he has been in Pennsylvania, having deputy director and director of the Greater Delaware Valley Regional Medical Program.
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Two women were chosen to be administrator and part-time physician for the Douglas County Health Department. Kay Kent will be chief administrator and Dr. Jennifer Kent will be principal of Kent began June 1 and Levene will begin in July. Kent's previous position was teaching public health nursing at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. Levene graduated from University of Oklahoma and her husband will be the physician at Haskell Indian Junior College for two years.
TWO GROUPS are seeking new administrators. A committee of faculty and students is searching for a dean of the School of Business, and the Board of Regents has indicated it will act on a recommendation to appoint a board staff member to direct statewide academic extension programs.
Clifford Clark, who is resigning as dean of the business school, July 1, will be replaced in the interim year by Joseph Pichler, associate professor of business, who will be acting dean. The goal of the committee is to find a dean to begin July 1, 1974.
Eugene Kasper, director of the Center for Student Development at K-State, will be recommended to the regents at their June 28 meeting as statewide coordinator of extension programs. This will eliminate duplication and give more efficient use of the tax dollar, according to Regent Robert Helman.
TWO OTHER groups have hired new administrators. Headquarters Inc., the drug abuse and personal crisis center, will be managed by Evie Unkefer, a 1973 KU graduate in personnel administration who leads a headquarters volunteer for two years.
2 KU Profs Quit For New Jobs
Dr. Ernest B. Brown Jr. was appointed dean of faculties and academic affairs at the Medical Center, replacing Dr. Dante G. Scarpell, who will be chairman of the department of pathology and oncology. Brown has been at the Medical Center since 1961.
Two KU professors have resigned and been moved in mid-July to take positions at pain management centers.
The professors, Murray Wax, chairman of the department of sociology, and Tosalie Wax, professor of anthropology, accepted similar posts at Washington.
Delbert Shankel, associate dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, attributed their move to the higher salaries they would receive. He said that he was sure
it was a "difficult decision for them to make."
The Waxes were out of town and could not be reached for comment.
Both professors are interested in contemporary American Indian affairs, Indian culture and education in Indian communities. Working as a team or with other researchers, they have conducted several studies on formal education of Indian children on reservations, in small rural schools and in urban areas.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
WEDNESDAY JUNE 6,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
Senate Asks President For Fuel Priority Plan
WASHINGTON—The Senate passed a bill Tuesday requiring the Nixon administration to draw up a nationwide fuel distribution plan in order to establish priorities on the use of fuel and to insure that no part of the country suffers more than another. The legislation would do away with President Nixon's voluntary approach to fuel distribution. Attached to the bill was a non-binding resolution urging states to lower fuel taxes by up to 53 million (or $60 billion) was the greater reduction), to conserve fuel. One intent of the bill is to see that gas station owners and independent refineries get the same crack at petroleum products as the major companies through a rationing of the shortages.
Pompidou Cancels Appearances
PARIS—Fears that the health of President Georges Pompidou may be failing have been confirmed by an announcement from Elysee Palace cancelling all ceremonial appearances scheduled for the anniversary. Press reports hints that Pompidou's aliment may be serious.
The French constitution, which gives the President sweeping powers, does not provide for the naming of a permanent successor. In the event of Pompidou's incapacitation, Senate President Alain Poher would take over until new elections could be held.
Moslem Merchants Strike
JERUSALEM--Just two days before the birthday of Prophet Mohammed, the Moslem merchants of Jerusalem went on strike Tuesday to mark the sixth anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Women placed wreaths on a monument to an unknown Jordanian soldier and the day passed without any incidents. The strike was over as troops patrolled the streets of Jerusalem and troops patrolled the street near all major clashes. In other areas life remained normal with Arab laborers commuting from the gaza Strip to Israel.
There will be northwesterly winds ranging from 5 to 15 miles an hour, and temperatures may drop to the mid-30s during the night, which will be mild and partly cloudy.
The weather today will be mostly warm and sunny with temperatures rising as high as the mid 80s.
Rogers Asks for Aid Approval
WASHINGTON—Secretary of State William P. Rogers urged Congress Tuesday to approve the administration's $2.9 billion foreign economic and military aid program. He said this would improve the lot of the underdeveloped nations and ensure the continued armed forces. "If we want to be one of the first objectives, he said it was essential for nations in the area to be provided with arms for their self defense and internal security.
The United States is currently reported to be negotiating the sale of 24 Phantom jets to Saudi Arabia and another 16 to Kuwait. Rogers said for approval of the sale of military items to Latin America, and said the sale would request for $80.6 million in military aid for Cambodia be approved.
Both the House and the Senate passed bills earlier to prevent the administration from using funds to finance the bombing of Cambodia.
Fighting Continues in Viet Nam
SAIGON—Heavy fighting was going on Tuesday in the Mekong Delta 40 miles south of Saigon even as Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam prepared in Paris to resume their discussions to firm up the Vietnam ceasefire. The Saigon government rushed reinforcements to the area and field reports said fighting was continuing.
Dollar Sets Record Low Mark
LONDON-The dollar sank even lower Tuesday than it has in previous weeks, setting record lows in Europe as the price of gold continued its climb. Although dealers have been blaming the Watergate scandals for damaging confidence in the dollar, some of the criticism now is directed against the floating system itself, which was designed to prevent such monetary crises.
U. S. Treasury Secretary George P. Schulz said in Washington he was puzzled by the dollar's poor performance abroad. Wealthy individuals, corporations and Arab oil interests no longer want to hold dollars. It now remains to be seen how far the dollar will be allowed to weaken before governments step in with emergency measures that could affect the floating system.
Klein Leaves White House Post
WASHINGTON-Herbert G. Klein resigned Tuesday as White House director of communications, saying that pressure had been building up for him to return to private enterprise. His resignation was accepted by President Nixon "with deepest personal regret."
Italian Journalists Protest
ROME—In Italy, a nationwide "widow of silence" was observed Tuesday by journalists protesting "an assault on the freedom of the press." Printers and television personnel struck in sympathy, bringing into attention a total news blackout. The journalists appeared to be specific about the date and nature of these publications including II Messaggio, Romes most prestigious daily, to a publisher known for his rightist views in a leftist land.
Sunny, Warm and Breezy
FANTASTIC
KU's foreign students; how do they think and what do they want? Zahid Iqbal, the Kansan's associate editor, last month interviewed members of KU's alien minority to discover the answers to these questions. Here, in a two-part series, is what he found.
KU's Alien Minority
First of a Series
foreigner," is nervous—and perhaps afraid—as she listens to my reasons for interviewing her.
By ZAIDH IQBAL
Associate Boise State
The girl flicker "incurtable
Foreign Students Striving To Accept Small Unhappinesses
As I continue, she glances at the others in the busy newsroom-American students, most of them at work, a few of them just talking or laughing.
She turns back to me. We have at least one thing in common. For in the confusion of all those faces, the pounding of typewriters and the staccato chatter of the telegrapher.
one thing is obvious—we are both aliens here
I smile encouragingly at her and pop my first question, trying to make it sound very casual.
"TELL ME, how do you like it here?" "Oh, pretty good. It nice."
Her voice trails off uncertaintly as I peer rather closely at her. I don't think I can be sure, but she's looking up at me.
See KU's ALIENS, Page Five
Mitchell Linked To 'Gemstone' File
WASHINGTON (AP)—Robert A. Reisner, an aide in the nixe re-election campaign, testified Tuesday that two weeks before the Watergate break-in he put papers under "Gentleman" political espionage file into an embassy prepared for a meeting with John N. Mitchell.
Reisner told the Senate Watergate committee he was handed the documents a week or two before the break in his boss, Robert Dole, deputy to Mitchell, former attorney general.
The next witness scheduled, when the hearings resume at 9 a.m. (Lawrence time) today, is Hugh W. Sloan Jr., the Nixon campaign treasurer who quit after the campaign contributions wound up in the bank account of one of the Watergate burglaries.
THE COMMITTEE'S schedule of witnesses was thrown into confusion by legal questions centering on whether Maurice H. Hillman was a potential residential counsel John Dean would testify.
were providing the opportunity for him to see any documents relating to the cam
But in another area—logs detailing conversations between President Nixon and Dean—the committee will be luckier. Deputy Press Secretary G. L. Warren, reversing his stand, said a review was being made to find out whether the logs would be
made available on some basis other than subpoena.
Reisner told the senators that a copy on each paper that went through him to Mitchell was copied and that duplicates went to H. R. Haldeman, Nixon's chief of staff.
[Image of two men in suits]
The materials in "Gismeteen"—a code word for political espionage reports—were brought up for the first time in the Senate hearings Tuesday, first by Sally J. Harmony, secretary to convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Lidvy.
"WE WERE working for the presidents who was the candidate," he said, "so we
MITCHELL MAGRUDER
Harmony had given the committee a stenographer's view of typing memoranda—some on the Gemstone stationery—for the "Dial" series of Ruby One, "Ruby Two," and "Crystal."
She said she also typed wretap transcripts, but was "not aware they were wretap conversations at the time I was typing them."
REISNER introduced another code word into the Watergate lexicon: "sedan chair."
He said a person known as "Sedan Chair" had been paid $1,000 a month for six to nine months from a cash fund maintained by the campaign director of the campaign committee's scheduling.
"That individual was receiving information, it seemed, from the Hubert H. Hubert Foundation."
REESNER had given the committee a day-to-day diary he kept while working for McGraw-Hill.
He said he had no knowledge before June 17 that there were plans for the break-in. And Reisner said he also didn't know of any plan to disrupt the Democratic campaign.
d administrator wearing a See MITCHELL, Back Page
PALERMO
Kansan Photo by HANK YOUNG
KU Students, Yet Alone
More Watergate Stories Unfold
John D. Ehrlichman, in a deposition taken last month and released Tuesday, said Job S. Magruder, the committee official in charge of the death of the threat April 14.
WASHINGTON (AP)—A former presidential adviser has testified that Watergate conspirator G. Gordon Liddy was the deputy director of President Nikon's research division.
According to Eriklrichan's testimony, the threat was made around mid-March 1972, when Liddy was allegedly trying to get intelligence gathering and wiretapping.
At another point Ehrlichman said Magruder told him that the alleged death threat made him fearful because Liddy "had been known to carry a gun, that he considered him to be a rather unstable character . . ."
Ehrichman's testimony included an allegation by Magruder that John N. Mitchell approved the wretapping of the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office building. Ehrlichman said Mitchell refused to discuss the matter with him and he said he had been present for the third man, Frederick C. LaRue, who was said to have been present when Mitchell approved the plan.
Mitchell was the director of the Committee for the Re-election of the President; Magruder was deputy director and LaRue was a Mitchell aide.
According to Ehrlichman, Nickson said it was evident that the man who had been responsible for the previous White House attack on Mr. Bush was involved in the scandal "up to his eyebrows."
ERLICHMAN, who was Nixon's chief adviser on domestic affairs, said he talked to Magruder in connection with instructions he had given to conduct an investigation of the Waterate affair.
Dean, the White House counsel, was fired April 30, and Ehrlichman resigns his post.
Meanwhile Tuesday, a White House
on campus
A CARILLON recital by Albert Gerken, university carillonneur, will be presented tonight at 8 o'clock at the Memorial Campanile.
spokesman said there would be a review of whether logs detailing conversations between Nixon and Dean would be made available to Watergate prosecutors. Deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren had said the logs would not be made available.
THE LOGS became important after it was reported that Dean was prepared to testify that he had met with Nixon 35 to 40 times to discuss aspects of the coverup. The White House has said repeatedly that the President knew nothing of the coverup.
Meantime, a former aide in the Nixon reelection campaign told the Senate Watergate committee that he put documents labeled "Gernestone"-the code word for political esponge papers—into a bag for use at a meeting with Mitchell.
Robert Reisner, at one time an aide to
Maggreuer, the material
stories. *STORIES, Back Page*
Trolley Car Tracks Stir Nostalgia
By MARION PIKE
Kansan Writer
At Seventh and Kentucky, truenet tracks over a century old have stirred the imagination of several Lawrence residents. Can these old tracks, still preserved under a few inches of smooth asphalt, solve transportation problems for Lawrence today?
A horsedrawn street railway system operated in Lawrence in 1871. Later, a team of small mules pulled the cars through the business district on Massachusetts St. They ran south to the Mascion Temple and north across the river to the Union Pacific Depot. During the '80's the rails extended south on Tennessee to 17th St.
In the fall of 1999, electric power cars began carrying passengers in downtown Lawrence. On April 9, 1910, the first streetcar rides rope up Mt. Ourea.
AT THE HEIGHT of streetcar prosperity, there were three service routes. Three cars ran at 20-minute intervals on the main line and two on the Massachusetts streets. They ran north to Seventh Street east to the Santa Fe station, south on New Jersey to 131st St, and east on 13th to Haskell Ave. They ran north on Haskell nearly to 131st St, and they ran main line east on 13th to Prairie Ave.
The KU run started at 8th and Massachusetts streets, ran west to Mississippi SK., then south to McCook Field. The single track from McCook Field to the single track is 6 miles.
See TROLLEY, Page Four
100
Kansan Photo by RAYNA LANCASTER
Trollcy Rails at 8th and Tennessee Streets Reveal a Presence of the Past
2
Wednesday, June 6. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Citv Studies Sewer Usage to Get Grant
Kansan Staff Writer
By BETSY RIORDAN
The Lawrence City Commission approved on Tuesday a motion to allocate $8,000 for a
new recreation center.
City Manager Buford Watson said that the study would be undertaken in compliance with federal requirements to obtain a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA).
The EPA grant would enable the city to construct a sewage treatment plant. Watson said that he expected the EPA grant to fund $6 million per the total of the cost, or about $8 million.
THE MOTION authorized the mayor to sign a contract with the engineering firm of Lloyd Martin.
Libraries' Workers Refused Recognition
Kansan Staff Write
BY JACKSON MITCHELL
The Kansas Public Employee Relations Board dismissed a petition for recognition, which had been submitted by KU library classified emlovers, on Thursday.
In dismissing the petition, the board refused to recognize the employees as a bargaining unit on the basis that the unit would be too small, about 95 persons, according to Carol Wampler, secretary of the board.
The classified employees were represented by Jack Lovett, Area Director of Communication Workers of America, when the petition was presented. Lovett argued that the training was essential because they required special training in performing their jobs not required by any
other type of clerical work. He also pointed out that the classified employees had no opportunity to communicate with employees outside the library.
Concurrent with the petition another proposal was made by the State Civil Service Department asking for certain employees to have one single unit. Having two conflicting proposals before the board at the same time was definitely a disadvantage to the library employees, according to Sandra Wilson, assistant in the Engineering Library.
The employees can do very little in the near future because there is no means of appeal, but there is a possibility they will start organizing on a campus-wide basis.
The commission meeting was attended by 36 Boys' State mayors and two members of the American Legion, which sponsors Boys' State. The young mayors observed a city government in operation and asked what dealt with city management problems.
Commissioner Barkley Clark said that he had been a Boy's Stater himself in 1968.
"It's not a very long jump from there to here," Clark said.
CLARK COMMENTED on the boys' hair length which, he said, was much longer than when he had participated in the program. He also noted that he had been the trademark of Boys' State.
A spokesman for the East Lawrence Project Area Committee announced plans for a picnic to be held at 4 p.m., June 9 at 10th and Delaware streets, site of the East Lawrence Recreation Center. He said that everyone was welcome and asked that those who came be willing to help serve food and soft drinks.
In other business, the commission approved a resolution that designated the city manager as Lawrence's agent for obtaining funds under the Disaster Relief Act.
WATSON SAID that damage from high water was partially corrected, but warned that the problem probably would not be solved entirely.
The commission approved the proposed site for Mill Park Plaza, to be located at 1328 W. 9th St. The plan calls for an office in what was once a fraternity house.
Libraries, Union Schedules Listed
University of Kansas Libraries, the Kansas Union and its food services and the Lawrence Bus Co. have listed summer hours for their services.
The reference, circulation, periodicals,
art, reserve, copying and microforms
from June 4 through July 27 as follows:
Monday-June 4 from a 8: am to 10: p.m;
Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m; Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday is it
The only exception is July 4, when the departments will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
FROM JULY 28 to August 26 the departments of the library will be open on Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and closed on Saturdays and Sundays.
The documents department follows the same schedule except that it is closed on Saturdays and between 5 and 7 p.m. on Mondays.
The East Asian department of Watson Library is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and closed on Saturdays and Sundays.
THE SCIENCE Library will follow the same schedule as the main departments of WSU.
THE LAW LIBRARY will be open from
4:30 through 7:25 on July 26, on Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.; Saturday
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday from
2:30 to 10 p.m.
The Engineering and Architecture Library and the Music Library follow the same schedule as the Earth Science Library but are closed on Saturdays.
On Fri, July 27 the Law Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Earth Science Library will follow the same schedule with the exception of between 5 and 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday when it is closed.
From July 28 to August 26, the library will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
THE UNIVERSITY Archives will be open
Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m.
The Mathematica Library will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Department of Special Collections and the Kansas Collection will be open Monday from Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and closed on weekends.
The Map Library will be open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to noon and on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Entomology Reading Room will be open on Tuesdays only from 1.0 to 4 p.m.
DYCHE READING Room will be open
Monday through Friday from 1 o'clock p.m.
and then from 5-7 p.m.
THE CAFETERIA will be open Monday through Friday from 7 to 8:30 a.m. to serve breakfast, from 8:30 to 10 a.m. to serve lunch, from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. to serve lunch.
The Kansas Union building will be open in the summer Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 9 p.M., Saturday from 7 a.m. to 8 p.M., and Sundays from 2 to 10 p.M.
The Deli will be open Monday through
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 145
Telephones
Newsroom: 844-8100
Advertising/Circulation: 844-4358
83rd Year, No.145
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters, and Monday throughursday during the winter semester. Mail applications to Stacey Horn, 604-357-8121, stacey.horn@kansas.edu. Mail subscription fees are $ä a $15 fee per person. Accommodations, goods, services and employment benefits apply. All applicants without regard to color, creed or national origin. Or students from the University of Kansas or of the State Board of Education.
new staff: MONICA Dodat, director. Zahid狄马, associate manager. MARIANA FREEDMAN, associate manager. JOE HASUO, chief PRISON officer. JOHN KAUFMAN, branched manager. MARK ROSS, branched manager. GEOFFREY CLASSIDER, classified manager. JONK MITCH, severing manager. MICHAEL MOLINER, assistant business manager. JACK MITCH, assistant business manager.
A
A Student Takes Advantage of Watson Library
Friday from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. and Sundays from 4 to 7 p.m.
The Hawk's Nest will be open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
The Prairie Room Restaurant will be open Monday through Friday from 11 a.m.
TWO BUSES provide campus service Monday through Saturday.
The buses will follow a route. A bus leaves Ellsworth Hall via Lewis Hall to campus and downtown every 10, 30 and 50 minutes from 7:10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
A bus leaves Oliver Hall to campus and downtown every five, 25 and 45 minutes from the airport.
A BUS LEAVES the Kansas Union to Ellsworth Hall and Oliver Hall on the hour, and every 20 and 40 minutes past the hour from 7:20 a.m. to 5:20 p.m.
A bus leaves Gertrude Sellard Pearson
tail and Corbin Hall to campus for 15, 35
units of training.
A bus leaves the Kansas Union to GSP and downtown on the hour, 20 and 40 minutes past the hour from 7:20 a.m. to 5:40 p.m.
A bus leaves the Massachusetts campus and residence halla every 10, 30 and 50 minutes from 7:10 a.m. to 5:10 p.m.
Police to Sponsor Auction of Bicycles
The abandoned bicycles, which have been held for more than six months, will provide money for the Fire and Police Retirement Fund.
Richard Stanwick, Lawrence Police Chief,
announced a bicycle auction to be held 9 a.m. June 16 on the front lawn of the Police Station.
The multi-disciplinary program will explore such areas as art and architecture; sex, race and violence and literature as a social-historical resource. Lectures are in English, followed by group discussions and field trips.
The American College of Amsterdam and the University of Amsterdam faculty is offering a five week, six credit summer course. The American and Dutch studies from July 9 to August 7.
The American Study Center in Amsterdam is also offering a program of study combining academic and cultural features in the islands during the 1973/74 academic year.
Many of the 48 bicycles which will go on sale have been listed as being in good condition.
Summer Dutch Studies Offered
Students will take 12 units in Dutch language, literature, art, and society.
Tuition for that program is $1250 per academic year or $650 per semester. Further information and application forms for both programs can be obtained from the U. S. Office, AGA, 62 Montague St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201.
The fee, including enrollment, tuition,
room and breakfast is $550.
The building originally was the Theta Ticha fraternity house and last year it became the Yellow Brick Road school. For a short time, the building housed Studio 8 Apartments.
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Parking areas, landscaping and curb adjustments are part of the building plan.
that commission meetings would be held at 7:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month and at 2 p.m. on all other Tuesdays in the month.
Commissioner Clark emphasized that the ordinance was in no way binding. He said that it was more a guideline for scheduling business.
An ordinance was passed that provided
By KRISTA POSTAL
Douglas County real estate tax assessment.
Beginning last July, real estate records of Douglas County were converted into computerized data.
Do not fold, bend or mutilate your
County. County real estate tax assessment.
Programming completed in mid-January now enables the computer, which is leased hourly by the county, to determine and assess real estate tax for county residents.
nsan Staff Writer
Douglas County Converts Real-Estate Tax Records Into Computer Data Cards
Replacing a hand-typed assessment are four computer cards, which will eventually alleviate the amount of mechanical work required to perform the task to Jim Tate, data processing director.
Though not much time has been saved this year because of the extra work needed to convert the information, both money and time will be saved in the future. Tate said.
"Every office is now being used and overused. The number of records require
Tate said that the computerization of
information would relieve a great part of the work load. Fifteen drawers of real estate records alone were transferred onto two discs.
Exhibits, Films Spice Summer
Theatre productions, films and exhibits have been planned as summer activities for the city.
The KU School of Fine Arts is presenting a summer series of carillon recitals on Sundays and Wednesdays featuring Albert Tennant's next recital will be at 9 a.m.
Solid evidence of the computer's usefulness will be available sometime this month as a print-out of the county valuation abstract is being prepared.
The abstract, which will be used in planning the upcoming budget for the County by Budget Director Darlene Hills, is progressing well, according to Tate.
Sans Company will present "The State of Man" performed by Tom Sawyer in conjunction with the Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute. The production will be staged at Murphy Hall. The Sans Company will also conduct Julius Caesar June 16 and June 18-23.
"The Lost Patrol"), a film starring Boris Karloff, will be presented Friday night, and Sunday night the Shakespearean Film Classic will be "A Midsummer Night's Dream."
Art and Historical exhibits will be displayed throughout June. The Kansas Union display cases feature a reflection of yesteryear, with photographs dating to 1923 shown. The display was prepared by the Kenneth Spencer Research Library and includes pictures of classes and athletic squads.
The computerization of tax records, employed by only about six counties in the state, was working dependably, said Tate, and the commaer's personal property records will begin July 1.
The art department will present an exhibition and sale of original and graphic art 10 a.m.—5 p.m., June 19 at the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 6.1972
3
Come to where the flavor is.
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Come to where the flavor is.
... And the Back of It
Kansas Photos by MARK UNTERSEE
Watson's retaining wall, and, after a moment, it crossed the street again to the side of the steamplant building. No damage was injured. Police arrived and estimated damage to the truck at $200.
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Agnew Flies In To Meet Governors
By DON MCLEOD Associated Press Writer
A number of governors complained that the Watergate affair had created indecision and inaction in Washington which was blocking solutions to pressing local
STATELINE, Nev.—Vice President Sprot T. Agnew arrived at the National Governors Conference Tuesday saying he came to "make friends and ease tensions" in the wake of complaints that Watergate had paralyzed government in Washington.
Agnew had not planned to attend the conference, where Watergate had been widely discussed, but Monday suddenly announced he would.
While insisting Watergate would not be discussed in his meetings with governors, Agnew said he would be talking to them privately about the problems many have linked to a Watergate paralysis, such as budget binds.
"Of course when a member of the national administration comes to a governor's conference, he comes to make matters more difficult. He newsmen after arriving from Washington.
Gold Humiliates Devalued Dollar
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK-Through the years, gold seems to have held mankind in a trance. Once, it was worshipped as having come from the sun, or the heavens. Today it is worshiped by many as the only real financial security.
By JOHN CUNNIFF
WHY THIS should be done isn't altogether explainable, but nothing about gold and its value.
Because of this, the twice-devalued dollar is in trouble again. Dollars are being sold for gold; so, following the law of supply and demand, dollars are being down and the price of gold, pushed us.
Last week, it reached a price of more than $120 an ounce, up 25 per cent in just a month, as financial assets that were maintained in dollars were switched into gold. And, because of inflation, a lot of dollars are floating around.
This is bad news for those who traditionally have held dollars for security. All over the world, the dollar was thought to be corrupted by the erosion that ruined other currencies.
For example, there is plenty of evidence that gold buyers are speculating on an increased role for gold in the monetary system of the future, even though its
But dollar erosion today is very serious, and gold never erodes. No government or industry or institution can do anything to diminish the amount of gold somebody has cached away. And it is almost impervious to nature.
relationship to currencies is officially severed.
TALK AMONG economists now is of an upcoming recession following the current
There are those who cannot believe that man can rid himself of ties to gold, and they may be right. Gold as a medium of exchanging information is attractive, but it remains universally acceptable.
THE CURRENT interpretation of the rising gold price is that the United States' economy continues to suffer from inflation, notwithstanding promises from Washington about the future. The country still imports more than it exports.
boom. William McChesney Martin Jr., former governor, has the latest to express this opinion.
Martin is highly respected in world monetary and financial circles, and his comments are bound to be used abroad as reinforcement of their own concerns. Among those concerns about America is its current government.
Martin fed additional fears with his statement to the Senate Finance Committee that "the nation is floating on a sea of debt" and he was worried about the banking system.
IN THE VIEW of some European, President Nixon's ability to govern has been impaired seriously at the very time that American needs close supervision from Washington.
So they switch to gold, hoping that somehow the new international monetary order or growing industrial demand will continue to push up its price. It might not pay any interest, they know, but they feel safe with it. Man always has.
Steinem Fashions Ms. Magazine Into 'Believable Editorial Product'
By JOHN HENRY
THE EDITORIAL content of the monthly runs to the heavy side: where other women's magazines offer tips on ways to work, for example, Ms. has "how-to" articles advising stewardesses and secretaries to do how to deal with the job sex discrimination.
NEW YORK—The firm's headquarters are a cramped and cluttered set of offices, where visitors have to walk carefully or they'll step on some of the incoming mail that has been dumped on the floor for sorting.
Although the offices are situated in midtown Manhattan, where gray flannel suits are the standard executive dress, one of the leaders in this enterprise is clad in pants. Hull of the people in the place wear. And there are no titles on the door.
Because of the magazine's reputation for militancy on its editorial pages, corporations are thought to be wary of ad-followers. People seem being among some of Madison Avenue that promotes a single cause—the women's movement—may run out of things to say.
On the surface, Ms. would seem to have other things working against it besides the chief engineer.
IT IS IF the business is Ms. Magazine. At the end of its first year, the magazine, aimed at liberated women and edited by feminist Gloria Stinema, is according to the magazine adding readers, gaining advertisers' important, making money. Not a bad opportunity when you consider that it was years ago. Illustrated magazine, one of publishing's hottest properties today, earned so much as a dime for its owners.
Is this any way to run a business?
The ads, while still few and far between,
are growing in number. The June issue—in
which several corporate heavies including
Ford, Exxon, and New York Life Insurance,
make their first appearance—contains 20
pages of ads, a record for the magazine.
SOUND FINANCIAL management undoubtedly has played a part in the magazine's success. But the main reason, as many observers see it, is the comedy of Stehlem and Caribine to put away an editorial product that is authoritative and believable.
the women and its strong ideological bent actually has turned out to be an asset in the advertising community. It's evident from the ad copy that some companies are using MILK to convince women that they are more than just their employment and marketing policies.
A recent Volkswagen ad claims, "We never ran an ad in another magazine we wound't run in Ms.," and an ad placed by Lincoln Savings Bank in banks distributed across the country, endorsers, "if you don't get a mortgage at the Lincoln, it isn't because you're a woman."
The magazine's close identification with
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"There is a creeping paralysis, a slowdown nationally," said Maryland's Democratic Gov. Marvin Mandell, who is outgoing chairman of the conference. "They apparently are not willing to make decisions in Washington."
"A creeping paralysis is overtaking Washington as a result of Watergate balances the action on a variety of critical problems." - Gov. Daniel Walker of Illinois said.
Astronauts Set For Repair Job
HOUSTON (AP) - Skylab's astronauts prepared Tuesday for a bold and unprecedented space walk attempt to salvage a broken solar panel and end a critical power shortage aboard their orbiting laboratory.
Space agency officials revealed Tuesday that Conrad had experienced irregular heartbeat earlier in the mission, but said that, nonetheless, the crew was in excellent condition.
Take Ronald McDonald to the bathroom with you.
Astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph P Kearn and Paul J. Wetzl studied a complex proposal for the repair job and scheduled a review session with experts on the plans. The space walk is tentatively planned for 11 a.m. (Lawrence time) Thursday.
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
COLUMBIA COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
The old "run, Spot, run" method.
If all began in the first grade.
But don't blame your first-grade teacher, it wasn't her fault. It was the system she had to teach.
You had to读 it out loud. Words by word.
And that's the way it was until you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently. Where your teacher asked you
If you're an average reader, you’re probably reading that way now.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still said every word to yourself.
Which means you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute.
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Monday through Friday,
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4
Wednesday, June 6, 1973
University Daily Kansan
IRAWA
KU's Mark Lutz
Ryun to Run Mile Tonight In N.Y. City
NEW YORK (AP) — "Just once, I love to run the old way," said miler Jim Ryan, wistfully. "Way out in front, with everyone cheering for a record. Maybe ... one night."
Ryn may get his chance when the International Track Association climaxes its 16-meet circuit with the World indoor Madison Square Garden Wednesday night.
It's been over five years since anyone's been able to break four minutes for the mile run. Ryan was the last person to do it, back on Feb. 9, 1968.
The 26-year miler just might "run the old way" in this final meet of the first pro track season and try to better his world indoor mile record of 3:56.4.
"I've often felt like cutting loose and really trying to run a great time," he said, "but I know I have to save something for the next night."
This time there is no next night, so Ryun may take a shot at the $500 bonus which the ITA awards when a world record is bettered.
What's more, he's already clinched the $6,000 Grand Prix award for the mile, based on points awarded in each meet. Ryum has won 11 of 13 races as a pro, including his last nine in a row, although he has been bothered lately by an aching hip.
Ryan's dynic competition is expected to come from Kipchoge Ketno of Kenya, a 1968 Olympic gold medalist. Also expected in the field are Bob Messina and Keith Murson.
9 to Go to NCAA Meet
A group of nine athletes will represent the University of Kansas track team at the $2nd annual NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Thursday through Saturday at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
The team, accompanied by coaches Bob Timmons and Thead Talley, for belton Rouge Monday morning, where they will train for the meet. The Jayhawk team is rated as a likely contender for the title; UCLA is favored to win.
Leading the Jayhawk delegation are javelin thrower Sam Colson, spinner Mark Lutz, pole vaulter Terry Porter and hurdler Delrio Robinson and Gregg Vandevere.
Colson, a senior from Mankato, Kan., currently has the second best second in the world this year. He has been hampered much of the outdoor season by an elbow injury, but has ignored the injury to win the title and is now Track and Field Federation laurel titles.
sports
Two other Jayhawks, Delario Robinson and Gregg Vandevere, rate as contenders in the 120-yd. high hurdles. Robinson has a best of 13.4 at the Big Eight meet, while Vandevere's best of 13.5 came at the Kansas Relays.
Porter, who is the current NCAA indoor pole vaulting champion, is rated the favorite to win the outdoor title. He vaulted 17-4 at the Big Eight meet two weeks ago.
Lutz, the only double winner at the Big eight meet, is rated as a contender in both the first and second rounds.
Eight meet, he ran a wind-aided 9.2 in the 106 and 20.4 in the 220.
Other Jayhawks competing in the meet are Barry Schur and Randy Smith in the high jump, Bob Borknessel in the 440-yard race, Mike McDonald in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.
What's for Lunch? KU Football
The luncheon, which is sponsored by the KU Alumni Association with the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Sports Committee, is the sixth stop on this year's Jayhawk athletic program promotional tour of Kansas.
Don Fambrigh, KU football coach, and Gale Sayers, assistant to the athletic director, will be the featured guest at a basketball game this weekend noon today at the Lawrence Holiday Inn.
Speeches by both Fambrough and Sayers and the introduction of area athletes who
baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
W. L. Pct. G.B.
x Detroit 27 143
New York 27 143
Baltimore 25 229
Boston 23 265
x Milwaukee 23 265
Ottawa 23 275
G.O.A.T. 600%
WEST
Chicago 27 19 598 — 14
Kansas City 30 26 154 — 11
Minnesota 26 21 154 — 11
x California 25 22 353 21/4
x Oakland 25 22 353 21/4
Oakland 16 11 16
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pelt G.B.
Chicago 21 31 596
X-Pittsburgh 21 31 591
Kansas City 22 31 511
New York 22 31 486
N.J. Louisville 22 31 466
Philadelphia 22 31 464 7%
10%
Minnesota, Cleveland, rained out
Baltimore 7. Chicago 10.
Kansas City 4. New York 8. Texas 6
California incomplete
Detroit, California, incomplete
West 32 20 643 4
× San Francisco 32 21 643 2
× Los Angeles 32 21 643 2
× Miami 30 20 533 6
× Houston 30 18 533 6
× Atlanta 19 18 533 6
× San Diego 19 14 354 13
Los Angeles 14, Alabama 7 results
Philadelphia 14, Houston 0
San Francisco 8, Chicago 2
New York, Cleveland, incomplete
San Francisco, Philadelphia, incomplete
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETING
register by phone, information and pairings will be forwarded in the mail.
Courtesy Duke D'Ambra Collection
Trolley...
Trolleys Braved All Weather on The Hill in 1925
Shelter houses for waiting passengers were built at McCook Field, the Massachusetts St. turnaround and 13th St. and Prairie Ave. Streetcar service con- trolled in 1933. The Kansas Electric Power Company was waning and sold the entire system to Rapid Transit, who replaced the streetcars with buses.
switch near the old Robinson Gymnasium. The cars came down by the same route, and we were on the Louisiana streets, north on Tennessee to 11th St., east on 11th to Massachusetts St. and north on Massachusetts to 8th St. Two days later we provided service to KU every 15 minutes.
THE INDIANA run started at 8th and Massachusetts streets, ran west to Indiana St., north to 4th St. and back the same way. Another route was added which ran north across the bridge to 2nd and Locust streets, east on Locust to 8th St. and returned.
There were problems with streetcars too. On the Mississippi St. and Indiana St. turns, the rails shrieked shrilly, even though they were greased. Sometimes the motorman clanged the bell furiously to get the right of way.
Fast pitch and slow pitch softball leagues are now being formed for both men and women. Groups can register as a team or can sign up individually in room 108. Students who sign up individually will be placed on a team.
Passengers could transfer to any route on their original 5 cent fare.
When the snowfall was heavy, men worked all night with plows on the cars to insure the next day's service. If the rails were icy, the motorman released sand onto the track through a sand pipe which did not work on curves.
In hot weather the system put on open summer cars with canvas curtains which could be lowered in case of rain. In the early part of the century, many passengers rode carriages into entertainment. Those were the days when the streetcars were prosperous.
Intramural Entries Due By Friday for Summer
From Page One
CARS USUALLY carried a motorman and conductor. Students were frequently employed at 17% cents an hour in four-hour shifts. The last shift was 7 to 11 p.m.
The Journal-World reported in 1910 that two students had to be jailed for jumping on the bridge.
Intramural tournaments for both men and women will be offered in both fast pitch and slow pitch softball, tennis, horseshoes, and mud hockey, paddle ball and mud hockey (Putt-Putt). Golf
An extensive program of intramural sports is planned for the summer session at KNCS.
the Alumni Association; Todd Seymour, fund director of the KU Endowment Association; and John Novotny, business manager for the athletic department.
Larry Heeb, sponsor of the softball leagues and associate professor of physical education, also announced that a meeting of the board of directors would be held at 4 p.m. Thursday in room 108.
Also representing KU at the lunchroom will be Dick Wintermute, executive director of
perform for KU will be featured at the luncheon.
The type of tournament will be decided by the number of students entering, and anyone wishing to participate can stop in by calling 843-371. For those who register by calling 843-371.
KU Signs Two Tennis Stars
Mike Howard, KU tennis coach announced yesterday the signing of Bill Clarke and Dennis Cahill, two hard-recruited tennis stars to national letters of intent.
Clarke, Shawnee Mission South High School senior, won the Kansas state high school championship the last two years. In 2014, the school senior, has been the singles charn-
League Leaders
By The Associated Press
BATTING - 100 at bat- Blumberg, NY, .296; Kirk-
park, KC, 333.
RUNS-Mayberry, KC, 37; Patek, KC, 35.
RUNS-N-Mayberry N=Mayberry, KC, 35; Melton, Chl. 39.
pion in Wisconsin for the past three years.
HITS-0s, KC, 64; Murree, NY, 37.
DOUBLE-B, D. Allen, Chl. 13, Kirkstaff冲.
N.Y., N.Y.,
DOWBLES-D. Allen, Chl. 12; Kirkpatrick, KC. 12;
Rojas, KC. 12
TRIELS-CAREM, Mlb. S. Cottagn, B.乳, B.墉b; B.利, B.Erickman, D.授, Spencer, Tex. 4
**TOLEN BASSEN** - North, Kc. 16; Harper, Hm. 14.
**TOLEN BASSEN** - West, Kc. 15; Harper, Hm. 14.
Coleman, D. 10, 3.79, Kc. 10; Hoffman, Hm. 10, 3.79,
Kc. 10
STRIKEOUTS—N. Ryan, Cal, 123; Singer, Cal, 97.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING—10 at bat—MIDFIELD, 38 (x). Watson, Hn.
39.
Pier, 21
Runs BATTED (N=Foerger, LA, AJ, Blenn, Cm, Chn.
BUNDES=, SP, F) , 7 (Foerger, 57)
(Blenn, Cm, Chn.)
DAMBLER= Ferguson, L. A.; Brades, SF, 14
DUALER= Hmett, H. n.; Squamille, Pg, 5; Mah,
dap, SF, 7.
dot.SF, 5.
HOME RUNS = Stargell, Pgh, 16; H. Aaron, Atl, 13.
in Ciarke and Cahill we have two of the top prospects we wanted," Howard said. "With these two plus the many returning veterans we have, we hope to compete at the top of both the Big Eight Conference and the NCAA."
BROWN, Peggy; Pun, Tej. 19; H. Aaron, Al. 13.
STOLEN MASKS—Morgan, Clan. C.; Cedron, Hein. BDSP, 19.
Bonds, SF. 19.
*WIYING-N* = Decisions-Billingham, Cn. II-4, 800.
*WIYING-S* = Decisions-Billingham, Cn. II-4, 800.
2.91 WISE, SGL, 71, 70, 162, ZL
STRIKEOUTS - Seaver, NY, 89; Carlton, Phl, 85.
Howard also indicated that he hoped to sign two more players before next year and expressed optimism about the next season. He said the game would be Big Eight Conference, 44 points out of first.
"We were hoping for a fight in July, but if nothing materializes soon, the Tokyo fight will be the first defense," says Dick Sadler, Foreman's manager and trainer. Sadlier says the amount of money Foreman will receive has not been determined.
The fight apparently will be Sep. 1 in Tokyo against Puerto Rico's Joe "King" Roman, ranked by the World Boxing Council as the No. 1 heavyweight contender.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Heavyweight champion George Foreman will return to the gym this week to begin "shaking loose" his title defense, his manager said Monday.
Foreman Defense Set for September
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 6. 1973
5
KU's Alien Minority
Foreign Students Attempt to Live With Small Unhappinesses...
From Page One
...
Indian Women Find Things to Smile About Despite Isolation in a Strange Land
other foreign students I have interviewed so far has given me exactly the same answer. It has been an automatic, programmed response, just a bit too pat.
I shift my ground, ask when she first came to Lawrence, what her feelings were in the first few weeks, the people she got to know the things she did, the food she ate and so on.
I am preying into matters that may not be any of my business but I have a job to do. I must satisfy myself that "pretty good" is the best American. "Great" graduates to everything American.
The inscrutable foreign feeler, ate, an-
Out come feelings of extreme loneliness,
disappointment, insecurity and resentment
at being rejected by American students.
BUT THAT is not an easy task. Despite my being a foreigner too, I can sense the reluctance on the part of my interviewee to say anything. So, on impulse, I tell her that no names will be used in my story and that she may speak freely and frankly. I am made to repeat the assurance, and then the breakthrough is made.
The floodgates open. The reticence of the past few minutes gives way to an outpouring of hurt feelings and complaints about things that have made her unhappy.
And with this is a resignation to unhappiness, a shrug of the shoulder and the foot.
IN THE DAYS that follow, I speak to many others. In each case the interviews follow the same pattern, with unhappiness being expressed in varying degrees. But always, at the end, the brave smile and the contradictory "Oh, I like it here."
THEN HE looked through the telephone directory until he found a familiar name, explained his plight to the student from his country whom he had called up, and was eating his first meal in 8 hours, shortly afterwards.
It would have been a good thing if this were true. Unfortunately, for many of them their troubles began the day they landed here. Because they did not know better, they found themselves in helpless situations.
It is all very well, probably, for them to suffer in silence because they convince themselves that no one cares enough to do anything. But in the meantime, their "hosts," the Americans, haven't an inkling that anything is wrong.
One student rode in from Kansas City in a taxi because the last bus for Lawrence had already left. He managed to find overnight accommodation at one of the residence houses on the water front of the water fontain to keep his hunger pains away until he could bear it no more.
There are other tales which just add up to a shocked realization on the part of the newly-arrived foreign student that no one knows about him. In the days that follow he may also begin to think that no one cares, and may accept this.
IN THE MEANTIME, more and more foreign students come to Kansas each year, eager and bright-eyed, and receive their orientation packets with a lot of exciting content. They realize that the packet is possible the extent of their "Welcome to KU."
I spoke to a few American students to see whether they had ever thought of the problems foreign students might be facing. A few said they thought the foreign students were very happy here because that was what they always said.
One person was hurt by the suggestion that they might actually be unhappy but said a little later: "Come to think of it, guess it would be kinda tough if you tried to live in a new place with almost nothing to relate to."
ONE STUDENT said that a little unhappiness was the price foreign students would have to pay "for the benefit of an American" could not possibly get in their own country."
Strangely enough, foreign students agree. In fact, the most common reason for concern is that they are not being educated.
various problems, was the degree they hoped to take back with them, after
The feeling expressed most often was that once this was over, they would be able to return to their countries, and a world turned upside down. The real difference with different culture would then right itself.
"But that's not fair: they might be prepared to take things that way, but that doesn't say much for us," an American girl protested.
"WHAT DO THESE guys say when they get back?" We got enough people hating us in other countries; we need a few friends," said another American student.
But if it's merely a question of "image" Americans need worry little. Foreign students consider their inability to fit in or be happy a reflection upon themselves.
Most of them use the rare occasions when they do get together with Americans to take photographs to show back home. It is hard to imagine doing different would constitute a loss of face.
I asked a "concerned" American student whether he would be willing to take part in an effort to improve the lot of foreign students at KU.
"LIKE I say, if I had the time I sure would," he said. "But when I get a few minutes I go out for a beer or something of the guys: so I really see no way."
In the meantime, the foreign student continues to be a part of the campus community, an insular individual or member of the community. He is never really a part of the community.
"There is a barrier between us and the Americans," said one student, and others added.
"IDON'T know if the trouble was with me or with them," another student said, adding that she had a problem with other foreign students. "I feel isolated," she said, "but I manage not to be unhappy."
One student said he was happy after he had accepted that he would never fit in with the group.
"They made me feel different," he said, and when I got used to the idea, it was OK. He made me feel different.
I tried to find out reasons for a foreign student's feeling "inferior" in a society dedicated to the freedom and the equality of man.
"LANGUAGE IS probably the greatest barrier," one student said, although he spoke English well enough to be clearly understood. Another spoke of the inability of American students to understand strange words and sentences in their time for anything they cannot understand."
PENNESSEY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
"A man who cannot understand you will
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Study is What Matters
not listen to you for long," said another,
with Confucian logic.
"Now I know what Negroes have felt all these years in this country," complained one student, asking what he called a "racist" American roommates to look down upon him.
an American's helped fit in more readily than students from other countries
"People who have trouble communicating are really lost," she said.
A EUROPEAN student said she thought that the fact that her appearance was like
A student from one of the Scandinavian countries said that the few Americans he could call friends wondered why he had been an English student from underdeveloped countries.
"Such attitudes have made me cynical and sarcastic. I tend now to look down upon them."
The creation of great misunderstandings between Americans and students from different parts of the world is probably one of the most significant misunderstandings in munications breakdown between the two.
ALREADY, SOME damage appears to have been done. Denied the cultural interchange each student comes here in exertion will have little chance to hold in contempt every American.
The urge to give of themselves seems to be very strong in foreign students. American offices abroad instruct them to come out here armed with information and materials, they teach them the skills, and they set foot on American soil believed to be here are as ambassadors of goodwill.
when they realize that no one is sufficiently curious about their countries or the ways in which they are often bitterly disappointed. Faced with an American's apathy toward their own culture, some students tend to react to it by declining their American culture with a "What culture?"
One of the students interviewed slashed out rather violently when he was asked for help.
1 "THINK it' s just a bastardization of
an aesthetic and disguised middle-class
behavior."
Not many students reacted this way, but comments they made showed rapidly increasing disillusionment about this country. They appeared to have given thought to what they considered "abnormal unfriendliness for a person of a host country."
Even those who had made a few friends said that American friendliness was superficial at best, "confined to loud greetings that make you feel good till you see them the next time—and they ignore you."
"It is not what we call friendship," said one student. "In our country we would do anything for a friend. But here, everything is so shallow."
民國內世文編(收育)
民國內世文編(財政·學說)
民國內世文編(實業)
"AMERICANS ARE much friendlier
abroad," observed another, and most of the students I spoke with agreed with her. "Foreign students expect them to be like that and are badly disappointed. But I guess they don't understand countries they are friendly because they are and as we are now. Here, they don't need us."
A couple of students complained that the brief interest displayed in them by Americans was the attention they would have given any "odidity." But, the students insisted that their curiosity was satisfied, the Americans were greeted them at subsequent meetings.
I told my interviewees that Americans charged that foreign students hired toward ours, others from their own countries and were themselves responsible for their isolation.
MOST STUDENTS admitted that this might be partially true, but argued that they had to go to our own kind in education. You have to have someone you can talk to.
Most foreign students try to find excuses for their hosts' behavior. One put it down to a reluctance on the part of Americans to form close friendships or become emotionally attached to people, places or things.
Foreign Language, Alphabet Can Be Problem for Foreign Students
Several others, who have been to other regions in the United States, said that the lack of friendliness seemed to be peculiar to them, where people seem "afraid of forefathers."
Kansan Staff Photo bv PRIS BRANDSTED
ONE OF THE Americans interviewed was a University of Texas doctoral candidate now with the University of Missouri as an instructor in sociology. Her dissertation focused on how she has worked on studies involving foreign students in other parts of the country.
She said she was positive this region was less friendly than back East because of a strong conservative streak in the people. She added that in her own native city of Austin, Tex., things would probably be worse.
Sise said she realized the foreign student community was cut off from the rest of the world, even though she had been because of ethnocentricism and an unwillingness on the part of Americans to give in. "We are so fortunate," she
Some foreign students seem concerned enough to want some kind of program for them, but many are not prepared for damage done to the foreign-American relationship, they believe that a "criminal shortsightedness" on the part of the American students is available for the communication breakdown.
One student called for "concert action to let the Americans know we are here and eager to learn about them." Another said, "We want to be good that we should be cut off this way."
These are the ones who are hopeful that something can still be done. But others have already turned away, convinced that narcissists are interested only in themselves.
"YOURE ETHIER accepted or you're not," said one student who indicated that he had been partially accepted. "But there is nothing you can do about it. The only hope for foreign students is greater interdependence upon themselves."
"I am here to study; I don't give a damn if they don't want our friend's, said another student, adding, a little later, that he would respond to an show of interest.
"It is ideal if we, as hosts, make a few moves. too," he said.
Some attempt to bring foreign students together with Americans is made through monthly People-to-People programs, which, for a small amount of money, take foreign students on guided tours to places Students expressed appreciation of this handsome Small World II. program for wives and children of foreigners at KU.
REACTIONS TO THE Lawrence Host Family program were less enthusiastic. Students said they saw little good coming out what turned out to be for most of them a one-shot get-together with an American family. One student called it "humbug."
One student complained that at his first meeting with his host family, his religion was ridiculed, and the family never saw him again.
"I sent them Christmas presents and they never even said thank you," he said.
Some students have had better luck with the families assigned to them and manage to get together more than once a semester. Three of the students I spoke to told me of the family here that I had known had found a family that I had known the things her own family would have done.
INQUIRIES REVEALED that the people in question were the Stockwells, 503 Arizona St. I asked Hiram Stockwell, who is assistant director of the KU printing service, why he and his wife had done more for this girl than the program called for.
Explaining that he and his wife had been co-chairpersons of the program some time earlier, Stockwell said their actions had driven the definite need the girl had of assistance.
"She was completely alone—these people knew few other people—and she needed advice, transportation and other assistance." he said.
“If we were in another country we would probably have wanted someone to do the same for us. And this was certainly no burden.” he added.
FACED WITH such isolated examples of friendship and concern, the foreign student finds his concept of mid-Western unfriendiness rapidly disintegrating.
"I guess there are a lot of good people around," says one. "We aren't looking hard at it."
KANSAN WANT ADS
In tomorrows Kansas:
Foreign Students and the KU ad-
dministration
Test No. Name Test No. Name Test No.
1. 0.06 2. 0.35 3. 0.78 4. 1.21
5. 0.09 6. 0.44 7. 0.69 8. 1.04
9. 0.12 10. 0.55 11. 0.89 12. 1.34
13. 0.16 14. 0.69 15. 1.14 16. 1.69
17. 0.21 18. 0.74 19. 1.27 20. 1.82
21. 0.26 22. 0.80 23. 1.24 24. 1.88
25. 0.29 26. 0.84 27. 1.28 28. 1.92
29. 0.33 30. 0.87 31. 1.32 32. 1.86
33. 0.36 34. 0.89 35. 1.34 36. 1.96
37. 0.40 38. 0.92 39. 1.36 40. 1.98
41. 0.44 42. 0.96 43. 1.38 44. 1.98
45. 0.48 46. 1.00 47. 1.42 48. 1.96
49. 0.52 50. 1.04 51. 1.46 52. 1.96
53. 0.56 54. 1.08 55. 1.49 56. 1.98
57. 0.60 58. 1.12 59. 1.54 60. 1.98
61. 0.64 62. 1.16 63. 1.58 64. 2.02
65. 0.68 66. 1.20 67. 1.62 68. 2.16
69. 0.72 70. 1.24 71. 1.76 72. 2.28
73. 0.76 74. 1.38 75. 1.82 76. 2.34
77. 0.80 78. 1.42 79. 1.86 80. 2.38
81. 0.84 82. 1.48 83. 1.92 84. 2.48
85. 0.88 86. 1.52 87. 1.96 88. 2.48
89. 0.92 90. 1.56 91. 2.00 92. 2.48
93. 0.96 94. 2.00 95. 2.48 96. 2.96
97. 1.00 98. 2.48 99. 3.00 100. 3.48
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6
Wednesday, June 6. 1973
University Daily Kansan
[Picture of a man reading a book].
Gift of Twain Manuscripts Includes Articles, Monograms, Typescripts
Kansan Photo
Library Shows Twain Collection
Avid Mark Twain fans might find it to their advantage to visit the extensive collection of Mark Twain manuscripts current collections at the University of Chicago School of Science, Research Library.
The collection, numbering about 60 pieces, was a gift to the library by Milton Barlow, president of the Johnson County National Bank and Trust Company.
Included in the collection are such items as a typescript of "Tom Sawyer, Detective" with Twain's personal comments and first editions of "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" and "The Pains of Lowly Life."
ALEXANDRA MASON, assistant director of libraries, said that the collection was a significant addition to the library's holdings. Prompted by the Bawlary gift, the library staff has assembled about 40 other books from public libraries catered throughout the KU library system.
Barlow gave the collection as a memorial to his father, Milton T. Barlow, who was a
Also included in the collection are copies of several magazines carrying articles and monograms by the frontier writer-philosopher. Of particular interest is the December 1866 issue of "Harper's" which carries an article entitled "Forty-three
Days in an Open Boat" by "Mark Swain."
ALSO IN THE DISPLAY is a pirated edition of Prince and Fashion, with points on each page.
Prof Studies Steel Safety
first edition of "Life on the Mississippi" in his father's library at the time of his birth.
Barlow expressed the wish that, through the collection, future scholars might snare the spirit of the frontier known to his father and to Twain.
"The Effective Utilization of Yield Strength," a research project now underway at KU concerns a study of the safe high-strength steels for pressure vessels.
S. T. Rolfe, professor of civil engineering is directing the study, which emphasizes materials, design, and fabrication problems associated with pressure vessels.
"One of the advantages of living on the frontier, which my father delighted in pointing out," Barlow wrote, "was the opportunity to have a completely independent way of thinking as well as an independent way of doing."
Lawrence Sherr, associate professor of business, has been selected chairman of a committee of faculty and students which will seek candidates for the position of dean of the University of Kansas Business School. The committee's goal is to find a new dean who would assume office July 1, 1974.
Barlow began his collection of Twain writings and memorabilia after finding a
The Barlow collection will remain on display in the North Gallery of Spencer Research Library through the summer. This week, a 5 p.m. to 6 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Annamma Varghese, Alleyep, India, graduate student, has received a $3,000 Amelia Earhart Fellowship for advanced research in the aerospace sciences.
Indian Student Gets Grant
B-School Search Begins
Prof to Study Constitution
Mitchell ...
A graduate from the University of Kerala, Virghese earned her master's degree at the Institute for Technology in Bombya. She will use the Fellowship to study for a doctorate degree.
WHEN MAGRUDER introduced G. Gordon Liddon—former counsel to the Committee to Re-elect the President and a convicted Watergate burglar conspirator—to the staff in December 1971, he referred to Liddon's "other talents."
Prof to Study Law's Aims
From Page One
McGovern button was sent to sit in front of the White House—for the negative publicity it would create for the presidential candidacy of Sen. George McGovern, D-D.S.
The University libraries will remain open from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m., but the Kansas State University Libraries will remain open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
John Murphy, professor of law, has been appointed to a study panel on the U.S. Constitution and the conduct of American foreign policy.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols has declared July 4 an all-University holiday on recommendation from the Senate Executive Committee. Classes in all schools and departments except the KU School of Law will be cancelled.
The panel is expected to make proposals for revisions in present arrangements to Congress and the Executive Branch after studying the powers under the Constitution to include international agreements and to manage the flow of information to the public.
Nichols Cancels July 4 Classes
Phillip Paludan, assistant professor of history, will receive a post-doctoral award from the American Council of Learned Societies on the aims, concepts and techniques of law.
in brief
"I think there was a reference to 'super sleuth' or something like that. Subsequently I learned from other members of the staff Liddv was upset by that reference."
Committee chairman Sam. J. Ervin, D.N.C. announced that Liddy—described as the organizer and mastermind of the Democratic Headquarters burglary—had refused to testify because his conviction and 6-20 year sentence was being appealed.
LIDDY ALSO refused to talk to the Watergate grand jury and is serving an additional jail term for defying judicial orders. It also testified that testimony befolds both involuntary screams.
Attorney for former Commerce Secretary Murice H. Stans, the former firm's chief counsel, asked the paign, asked the Senate committee Tuesday to defer Stars' schedule appearance later
Stans is under indictment on charges of obstructing justice and perjury.
Before calling Mrs. Harmony, the 12th witness, Ervin's committee met in executive session to reply to a request by Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox for a delay of three months or so in the hearings.
AFTERWARD, Ervin announced that the committee "unanimously determined that its duty require it to decline such a request."
Harmony testified she typed general intelligence memoranda, including two that
McGovern, last year's Democratic presidential nominee,
On June 28, the day Liddy was fired from his job for refusing to talk with FBI agents, Mrs. Harmony said she shredded her notebooks and all documents she could find with Liddy's handwriting. She said she did it on Liddy's orders.
LOS ANGELES—A county grand jury probing the burglary of the office of Daniel Tuesday from Elsberg and 10 other witnesses. The jury awaited appearances later in the week by former presidential adviser Eli Schlman and three Watergate captors.
L.A. Jury Hears Ellsberg
By LINDA DEUTSCH Associated Press Writers
Dist. Atty. Joseph Bush, emerging from the grand jury room after a day of
Ehrlichman's Los Angeles attorney, Joseph Bail, said Ehrlichman would appear voluntarily before the grand jury Friday. A judge on Thursday said that other former White House officials, including former presidential counsel Charles Colson, were expected to testify.
questioning witnesses in secret session, said he expected the hearings to be concluded by Friday and "then we'll be at a place where we can talk."
Busch has not said whether he will seek indictments.
Ellsberg, who was the first witness to testify, observed, in a talk with reporters, that those who had been named as the actual intruders at the psychiatrist's office had received immunity from prosecution and were not threatened by he thought that indicate that authorities had information aimed at filing charges against "higher-use" who planned the break-in.
Eilersbald told the reporters he thought the planning of the break-in "comes close to a complete collapse," Mr. Eilersbald said.
believed the Nixon Administration hoped to use his psychiatric records for a smear against one or more presidential candidates.
But he said the intruders probably were disappointed to find that the records contained nothing that bore on Sen. Edmund Muskie or other candidates.
Ellsberg, 42, was a defendant with Anthony Russo in the Pentagon papers trial, which ended last month with dismissal of all charges.
"I frankly think they weren't after information to use in my prosecution, but to use in a political campaign," Ellsberg said. He added that the administration apparently had hoped to link his name to a candidate and then to use psychiatric records to portray him "as a less palatable person."
"We can never understand what he went through out there, but it changed him—he brought the torment back with him," said Robert Brudget, acting as spokesman for the family of the first POW returned from North Vietnam to take his own life.
In an interview in the captain's home town with the Quincy Patriot-Ledger, Robert bitterly criticized North Vietnam as "a country that would so tormently commit such torture and torment to people."
THERE were reports elsewhere that Edward, who died on the眼 of his 33rd birthday, was despondent because his hopes of becoming an astronaut had been thwarted by his 74 years of imprisonment after his jet tighter was downed over North Vietnam.
Brother Explains POW Suicide
QUINCY, Mass. (AP)—The brother of Air Force Capt. Edward A. Brudno said Tuesday that the suicide death of the former pilot was an accident, a war casualty as any of the others."
Also, Robert said the captain was deeply disturbed by antiwar protests in this country.
But the brother added: "There was no specific thing that caused his depression, but because of his experiences he lost all confidence and appointment and misfortune were disaster.
"All the normal problems of repatriation and rehabilitation to him were crisis, and he must have been very ill."
Perhaps this death was the only way he could get peace."
EDWARD WAS found dead in bed Sunday at the Harrison, N.Y., home of his parents-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Millon Gitenstein. He and his wife, Deborah, had been staying there, although she was visiting Quincy at the time.
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- ATTY. GEN. Elliot L. Richardson testified that he believed Congress had a right to know "the way the FBI goes about its business." Richardson said the FBI, which had been involved in the Watergate, should keep Congress informed of its process and ruled out only access to raw files and the status of pending investigations.
—Attorneys for former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans are seeking to waive Stans' scheduled appearance this week after he was convicted of mail counter because Stans is under indemnity in New York. Stans, who was chairman of the Nixon campaign's finance committee, was indicted in connection with the acceptance of an account from financier Robert L. Vesco,
Stories ...
From Page One
In other Watergate-related developments:
EARLIER, Liddy's former secretary, Sally Harmony, told the committee she typed memoranda from sources known to her only as Ruby One, Ruby Two and Crystal. She said she did not know she was typing wiretapped conversations.
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A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE?
Probably few know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns conspicuously on Massachusetts Street.
The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, a retired Civil War general. He was a man of great wealth with an income from patients on wooden containers carved in the mountains.
Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is finished in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly finished in birch, cherry, oak, walnut and sycamore and pine. The wood running all were drowned by hand by Sidney Endacott of England, a brother of Frank Reineck and a master of the sculptor and artist and some of his work in the drawing room of the Lord Hailstone hall.
There are beautiful fireplaces in the house, with a unique design with various colored stains. The walls are adorned with white and marble accents and 18th-century cloak. A recess cabinet of mirrors and stained glass window allows the fireplace gives an airy feeling.
The tower, which gives the old glass appearance, has a stairway leading to the third floor. The second floor is also a multi-purpose area used during the summer months. The bathroom with window windows seats on the third floor
If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really interact with the staff is through the front desk.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THURSDAY JUNE 7,1973
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules / the associated press
McGovern Letter Says Dole Not in Watergate
WASHINGTON—In the wake of a disclosure during the Watergate hearings that Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan, received $3,000 in Nixon campaign money for a trip to Vietnam in 1971, a letter apparently released by Dole aides quotes Sen. George McGovern as saying that Dole had nothing to do with the Watergate scandal. The disclosure was made earlier by Hugh McSloan Jr., Nixon's former campaign manager, who said that at the time the funds were given "we could not understand why we would be paying for Mr. Dole's trip."
Dole aides had said earlier that the senator had used campaign funds rather than government money in order not to create the impersonation.
The McGovern letter, written in response to a letter asking whether he thought Dole was involved in Watergate, said that he was not.
"In fact, as many prominent Republicans have noted, one of the reasons the President now finds himself in such a mess is that he isolated himself from respectable Republicans and surrounded himself with men of questionable integrity." McGovern said.
House Passes Wage Hike Bill
WASHINGTON - The House passed a bill Wednesday that would increase the Home Depot charge from $1.60 an hour to $2.20 next year and benefit more than 6 million customers.
The bill, sent to the Senate, would raise the minimum wage rates in three categories: those covered by the Minimum Wage Act before 1966 would be benefited immediately after the amendment came into force and other workers would receive these benefits in successive stages. This would also extend to farm workers and domestic household workers.
Hunt Testifies to Grand Jury
LOS ANGELES—Watertage conspirator E. Howard Hunt testified in secret before a county grand jury on Wednesday about the plans he made for the burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatric records, and he said that his son him to the grand jury in Washington now investigating Watertage.
Hunt and two other conspirators, Bernard Barker and Eugenio Martinez, have been granted immunity for their role in the burglary. They were expected to reveal who in the White House had given them their orders.
Astronauts Practice Space Walk
HOUSTON—Skylab's astronauts rehearsed the tricky spacewalk salvage job scheduled for today while the power problem aboard the space station was intensified by the weakening of another battery. The mission was not as optimistic about the job as were space officials on earth.
Skylab 1 is now operating on power equalling less than half its designed needs and the astronauts are expected to pull off a complicated repair job to save the mission.
CBS to Stop Instant Analysis
NEW YORK—CBS has announced that it will no longer carry instant analyses of presidential speeches on television or radio, according to a network announcement. It plans instead to have programs within a week after such speeches if there is "significant national disagreement" on their content. The programs will feature opposing views.
Other networks such as ABC and NBC would continue to follow a flexible policy on instant analyses. An NBC spokesman said it was not ruling out instant analyses and would evaluate different speeches to determine the time and nature of such analyses.
William Sheehan, senior vice president of ABC, said, "We do not believe in setting a blanket policy to apply to all future circumstances."
Spiro Pats Ruffled Feathers
STATELINE, Nev.—Vice-President Spiro Agnew's assurances at the National Governors Conference that he would be "available for consultation, available for counseling," evoked favorable response from the governors but failed to get their consent to President Nixon's manpower training proposal. The conference endorsed only one of Nixon's special revenue sharing programs—the relatively controversial law enforcement project—and denounced the manpower training proposal as bypassing the states.
being the states;
The governors praised Agnew's assurances of cooperation. Gov.
Dale Bumpers of Arkansas said he thought the President would be
"more amenable" to suggestions in the future.
Keino Beats Ryun in Mile Run
NEW YORK - Kip Keino of Kenya raced to an easy victory in the mile run at the International Track Association's final meet of the year, leaving Jim Ryan, former KU star, lagging hopelessly behind. Ryan came loping in last, finishing in 4:11. He did, however, win the $6,000 Grand Prix bonus for the best overall performance, which wound up before a record crowd of 15,501 at Madison Square Garden.
For Keino, who was timed at 4:03.0, this victory was a change from the bitterly disappointing season he had had so far.
Lawrence weather will continue to be pleasant and summery, with sunshine forecast for the next few weeks may climb as high as the low 95. The lows for tonight will be around the low 60s, with fair night weather. Weather tomorrow is expected to be partly sunny and warm.
Some More Pleasantries
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Chalmers Weds Former Student
PETER S. BURTON
Ex-Chancellor Chalmers
Special to the Kansan
HICAGO man who resigned after his divorce and wife was resigned as chancellor of the University of Kansas, E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. has married
Chalmers—whose three years as head man at KU were marked by student turmoil and complaints from faculty, the Board of Regents and Kansan politicians—was born in 1907 on Han Van de Riet, a professor of clinical Florida at the University of Florida.
They were wed in a small civil ceremony at the Lake Forest, IL, home of the chairman of the Chicago Art Institute. Chalmers has been president of the institute since his sudden departure from KU last August.
VAN de RIET, who holds a doctorate in clinical psychology, first met Chalmers as one of his students when he taught him. Florida State University several years later. Chalmers recalls thinking she "was one of my brightest students."
This is the second marriage for both of them. Chalmers was divorced last August shortly before he resigned. His new wife had been divorced a number of years.
“...one of my brightest students”
Chalmers said in a telephone interview that he had often met the new Mrs. Chalmers at annual conferences, but that it was at a recent meeting that they decided to bring many things in common "and should put on of our lives and careers together."
"SHE'S BEEN ON the faculty of the University of Florida for the last 10 years. And I'm sure she'd like to continue her research there. She will also seek a professor's here."
He said that he was happy and looked forward to a life of shared interests with his friends.
Chalmers said he expected to be in Florida today and that he would be driving back to Illinois later with his wife and her 8-year-old daughter, Jill Van de Riet.
RAYMOND NICHLOS, who succeeded Chalmers as chancellor, said he had heard Tuesday night about Chalmers' wedding. Nearly a quarter of the city's executive secretary under Chalmers.
"Mrs. Nichols and I wish them all happiness," he said.
Chalmers left Florida State University in 1908 to replace W. Clarke Wesco as chair of the university.
White House OKs Inquiry
AFTER HIS ARRIVAL at KU, Chamers was almost immediately involved in a debate with then state Sen. Reynolds Shultz over the use of CHAMERS students. "CHAMERS," Page 31.
By JEAN HELLER Associated Press Writer
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON—A potential constitutional brawl was averted—at least for the moment —when the White House agreed Wednesday to provide to Senate Watergate documents detailed information on conversations between President Nixon and John W. Dean II.
Some questions remained about whether the information the White House was willing to give was everything the investigators wanted to see.
The White House and the Senate Watergate committee no sooner settled one potential clash of wills Wednesday than the prosecutor went to court and began another.
THE PROSECUTOR, Archibald Cox,
said a federal judge to order the Senate
on campus
KU'S SPACE Technology Center and its projects-remote sensing, strip-mining in southeast Kansas, development of a music synthesizer and Skylab-will be the subject of a half-hour broadcast at 6:30 tonight on WAFD-TV, Channel 4.
"KENTUCKY KERNELS," starring the competent but forgotten team of Wheeler and Wooley and "A Day at the Races," starring the incomparable Mara Brothers, and "The Summer Film Series SUA Summer Films series at 7 o'clock tonight in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas University. Friday's film will be "The Lest Patrol," and Sunday's will be a 1988 "Mikepeake's Dream," "A Mid-summer Night's Dream," both starting at 7 p.m. in Woodruff.
TOM SAWYER, NOTED Shakespearea actor, will perform in "The State of Man" at 8 p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sawyer will also conduct workshops for anyone interested all day Friday in Room 314 of Murphy Hall.
committee to hear potentially incriminating testimony in closed session, or at least in a hearing.
There was no immediate ruling, but the move seemed unlikely to set well with the committee, which has placed a premium on monitoring such facts surrounding the Watergate scandal.
Earlier in the day, the committee apparently averted a constitutional brawl with the White House—at least for the moment—when the White House agreed to provide Senate investigators with detailed information on conversations between the White House and John Kaine. Some question remained about whether the information the White House was willing to give was everything the investigators wanted to see.
COXMADE his appeal in connection with a motion from the Senate committee asking that Dean and the former deputy director of the Nixon re-election campaign, Jeb S. Magruder, be given immunity from prosecution for what he says before the Senate panel. Cox indicated he believed the immunity would be granted.
"The most appropriate order would be one requiring the testimony to be taken in executive session without subsequent public. Cox said in a memorial to U.S. D.C. District."
But, when asked if the substance of the Nixon-Dean conversations could be made available to the Senate investigators and to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox if they asked for it, Warren replied, "I doubt it."
The conditions requested by Cux would apply only to testimony from witnesses in danger of being indicted on federal criminal charges.
DEPUTY HIRE House Press Secretary GERALD L. Warren said the material to be turned over to the Senate select committee Gerald L. Warren had the duration of face-to-face meetings and telephone between Nixon and Dean, the White House counsel Nixon fired April 30. Where meetings were involved, names of others would also be supplied, Warren said.
The constitutional problem arose with reports that the Senate committee might subpoena the logs, and the White House insisted that was not constitutionally possible because the logs were personal presidential papers. On Wednesday, the
committee said there would be no subpoenas.
THE LOGS became important last weekend when it was reported that Dana Cordray, a former FedEx employee, was arrested.
investigators that he had between 35 and 40 conversations with Nixon relating to attempts to cover up the Watergate scandal. He denied any knowledge of any coverup.
Nixon Rebuilds Staff Laird Chosen Domestic Aide; Gen. Haig to Be Chief of Staff
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon named former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird his counsel for domestic affairs Wednesday as he continued rebuilding the Watergate-riddled White House high command.
Laird in effect replaced John D. Ehrlichman, and Haig换位 H. R. Halderman, the two top presidential assistants who had been in the wake of the Watergate scandal.
Army Gen. Alexander M. Haiq Jr., who has been working on interim basis as White House chief of staff, will retire from the army and continue in the job.
LAIRD, A FORMER nine-term congressman from Michigan was coming out of retirement because "government in some quarters is a failure" and a result of Watageate.
A. J. BOLTON
"This cannot be allowed to continue," he told a news conference. "... It is absolutely necessary that we get on about the secret." See LARBARD, Page 518.
Associated Press Writer
Bv TOM SEPPY
K.C. Police Chief, a KU Alum Reportedly Is Choice for FBI
WASHINGTON—Clarence M. Kelley, the Kansas City police chief likened to comic strip cop Dell Tracy because of a penchant for insults. President Nixon's choice for FBI director.
Administration sources said Nikon had decided on Kelley, and the White House was one of the four.
Kiley is a 1982 graduate of the University of Minnesota, where she was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity.
KELLEY, WHO SERVED 21 years with the FBI before taking over as Kansas City police chief in 1961, would become the director in the investigative agency's history.
J. Edgar Hoover died 13 months ago after running the FBI for 47 years.
Kelley, a 61-year-old lawyer with a keen interest in computerized law enforcement, has spent three days consulting with administration aides here. Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Hoeffler will join White House liaison officer were introducing him to congressional leaders Wednesday.
The Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to schedule confirmation hearings
KELLEY WAS in charge of the Memphis FBI office when he took over his hometown Kansas City police force after a shakeup in 1986. Two other officers were indicted for corruption.
Robert F. Kennedy, then U.S. attorney general, was one of those who recommended Kelley to the city's police board. Among the programmed Kelley is credited
KU's Alien Minority
ing the programs Kenley is created.
See K.C. CHIEF, Page Six
Last of a Series
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Associate Editor
One of the big problems that hinders greater interaction between foreign and American students at KU seems to be the American grading system.
Foreign students said they had been used to helping each other out, exchanging notes and books, and studying together for examinations.
The foreign students I interviewed said it defeated the possibility of teaching young men and women, a spirit of independence and cooperation with which to face the world outside.
"HERE, IT is all competition. If one of your classmates falls ill and can't take an exam, you go up on the curve," said one student. "What is the University teaching? Students come in, learn how to be selfish and go out."
Lack of cooperation from other students can take many forms. One foreign student related how he had forgotten to bring to class a printed sheet of paper he needed for homework, and the other wrote sheets and agreed to let the foreign student have one for 15 cents. The student paid up so
he could take the test, though he knew the cost of each sheet came to just under two dollars.
THE COMPLANTS run on and on-
trivial matters in some cases—but all adding up to bewilderment at what life at KU has turned out to be for the foreign student.
Some foreign students go to the extent of faulting themselves for their inability to fit into American society.
"It may be that some of our habitions annoy them and so they treat us this way instead of telling us what is wrong," one student offered.
"I think Americans have so little time for themselves that they cannot be bothered with it."
The girls I spoke to either did not date or had had just one date. One girl shily explained that American men were used to greater degrees of intimacy with their dates than a girl from a less permissive culture was able to adjust to.
ONE STUDENT said that girls tended to be friendlier as long as a foreign student did not date American boys. Once she began interacting, the girls stopped being friends, she said.
As for the male foreign student community, the ones who date all are few.
Turn to ALIENS, Page Three
Cultural Differences Hinder Many Foreign Students at KU
PRIEST
Foreign Students Encounter Clash of Customs
Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
2
Thursday, June 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
THE FLOOR OF THE HOTEL
Kansan Photo by CARLOS LISSON
Water Zooms as Students Rest
The new fountain in Murphy Court, between the wings of wurgers Hall, provides relaxation for students in the library and classroom. The fountain, which was given by two KU
graduating classes, was completed in the spring. The fountain honors Alice Murphy, wife of former Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy.
Lawrence Feels Gas Shortage
By JOHN A. KING
Kansan Staff Writer
The growing gasoline shortage that is engulfing the United States is gradually reaching into Lawrence. Many of the local service stations are experiencing a gas crisis, having to compensate by closing their doors earlier or not opening at all on Sundays.
Gas stations that are affiliated with large gasoline companies are receiving more business because of the locked doors of other service stations.
Buck Walters, an employee at Hildreast Mobile Service said, "We are pumping a lot more gas now because other stations are working shorter hours."
THE PREDICTED Rise in gasoline prices, which have increased several times, led to several severe.
Melvin Percival, an employee of Holton Transport in Lawrence, said, "What shortage we have is due to the real cold weather last winter and the greater demand for gasoline this year. These companies are shorter than others on gasoline, and the
consumption rate has increased ten per cent over last year."
Glen Dieker, who transports gasoline to the Mobile stations in this area, said, "We've had a lot of gasoline has been no quota placed on the gasoline being hauled so far. 'Gasoline prices should increase two cents by this fall, making it more economical'." The value and 44.9 cents per gallon for premium.
A SPOKESMAN for Skelly Oil Co., located in El Dorado, said that they were ready to ship the oil.
"The main problem is that the pollution controls placed on the new cars cause more gasoline consumption, thus causing a rise in fuel prices," the spokesman said. The cost of removing the lead from gasoline is greater and the other anti-pollution measures adopted by the government are not effective.
"The increased cost of producing gasoline results in a higher cost to the consumer."
M. Dettweiler, an employee at Lo-Ball
inc., said, "We hope pries do not rasp
from the floor."
Asian Women to Inspect U.S. Volunteer Methods
East will meet West when seven Asianomen come arrive in Lawrence Friday as guests of the first session.
Representing Indonesia, Korea and Malaysia, the women will spend the weekend with families throughout the county. They have been placed with area agencies to protect their interests. Those interested in finance will spend the weekend on local farms.
The visit of the Asian women is being conducted in conjunction with the League of Women Voters Overseas Education Fund. Before visiting Lawrence, the women will have spent two weeks in Washington, D.C. After visiting Lawrence they will visit San Francisco.
the Asian women spent a week in Ames, Ia,
last year, but naturally we Lawrence
and Ms. Wynn will be there.
MARILYN BRADT president of the Lawrence League of Women Voters, said
The Lawrence visit is designed to help the women, who represent volunteer organizations in their countries, examine methods for making their volunteer groups work effectively. Most of them are part of law enforcement in correctional facilities and penal reform.
A monthly meeting of the Lawrence League of Women Voters will provide the visitors with an opportunity to see an American planning session in progress.
City Prepares Weekend Dedication
Kansan Staff Writer
By CATHY O'BRIEN
Music will be provided by the Ralph Hazel Band and the Dave Neely Orchestra.
Dedication ceremonies for the Lawrence downtown renewal project will officially begin at 8 p.m. Friday with a community lot and sampling lot of the First National Bank Tower
At 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, dedication activities will continue with a banquet at the Eldridge Hotel in Atlanta. Robert Dole and Mayor Nancy Hambleton. Among the tentative guests will be Gov.
Immediately following the banquet, guests will tour the downtown. The 42nd Army National Guard Band will present a march of 3 p.m. in front of the First National Bank.
DOLE WILL BE the main speaker, with lambleton making a few remarks on the topic.
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During a break in the concert at 2 p.m. Sen. Dole will cut the red ribbon that represents the end of phase I of the renewal project.
PHASE II of the project will cover the 1100 and 600 blocks. This will involve the replacing of sidewalls on the 1100 block and the widening of 8th St. between Verizon and Sunrise Drive. The allow for turning lines to improve the traffic flow and increase the safety factor.
To give Lawrence a more "put-together" look, there will be an entry plaza located at the intersection of 6th and Massachusetts streets, which will announce downtown Lawrence.
PHASE II of the project will cost the city nothing, with a small benefit district paying $150,000 to the 110,000 building, the work itself will cost and build, cording to Don Schanek, renewal director. In addition to this will be $100,000 for renovation and the relocation of some businesses.
Phase I cost $1,050,000. Schaake said about $438,000 of this was paid for with funds from the city's $250,000 community program. Money from the city came to about $858,000, with $111,000 coming from a sidewalk benefit district. In such a district the sidewalk benefit is a benefit from the sidewalks pay for them.
The planning for city improvement began in the beginning of the 1960's. It was at this time, Schaake says, planning consultants were hired. in 1964 a report was published
33rd Year, No. 146
Telephones:
Newspaper: 844-8101
Advertising/Circulation: 844-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the winter semester. Mail subscription rates are $ & $ each student; m
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Streets Were Barricaded for Downtown Renewal
on the problems that faced the Lawrence area. These were such things as how and where the city was to expand and zoning problems that could arise.
In time, the street was higher than the sidewalk and wasn't carrying the water over. This led to a wearing away of the curbs, enabling cars to go over them.
and at one time there were log paving and wood sidewalks. These were built over with the same design.
SCHAKE SAID that an area of a town or city could "wear out" He has been told that the area's water supply is threatened.
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Because of this, Massachusetts St. had to be rebuilt. Short of funds, the city kept putting off the rebuilding for as long as was possible. There was much public and investment in the downtown area, which the city couldn't afford to throw away.
PLANNERS AT first advised the city to make the downtown area into a mall. Later, said Schaake, it was decided that Lawrence did not have the "build" for a mall. The streets were too wide and the blocks too long.
Architects Robertson, Peters, and Williams, with the help of the Project Area Committee, worked to find the format for the new Lawrence.
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Construction began on June 16, 1972, by the Constant Construction Company, with the help of the American Mining Company they had the basic form. The months of January and February were a standstill caused by the rain and snow. It wasn't until April that construction could begin again.
The Hillcrest
All of the work on Phase I will be finished by Saturday for the dedication ceremonies, just over one year from the date on which construction began.
The essentials of the project are found by Schake to be comfort, safety and beauty. We now underground utilities, street furniture and new streets, Lawrence is ready for the future.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 7, 1973
3
KU's Alien Minority/
Problems Encountered by Foreign Students Include Dating, Grading and Customs
From Page One
Many said they were friends with American girls but indicated that little or no "biology"
ALTHOUGH I thought it would interest a student of psychology to know how many adult males "managed" in such a state of sexual limbo, only one person admitted that foreign males were possessed of any "urges."
The student who responded to leads in this direction was a married student who stated that when even day and night concentration on his books had failed, he had made a short trip back to his country and brought back a wife.
Only one of the students I interviewed had married an American girl. He said he was very happy and wondered why there were marriages between Americans and foreigners.
STRANGELY enough, foreign students do not seem as tough after this country in England and other countries be motivated by dreams of a comfortable life in their
"If it were not for my teachers and the useful things I am learning, I would have packed long ago."
husband's country without ever having to work, but most of such marriages are known to work out. In some cases the husband must be a passive massive supplicant, aggressive, and return.
This may not be true, but one sophomore I spoke to informed me with a glint in his eye that he was transferring to a junior college where he might find more willing girls.
Foreign student
"But in the United States people think
in student is out to have a good time
of life."
ANOTHER STUDENT he had once read a letter in Playboy, written by a foreign student desperately in need of aid. He was sent to the adviceurges. Instead of the advice generally handed out, said the student, the magazine advised the letter-writer to divert himself by cultural activities and told him to avert his mind if he thought draw his mind in the other direction.
This, admittedly, is one problem that the university authorities can do nothing about, and would probably be totally out of their depth if they attempted to do so.
It would appear that this is the first time this liberal column has urged a person to something approaching cablacy. It is strange that in the case of a foreigner, it should practically advise a letter writer to so frock himself.
BUT THE other problems remain, and it
Do foreign students find nothing here that pleases them? Are they by nature, or as the result of culture shock, given only to complaining about everything? Fortunately not . . .
would be appropriate if the university or the foreign students' office did something about
The persons chosen for my interviews were mainly picked at random from the pages of the student directory, although a few had previously been taken out a few prominent foreign students.
It was from the initial interviews, however, that I found widespread dissatisfaction among the foreign students in our institution, for office, which is meant exclusively for them.
THE PREDOMINANT thought expressed was one of fear and distrust of that office, which may be responsible for the fact that he had been sent to the office only when it was unavoidable.
—Foreign student
Comments about the staff ranged from one extreme to the other, based on each student's personal experiences. Most students also visited the office once a semester.
Students found the mimeographed newsletter put out by the office their only tangible link with it. The newsletter, put out by students in the school, often about events at KU and other information of interest to the students. Interspersed are bits of humor such as "The hula-hula is described as a wild wait show." Most students found this article each issue of the international newsletter.
Coan spread out his hands helplessly when I suggested to him that student might not be able to answer the question.
"If you had no problems and you visited a place where someone came away with a problem," said another.
Although the office is designed to provide counseling and assistance of every type, none of the students felt they could take their personal problems there, or visit the dean of foreign students for anything but a signature.
"Before we got here the University was very sweet and the catalogs said many nice things. But now we are here, they have our money—what do they care about us?"
"The dean is a watchdog for the immigration people." said one student
HE EXPLAINED that in the three hours since he had come to office that day he had already seen four students who had various problems, and that he was trying to do the best he could with the staff he had—an assistant and a secretary.
Coan said he understood why students of foreign student offices at other colleges were in trouble.
*For the size of the foreign student population here, the police in the city are the most important force.
There are 835 students from 88 cou-
tries with fewer student have as
many as 100.
THE FOREIGN students agreed that the dean would be more accessible and helpful.
if he had a larger staff, and that the office would then draw closer to the foreign
"But they won't do it," one student insisted. "Before we got here the university was very sweet and the catalogs said many courses were free." The mover, what-do they care about?"
Coan said he was not sure of the amount of revenue brought in by foreign students, but his department had assistantships. Others, he said, were financed by their governments, by personal funds, by firms, or in some cases by the U.S. government organizations.
"BUT WHEN a school accepts foreign students it also commits itself to the creation of special facilities and programs for them," he said, and expressed sympathy for the foreign students and the problems they were facing.
Coan said he was in no way connected with any branch of government that might be keeping tabs in foreign students' activities on campus. He admitted that there seemed to a fear among foreign students to the FBI, constantly being watched by the FBI or CIA.
COAID SAID that if he were directly approached for information on students, he would give only that information that was readily accessible to any person.
"I have no idea if there is day-by-day surveillance," he said. "There is, of course, reason for certain organizations to be informed about the activities they're doing they're not about to tell me."
Referring to the panic among the students last fall when Arab students alleged harassment by the FBI, Coan said that none of those deported had been KU students.
He went on to say that he was working on a code of rights for foreign students that would safeguard them, and would be put to use nationally.
ON THE SUBJECT of cultural interchange and interaction of foreign students, Ms. Warn was aware that what was being done fell about the students' expectations. An attempt at cross cultural communication was made a couple of years ago, he said, but it had not been done.
Coan said he did not think the foreign students would be able to obtain a place in the Union where they could gather and meet those Americans who went there specifically to get to know people from other lands. He said there was a student activities team assigned to the Union with a place assigned to the International Club, which no one seemed to use.
Asked to comment on the alleged non-representative character of the International Club and the lack of confidence most of my interviewees had in it, Coan said he did not wish to take sides in the controversy.
HE SAID that until 1970 the International Club had been the most active campus organization, with weekly coffee-doughnuts and dips for all foreign foreign students and Americans had enjoyed.
Comments made by students, including persons present involved with the In-
struction, are recorded.
at least a partial return to such informal congregations.
A few acknowledged allegations that the club was too politically oriented, and said that although they would like to see this work, they felt it was not totally divorced from its planned activities.
I FACED Abdulla Al-Adiwani, then president of the International Club, with charges some students had made about Mr. Al-Adiwani's countries with common political ideologies.
"All lies," said Al-Adwani. "Any group can be a member of the club if it is approved by the vice-chancellor. Also, anyone can contest the elections. If they never come, how can they expect their countries to be represented?"
“WHAT'S THE USE?” said one student.
“They have control over about 60 votes and can manipulate these any way they want. No one stands a chance.”
But representatives of other countries do not appear to be even interested in making a claim for the benefits.
There were allegations, from one student, of irregularities in vote-counting, the handling of finances and other procedural matters.
Al-Adwani attributed some charges to Zomis propaganda aimed at discrediting him.
In the meantime, the main body of foreign students continues to live in a less than happy state, complaining to itself about such things as poor housing, neglect of premises by landlords, restrictions placed on them by the immigration authorities, and a general lack of response from the rest of the student community.
But regardless of where they stand, most students agree that the club may have projected too political an image, and would like to see a swing in the other direction.
ONE STUDENT said the last International Night had left him feeling ashamed he was a foreign student, particularly after an American friend told him it was a "sneaky thing to spring political elections." He had gone there for a cultural program."
Another student said that the "politics of hate made many students stay away from the International Club." One no wanted to change all of them; all they wanted was a change in its outlook.
There may be difference of opinion regarding the International Club and whether it is being exploited by a few people for political purposes, but as the officers of the club say, not many students making the charges have not made much of an effort to make it "representative."
THERE IS at least one thing almost all students seem agreed upon and that is their condensation of the Intensive English Center, an off-campus organization many foreign students have to go through before being allowed to join KU.
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It is linked somewhat under uncertainty with the university, but is almost totally self-supporting--depending, as far as I am to think, on fees from about 150 students.
It was not possible to obtain an interview from E. T. Erazmus, director of the In-Forensic Center (I.E.C.) although he received me and conversed with me for some time.
"I HAVE nothing to say to the Kansan," he announced. "Last year you did a story on us that was really damaging and was inaccurate, and you have ahead and print what you like about us."
Erazmus refused to comment on the serious charges made by some students because he had been ordered to fail students and keep them here for longer periods. Other charges were that outdated teaching methods were used at the school; teachers were teaching assistants were poor teachers.
One university professor I spoke to confirmed that the teaching methods were fairly obsolete and that the teaching artifacts used might not always be the best.
"But I doubt if the center has a conscious policy of failing people just to make them believe that they are not responsible."
THE ONLY information I was able to obtain from Erazmus was that certain faults in the program might be ironed out in the program and organized organizational changes had taken place.
In the meantime, the main body of foreign students continues to live in a less than bachelor's degree community such as things as poor housing, neglect of premises by landlords, restrictions placed on them by the immigration authorities, restrictions imposed from the rest of the student community.
DO FOREIGN students find nothing here that please them? Are they by nature, or as the result of culture shock, given only to complaining about everything?
Fortunately not. A foreign student feels more strongly about many things, perhaps, and may be more emotional than his American counterpart. Criticism voiced, when he drops his guard, may sound all too bitter.
But there are many things about America and about this universality that evoke an alarm.
MANY OF the students I spoke to spoke highly of various aspects of American life, the great opportunities, the dignity of labor, the great all, the great freedom people enjoined.
Satisfaction with their courses of study, and particularly with the teachers, was almost unanimous. Students said they found them helpful, friendly and understanding.
Many had found teachers who were
encouraged to them, and encouraged
them in their work.
"If it were not for my teachers and the useful things I am learning, I would have been left behind."
OTHERS TOLD me of instances when an adviser or chairman of a department had to make a decision.
Are the complaints foreign students voice any more legitimate because of, and this, that?
That, according to one student, is for the American community at large to decide
It may be helpful, in trying to see things through a foreigner's eyes, to visualize oneself in an alien land, speaking an alien language. If you have no attempts to make new ones, homestick for known faces, food and places, living with the hopeless knowledge that none of this will
change until one has finished what one came to do, and then returned home.
For this is how the foreign student is facing up to life at KU—for the most part without audible complaint—an anonymous part of KU's alien minority.
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
The image shows a young woman sitting at a desk, surrounded by an array of open books. She is focused on her work, with one hand resting on the table and the other pointing to a book in front of her. The room appears dark, suggesting it might be nighttime or a dimly lit space.
It all began in the first grade
But don't blame your first-grade teacher, it wasn't her fault. It was the system she had to teach.
The old "run, Spot, run" method
You have to读 it but outfour Word. World and.
And that's the way it was until you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
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You probably stopped reading out loud.
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Which means you read only as fast as you
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4
Thursday, June 7, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Law-Less Mayor Lacks Force
CONWAY SPRINGS, Kan. (AP)-The nine-member police force of Conway Springs has been dismissed by the mayor, who cited a lack of cooperation, but a City Council spokesman said the move resulted from a personal clash.
Mayer Lee Ternes unexpectedly fired the force at Tuesday night's council meeting. "I feel I didn't have the cooperation that would be desirable," he said.
Ternes added that he had received complaints about the performance of police duties and said that the department was too small to handle them. Springs is 27 miles southwest of Wichita.
POLICE CHIEF Robert Enloe said he knew of no major difficulty involving the conduct of his officers, and that Ternes had approached him about lack of cooperation.
Enloe received approximately $500
monthly, Spt. Owen Heird was the only other professional policeman. Others in the department were chiefly volunteers. They included four reserve officers, two trainees and Enloe's wife, Carolyn, who served as dispatcher from the Enloe home.
Conway Springs
Both Enoe and Ternes said they had no personal animosity. A recent brush that the mayor's son had with police had no bearing in the matter, they said.
A MEMBER of the city council, who
declined use of his name, said the general feeling of the council was that the matter was a "personal conflict" between Ternes and Enjoe.
The council member also said that the council knew of no complaints about police action.
TERNES TOLD newsman he opposed continuing the commissions of the department when he took office in May. At that time, three councilmen voted in favor of retaining the department members and two abstained.
Ternes he consulted state Atty. Gen.
Vern Miller and confirmed that he had authority as mayor to fire and hire the department.
In Topeka, Miller denied that he had advised Ternes that he could hire and fire policemen. "He had no right to say that," Miller said.
Regents Get Master Plan Report
By DEAN FORD
Kansan Staff Writer
TOPEKA-Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning and operations at the University of Kansas, gave a progress report on Phase II of KU's Master Plan to the Board of Regents and the Kansas Long Range Planning Committee Wednesday.
The planning committee was set up by the Regents in compliance with a request by the Kansas legislature for a committee to investigate the master plans of the six state colleges.
The committee also heard reports by delegates from the other colleges-Fort Hays Kansas State College, Kansas State College of Pittsburgh, Kansas State Teachers College, Kansas State University and Wichita State University.
City Jaycees Start Club Fund Drive
in brief
A fund drive for the proposed Lawrence Boys Club above the Duckwall store at 10th and Massachusetts streets is under way. The club, for boys ages seven through 17, costs $4,000 for first year operating expenses, $8,000 of which has already been collected.
KANU Gets Third Grant
The club, an idea of the Lawrence Jaycees, needs the first year's operating expenses which must be raised before the club can open.
Profs to Speak Overseas
KU radio station KANU-FM has been awarded a Community Service Grant of Public Broadcasting. This for the third station has received in the three years the project has been in existence. The grants help stations develop and improve services at KANU-FM the funds are used mainly to expand and improve programming.
Two KU professors have been asked to deliver addresses in foreign countries this summer. Ralph Christofersen, professor of chemistry, will deliver a major address at the International Conference on Computers in Chemical Research and Education, July 12-17, in Ljubljana, Uglyoslavia. John Murphy, professor of law, will deliver Nations Prosecute Syracuse, Sicily, on "United Nations Prosecute Central Repression of Terrorism." He will speak the Symposium on Terroismo and Political Crimes, June 4-16. The symposium is sponsored by the International Institute for Advanced Criminal Sciences.
KU Club Elects Officers
Judy Long, Salina senior, has been elected president of Mortar board, KU senior women's honorary society, for 1973-74. Other officers for the year are Stephanie Blackwood, Hoshington, vice president; and Pamela Elliot, Nuhantan, secretary; and Pamela Elliot, Nuhantan, treasurer. They are among 23 KU women in into Mortar Board. They were chosen by outgoing members on the basis of leadership, scholarship and service to KU.
Lawton would not comment on the reports given Wednesday. He said the reports dealt with the planning of facilities which might not be constructed for 10 years or more.
"The Board of Regents and then the Kansas legislature must approve of the
Even though the enrollment increases have leveled off in the last few years, KU is still struggling to get adequate facilities, he said.
plans before funds can be obtained." Lawton said.
High School Advisers, Students Attend Journalism Workshops
A workshop designed to train high school students for work on school publications is being conducted this week by the William Allen White School of Journalism.
Two sessions, both arranged through the University of Kansas Midwestern Music and Art Camp, compose the summer high school journalism activities. The first, which began Sunday, is a week-long event attended by 48 students.
The second session is from June 24 to July 21. Twenty students from eight schools will participate.
CLASSES IN ALL facets of newspaper writing and production, including photography, are conducted by members of the School faculty as well as guest lecturers.
This week's guest lecturer is Mary Benedict, professor of journalism at the University of Chicago.
"WE ARE OFFERING classes for beginners and advanced students. I think the critiques will help publications next year," said Suzanne Shaw, director of the workshop and assistant professor of journalism at KU.
An advisers' workshop, which began May 20 and runs until Friday, is also being held at the University of North Carolina.
With sessions in everything from interviewing to the legal aspects of the high school press, the workshop is designed to advisers on an opportunity to air problems by author publications and suggest possible solutions.
K.C. Senior Wins Boys' State Race
Jesse Millan Jr, of Kansas City, Kan, was elected governor of the American Legion Boys' State in elections held Wednesday on the KU campus. Milan, the candidate, defeated Steve Cousins, of Prairie Village, Federalist candidate.
More than 900 high school seniors are currently attending the week-long event, which has included the election of officials, a mock trial, assemblies, marches and rap sessions.
A change in the 1973 Boy's State was the liberalization of hair style regulations. Restrictions requiring the participants to wear hair above their collars were removed.
baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pets. G.B.
x Detroit 28 23
New York 28 538
Oklahoma 24 138
Boston 24 489
Milwaukee 24 489
Louisiana 24 489
West
Chicago 27 20 574 —
Minnesota 26 21 274 —
Minnesota City 19 30 134 —
x California 25 23 321 3/4 3/4
x Oakland 25 23 321 3/4 3/4
Toronto 16 22 132 12
Wednesday's Result
Boston 5, Kansas City 4, 10 innings
Colorado 3, Detroit 2, 15 innings
New York 7, Seattle 5, 15 innings
Minnesota 9, Cleveland 11, Cincinnati 5
Milwaukee, Oakland, incomplete
Thursday's Game
Thursday's Games
Chicago at Baltimore, night
New York at Texas, night
Detroit at California, night
NATIONAL LEGAUE East
W. L. P. Gat. 6
Chicago 21 32, 500
x Pittsburgh 23 33, 500 6
Boston 23 33, 500 8
Montreal 22 44, 578 7
New York 22 44, 578 7
x Philadelphia 22 38, 502 11%
x-San Francisco 37 20 649 -------------
Los Angeles 37 22 549 | -1%
Cleveland 30 18 634 -------------+
x-Houston 30 18 536 | 536 |
Atlanta 30 17 536 | 536 |
San Diego 19 36 345 -------------
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 8, Los Angeles 4
Philadelphia 10, San Diego 6
Philadelphia 6, San Diego incomplete
Chicago 7, Philadelphia 3
Three-Play Games
Los Angeles at Chicago at Montreal in Mountain Light
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh in Mountain Light
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Coaches Voice Football Hopes Continue Tour
Association, is part of a four-week 22 city tour of Kansas to promote the U.S. football team.
Needlework Classes Beginning June 11
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Extreme optimism about next fall's University of Kansas football program was voiced by Dam Fambrough, KU football coach, Sayers, assistant to the athletic director.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 7,1973
5
Facilities Adapted for Handicapped
By CONNIE DeARMOND
Kansan Staff Writer
Action is now being taken on campus to remove the architectural barriers facing students.
The restrooms in both the Kansas Union and Lawrence Memorial Stadium are being adapted to allow persons in wheelchairs to use the facilities. There are now only three restrooms on campus that handicapped persons can use.
Two residence halls are also making arrangements to remove architectural barriers. They are Joseph R. Pearson Hall and Oliver Hall.
AN AD HOC committee, formed this spring, is directly responsible for bringing about these changes. The committee is headed by Roger Williams, education assistant in geology, and a KU law graduate.
Williams is also awaiting the delivery of braille maps to help blind students and faculty move about campus. The curb cuts out in but have also aided the handicapped.
The cost of renovation is the committee's greatest problem. No news has been received on its request for funds from the state legislature. Until it receives funds, the committee must operate on funds available from the Buildings and Grounds budget.
**THIS GREATLY restricts possible changes.** Williams is concentrating on making "minimal accessibility to those people in the building that some of the new buildings on campus had unconsciously created barriers. The restroom toiletes are high enough and rails may be provided in the stalls but the stall doors are locked. Many wheelchairs. Many restroom doors are also
Means Says White House Ignores Indian Problems
RAPID CITY, S. D. (AP)-American Indian Movement (AIM) leader Russell Means says that a White House letter received by traditional Sioux leaders last week shows that the White House has trampled on the dignity of the American Indian and is continuing a "presidential head-buried-in-the-sand syndrome."
"Nowhere does this letter state that a radical and massive revolution of American Indian affairs has to take place immediately or the continued hopelessness, manifest itself into widespread do-or-die efforts similar to Wounded Knee," Msang said.
Means was freed on bond earlier this week after being charged in connection with the Wounded Knee takeover February 27. His statement in response to the White House letter was issued through his Rapid City attorney, Ramon Roubideau.
THE LETTER from White House counsel Leonard Garment was received after meetings between a government team and Indian leaders at Pine Ridge last month.
excess of twenty-five per cent of the area. It states that when sidewalks intersect with always the areas must be level and that public spaces should be wide enough to accommodate wheelchairs.
Means said the treaty between the government and the Sioux nation had been ratified by Congress and was on a par with the U.S. Constitution. He said the President Treaty provisions and create a presidential commission to renegotiate the 1868 treaty.
Indian leaders say they will issue their reply this week.
The ordinance applies to libraries,
hospitals, the new city hall and construction
projects for sidewalks. Curb cuts along
Massachusetts St. have also been put in.
The meetings at Pine Ridge earlier were among terms of the settlement that ended in 2016.
Indians claim the treaty gives them South Dakota land west of the Missouri River and have asked for a presidential treaty complaining about the loss of Indian leaders that only Congress, not the
White House, could revise the treaty,
GARMINIE, but it would also instil hard-
ware to Wounded Knee could only
too narrow for wheelchairs, Williams said that the committee was most valuable in "providing a very real watchdog service and in getting changes."
Some private businesses are adapting the buildings to allow access by handmade travelledodge The Travelledodge Hotel, Chuck Wagon Restaurant and Rainey's at Hillcrest have put in ramps.
The Lawrence community has also responded to the need for elimination of architectural barriers. On May 15 a city ordinance was passed adopting U.S. laws that require buildings and facilities acceptable to and usable by the physically handicapped.
The ordinance applies only to public facilities owned or acquired by the city and county authorities.
PETER RAYMOND
Means said the Indian Reorganization Act passed by Congress in 1934, which established elected tribal councils, was "the most serious problems in American Indian affairs."
The Kansas School of Religion is sponsoring a two-week institute focusing on the teaching of the Bible in the public schools. The program for Kansas teachers began Monday.
bring grief to Indians and alienate their supporters.
Course on School Bible Study Draws State Teachers to KU
Means Free on Bond
He said the act was similar to a law passed in the Union of South Africa to prevent the imposition of foreign debts.
"Besides studying the Bible and its contents," commented Lymn Taylor, dean of the school and director of the workshop, "the institute is considering matters of legality, propriety and significance of religious studies in secular education."
The White House letter illustrated the lack of sensitivity of high government officials to American Indian problems, Means said.
Lecturers for the workshop include Richard Jeske, assistant professor of
religion, and Rabbi Stuart Davis of Kansas City, Mo., lecturer in religion at KU.
"I thought the course looked like something I wanted to do," said Marilyn Keefer, a participant from Ottawa. "I also wanted to be a certificate and the course appealed to me."
"I'd like to have a pretty clear idea of what I can teach my fifth graders in regard to religion," said Wilma Perry of Bonner Springs. "I feel there is a void in their lives because the only way they ever hear of God is through profanity."
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Recreation Won't Draw U.S. Funds
Harold Cook, director of the East Lawrence Recreation Center at 10th and Delaware Streets said Wednesday that to the best of his knowledge, the center would receive Federal revenue sharing money that had been received by East Lawrence recently.
Cook also said he was not expecting any other additional funding for the center's efforts.
The recreation facility offers pool, ping pong and basketball. Starting Monday, Cook said a variety of games for small children would also be offered.
South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Mass. St., is the only other city recreation center in Lawrence, and Cook said that although both recreation centers basically offer the same facilities, South Park's receives more use.
The new summer hours for the center will be from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays and from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Sundays.
A playground will operate at the center 9 a.m. and end with and from 1 4 p.m. from 10 a.m.
Convenience, Cost, People Mark Summer Life in Residence Halls
more. Despite the negative comments I heard about the University of Kansas residence halls—"too crowed," "too noisy," etc.-occupancy rates remain constant.
Some call it home, others call it a hole
With a maximum capacity of 4,640 residents, KU residence halls operate during the regular school year filling approximately 87 per cent of the available space, during the summer with about 250 occupants.
"A BUS PICKS you up at the door, you
Convenience is the big attraction, according to Frank Bencivengo, assistant to the Dean of Men and summer resident director of Oliver Hall.
By KRISTA POSTAI
Kansan Staff Writer
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 pm-9 pm
10c DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
can rent refrigerators, your meals are fixed for you, there are washing machines in the basement--you just can't beat the service," Bencivengo said.
Depending upon the hall selected, occupants find other advantages to resident hall life from weight rooms to darkrooms to fully equipped kitchens.
“You'd be hardpressed to find a better financial deal in Lawrence,” Bencivengo said. “Besides that, you know your living costs for the entire year in August.”
THE HALLS, varying in cost from $560 to $1315, are financed totally by students under halls contract with the greater part of the money. 46.6 per cent going to pay salaries and benefits, 27.8 per cent good food costs, utilities and other related expenses, according to the Housing Office.
GIRLS' NIGHT
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1021 Mass.
THE AME in the WALL
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"We have a pretty high return rate and we're really trying to make halls a more appealing place," she said. She cited several options available to those considering residence halls, including the University of Chicago and students-coed, upperclass, freshmen-only and the construction of suites in Templin Hall to be available this fall.
"THE HALLS provide a chance to join group endeavors—at least the machinery's built in to offer something for everybody," Hanson said.
THE HILL in the WALL
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-785-7855 - We Deliver #9th & 10th
Center for Creative Arts constructed in Hashinger Hall, residence halls are attempting to be "a little more competitive with apartments and houses, because we have to be," said Ellen Hanson, assistant to the Dean of Men.
Emphasizing specialization, as in the
THE
sirloin
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Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are available at: www.univd.kannan.edu; or color, cedar, or national cedar CLARIBERING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HILL
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Let's look at the line again.
"Maintain a clean workspace."
Yes.
Final check of the text:
WATTER-you can drink it, wash it in and GOWN
it. You can eat it. You can drink it. You can eat it.
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Wait, is there a space before "GOWN"? No, it's just a blank space.
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The Student Senate is taking applications for someone to develop and conduct a public relations campaign for the University Run System. It will be held in B Kansas University between 5 p.m. Fri, June 8.
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6
Thursday, June 7.1973
University Daily Kansan
Lack of Quorum in House Halts McCloskey Talk on Impeachment
BY WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The first formal House discussion of possible impeachment of President Nixon was halted on the day after only six minutes Wednesday night.
a speech on the subject by Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, R-Calif., was on demand of Rep. Earl L. Landgrebe, R-Ind, murmur that the House could not muster.
McCloskey said he believed "that time seems almost at hand" when the House must consider formal impeachment proceedings"unless the President makes a full and fair disclosure of everything he knows and when he learned it."
LANDGREEB said he had no vendetta against McCluskey and represented no wing campaign.
"I don't think any member of Congress Republican, Democrat or Socialist should be on the floor talking about impeachment without a quorum present."
Even before Landgreye's quorum call, it was clear that because the day's business had been completed, most House members had left.
MCLOSKEY, in the prepared text of the speech that he did not complete, said Nikon's disclosure should deal with any White House knowledge of the Watergate case, including its coverup and the financial tactics of his campaign organization.
It also should include, McCloskey said, "all actions of the executive branch relating to the prosecution of Daniel Ellsberg, and in particular the domestic security activities, legal and illegal, of the President's own special investigations unit."
PETER HENRY
Paul McCloskey
"I suspect," he added, "that none of us
wish to impach the President or even inquire into the matter if he will fairly lay before us the facts that will establish his right to honorable acquittal or the precise reasons for his inability to properly release such facts."
IN ADVANCE of his speech in the House,
McCloake had invited colleagues to participate.
He suggested that the House look into the possibility of instituting preliminary impo
McCloskey has opposed Nixon's Vietnam war policy and ran against him last year in the 1960s.
IF THE national security were truly involved, McCloskey said in his speech, "we can keep our proceedings secret. Our record in this regard is at least as good as
Laird Named Adviser . . .
Several weeks ago Laird had told newsmen that if Nixon were involved in the Watergate scandal he would not want to know about it.
From Page One
Laird said the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the government were investigating the scandal as they should, but truth will be known and it should be known.
HE TOLD THE news conference that these remain his personal views "because of my concern about the presidency." But he didn't say anything about his noninvolvement and I accept that."
LAIRD SAID HE would assume his new duties June 15 after an already-planned trip overseas and would give up his congressional pension.
Hiaq, who for a month has been acting as interim White House chief of staff, will retire from the Army Aug. 1 and will become presidential assistant responsible for the operation and supervision of the day-to-day operations . . . of the White House staff."
business of government."
As counselor to the President, the White House said Laird "will be responsible for the over-all formulation and coordination of domestic policy." Laird, who was defense minister when he took office, will again hold Cabinet rank and will at on the National Security Council.
During four years on Henry A. Kissinger's National Security Council, Haig rose rapidly from the rank of colonel and last January was promoted to four-star general and named deputy Army chief of staff, a post he will now give up.
SEVERAL HOURS before the White House announcement, Ralph Nader's Public Citizens, Inc., fitted suit in U.S. District Court to strip Haji of his military rank and privileges, citing a law saying that no military officer can hold a civilian office.
those in whom the President has formerly reposed his trust."
He expressed the hope that colleagues would defer the filing of an impeachment resolution or the appointment of a special inquiry committee "for a few more days" to examine the disclosure. There have been no reports, however, that such steps are planned.
From Page One
with introducing a Sky Alert, a 24-hour day helicopter patrol; Metro Squad, a joint city-suburban investigation team; Operation Barrier, designed to prevent criminal activity across the Missouri-Kansas border; and the use of computers to speed police response.
McCloskey said, "The issue before us is one of constitutional and legal import, not of economic importance."
Kelley apparently came to administration
K.C. Chief to FBI...
THE DICK TRACY comparison was a product of a police department press release that boasted, "Even with two-way radios and space cars, Dick Tracy has much more over the technology-wise Kansas City police department and its chief."
attention last year when he took a leave of absence to head a five-man board supervising security arrangements for the U.S. and Republican national conventions.
His supporters credit him with reducing crime in Kansas City by 25 per cent since 1969. However, black leaders were demanding his resignation after the city's critics accused him of six persons dead. Critics accused him of condoning indiscriminate use of tear gas.
STATING THAT the House is the "sole repository" of the power of impeachment, McCloskey said. "Neither the Senate nor the House is the real power," we are entitled to delegate it to them."
"This being so," he added, "the question before us is at what point of time does the evidence of guilt reach that degree of probable cause that we are bound by the Constitution to commence formal inquiry, or not. This is clearly unless the President makes a full and fair disclosure of everything he knows and when he learned it."
Kelley last year assigned 10 black policemen to full-time recruiting other blacks for the police. The 1,300-man force now includes 90 black policemen.
housed, the Regents again discussed Chalmer's effectiveness.
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Criticism was aimed again at Chalmers in October 1969 when KU participated in the Vienna Open.
Chalmer's plans for the future were undecided when he resigns from what he had been a vice president.
Following the eruption of violence in July 1970, resulting in two fatal shootings, a motion was introduced by Regent Henry Bubb to oust Alcalmen. It was defeated 4-3.
Chalmers Marries ...
FOLLOWING THE BOMBING of a sairwheel in Summerfield Hall in December 1938, the bombing of St. Louis
CSW Distributes Booklet
Student unrest in May of that year following the shootings of students at Kent State, led to a nationwide call for the boycott of classes.
involved in the disruption of the ROTC review in April, 1969. Chalmers opposed Shults's request for the names of those involved in the incident.
Cancellation of the annual ROCT review and Chalimers' "plan of alternatives" drew criticism.
He was classified as a full professor on leave for six months prior to his appointment as president of the Chicago Art Institute in late September of 1972.
From Page One
CHALMERS SUGGESTED a "plan of alternatives," which was voted upon and approved in an all-University convocation. The accepted plan allowed students the
choices of finishing classes as usual, taking credit or no credit for a class, taking an incomplete or keeping the grades they had earned up to May 10.
A booklet outlining the purpose and activities of the KU Commission on the Status of Women was distributed to freshman women during summer enrollment.
The commission is currently attempting to deal with women's problems in obtaining
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
MONDAY JUNE 11,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS
The Chief Old Friends Recall Kelley from KU Days
A
Tracy Tag Came in KC
By LIZ EVERITT
And NANCY COOK
Kansas Staff Writers
Local residents who knew Clarence M. Kelley during his days at KU in the mid-30s remember him in him, glowing terms descriptive of a model FBI director.
"Kelley took us under his wing to straighten us out so we wouldn't be so rowdy, recalls a former Sigma Nu teammate and roommate of Kelley's, Swede Everley.
Everly said Kelley was a "quiet, smooth guy" with "a 'lot of tact."
Although Kelley was physically large enough to enforce advice to the younger
men, Everly said, "He never laid a hand on us."
ANOTHER FORMER ROOMMATE of Kelley's, Scott Ashton of Shawnee Mission, remembers as a care about anybody who didn't cut a corer.
Echoing Everley's recollection, Ashton said that although Kelley was a "a big, tough guy . . . he was kind and wonderful to everyone."
Ashton described Kelser as "one of the greatest gentlemen I have ever known." He said that his former roommate had been called "Chief" even during his KU days.
KELLEY HAD BEEN called "Chef" in
high school because of his youthful, jutting jaw resembling to the figure on Big Chief
When he later became involved in law enforcement, he was compared to Dick Dixy, both for his appearance and for his involvement in the fight fighting through modern technology.
While Ashton and Kelley were at the Sigma Nu house, there were only three or four cars at the house. Ashton recalled. He had two trucks, which was known to the fraternity as "Bluebird."
MILTON ALLEN, Lawrence city attorney, also remitmed a tax. Allen gold will
"always loaded with friends" to when Kelley gave rides.
Alen said that he thought Kelley "knew what kind of career he wanted" even while at KU. "For a college age male at KU, he might have already come into contact with." Allen added.
Allen called Kelley "a very congenial fellow" who was "highly non-partisan" and a "serious student," descriptions also acted by others who had known Kelley at KU.
Allen said that he and Kelley were not close friends and that they were "social networkers" who often shared food.
M. W. S.
See FRIENDS, Back Page
KU Student 'Chief Kelley
news capsules the associated press
U.S. Requests Costa Ricans To Extradite Financier Vesco
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica—The United States government has asked Costa Rica to extradite Robert L. Vesco, the American financier under indictment in connection with an unreported contribution to President Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign.
The Foreign Ministry announced Saturday it has forwarded the request to the supreme court. Sources said the court might decide Monday whether Vesco, a former New Jersey resident, can be extradicted.
Vesco failed to appear in a New York court last month to answer the indictment against him.
Vesco, a 37-year-old native of Detroit, has been indicted for trying to influence a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of his stock dealings with an unreported $200,000 contribution to Nixon's 1972 campaign fund.
Vesco also is charged with defrauding shareholders of Overseas Investors Services of $224 million during a time when he was investing in the company.
Indians Search for 3 Hijackers
NEW DELHI—The Indian government began Sunday what officers said was one of the biggest manhunts in recent years for three armed men who hijacked a Nepalese airliner in Indian territory and escaped into the jungle with $400,000.
The tri ordered the pilot to fly across the Indian border and land on a seldom-used aircraft built by allied forces during World War II. They drove away in a waiting jeep with the cases containing the currency notes.
A Nepalese embassy official said the money, which belonged to the Nepalese State Bank, was being transported on a regular Royal Nepali Air Force from Birtagaram, in southeast Nepal, to Kattamara, the capital. The hijackers did not seem to be politically motivated, the official said.
Israelis Egg Brandt
JERUSALEM - Rightwing demonstrators threw an egg and propaganda leaflets at West German Chancellor Willy Brandon after he visited holy places inside the old walled city of Jerusalem. The protest was the strongest objection so far against Brandt's visit to the Jewish community by a German government leader. About three dozen young Jews took part, shouting "Germans go home" and burning a German flag.
The theiroutist contrasted sharply with the generally warm welcome Brandt has found in Israel despite persistent memories of Germany's war.
Explorer 49 Zooms Moonward
The Space Agency's last scheduled moon flight in the foreseeable future was on course to the moon, a quarter million miles away, after being thrust flawlessly away from Cape Kennedy by a three-stage Delta rocket.
CAPE KENNEDY—A new Explorer is about to enter an orbit around the moon to record mysterious deep space radio signals, which could help solve the mystery of extraterrestrial life.
NEW YORK-John Dean III has told Senate investigators the wuhe House pressured the federal judge in the Watergate civil suit to delay taking "some potentially explosive depositions" until after the election, Newsweek magazine reports. Dean also alleged, Newsweek said, that President Nixon was personally aware of the Watergate cover up and that he and his agents frequently lied about it.
Dean Says Nixon Halted Inquiry
Newswear said Dean claims to have a sheaf of supporting papers and memoranda, no one of which "convicts" the President, but which did not.
Sun Here Again, But Not For Long
WINDY
The sunshine spree is to continue for a day at least, with a mask to protect against the sun, total with temperatures going once more into the high 80s. It should be fairly breery, with 15 to m.p.h. ranges ranging from 15 to m.p.h.
The outlook for tonight is slightly less cheering, with thunderstorms showers and thundershowers that could extend to Tuesday morning.
Fraternity Pal Of Kelley at KU Found in Auto
Playwright Inge Dies at 60
By Kansan News Services
LOS ANGELES—Embittered over the years as he waited for the curtain call that never came, William Ingen, by profession a painter in New York, wrote a tragic finale to his own life Sunday.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright was found dead at his home in the Hollywood hills in his automobile, its engine running, inside a closed garage. Police said it was an apparent case of suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning.
"I was always in a play," Inge, a native Kanasan, had once said in explaining why he liked to take long, lonely, nightly walks through his garden. "This is why this liking for solitude had made him somewhat of a reacuse, the scarcity of screenwriting assignments, having heightened his dislike for socializing. Just as I found that he been particularly depressed and unhappy
(1)
INVESTIGATORS SAID Ige had been admitted to the UCLA Medical Centre last week for psychiatric observation following a hospitalization that later signed himself up three days later.
Inge, a 1935 KU graduate, won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1950 for "Pc-
Inge at KU in 1935
nic," a play set in a little Kansas town. He also an Academy award for his work on "The Gunpowder Plot."
PETER SCHNEIDER
Inge Returned for Visit
other works were "Farber OH From Heaven"
heavens natural infection, "Theone Of"
natural infection, "Come Theone Of"
natural infection.
at the Top of the Stairs," "A Loss of Roses"
and "All Fall Down."
As one of the quieter and more sly members of the Class of '35, Inge was well liked but appeared to prefer keeping out of campus politics or any great social activity. Those who knew him personally described him as "a person of his own environment."
INGE WAS not one of KU's exceptional scholars and, when he was back on campus in 1961, joked about having taken three semesters to make the grades to be initiated to the Sigma Nu fraternity, of which he was a member.
He was interested at the time in becoming an actor—an interest sparked when he got a minor part in Sean O'Casey's "Juno and the Paycock." He began to take an active interest in theater, and was member of the National Collective Players.
Although he went to New York after graduating with the intent of becoming an actor, gave up the idea, possibly as the result of a moment of stage fright in an
ater production of "Our Town." HE WENT to work for the St. Louis StarTimes in 1944 as music-drama critic. After an interview with Tennessee Williams he
See PLAYWRIGHT, Back Page
Bob Dole Takes Poke at Press, Says Watergate News Overdone
Kansas Sen. Robert Dole used a speaking invitation in Lawrence over the weekend to lash out at the news coverage of the Watergate hearings.
Dole, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said the press could do too much in covering scandals and had a tendency to overkill.
Dole was speaking at a banquet sponsored by the Downtown Lawrence Association before the dedication Saturday of Phase 1 of the Downtown Lawrence Improvement Project.
HE SAID there had been a reversal of confidence in the government because of Watergate, but that the system was sound. He argued that the law didn't understand the system.
on campus
THE POLITICAL Action Committee of the Commission on the Status of Women will have an organizational meeting at 7 a.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. The committee will determine what action to take on potential sexual discrimination in local and national politics.
THE PUBLIC Broadcasting Service will feature "Joyce Chen's China" on the special of the Week at 7 tonight and at 9 p.m. Saturday on WTU-TV, channel 11. The program will have filled highlights of an American-Chinese woman's return visit to Mainland China after she had lived in Boston for 20 years.
Dole said what was happening "doesn't really represent America today." He concluded, "I have great faith in those who serve the government at any level."
Dole told the receptive audience that it was because of the system that we were finding the truth. In an interview after his speech, Dole said, "I hope that it will be done." And he proclaimed that the Watergate case and proscribe those who broke the law at the same time."
IN THE dispute between Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox and Sen. Sam Erwin's select committee, Dole said that he believed that he had been because he was a member of the Senate.
"However, I think the Senate also has a responsibility to Mr. Cox and his wishes."
since the Senate choke him out, he said.
Dole also said that he was afraid that if the dispute was not settled within the next week, "it will reach an impasse."
In his remarks prepared for the luncheon, Dole said about the Senate Watergate investigation, "I hope we can speed up what we're doing in the Congress."
HE SAID that the mail he had been receiving from constituents expressed a concern for "overkill" in the press and the Congress.
"I think they are rightly critical of Congress because that's all they are doing. I think the pendulum has swung too far." But he added, "I am confident that our system
venue sharing plan would greatly See DOLE, Page Two
HE TOLD those attending the luncheon that a revenue sharing plan would greatly
After Mayor Nancy Humberton recounted the long struggle of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce to acquire federal funds for an urban renewal project, Dole criticized the slowness of the Department of Housing and Urban Development in appropriating funds.
Dole said Lawrence's lengthy fight for federal funds for the downtown improvement project was a prime example of the need for revenue sharing.
I will try to be as polite as possible. Please don't call me if you have questions. I'll try to answer them in detail.
Sen. Dole Spoke at Downtown Dedication
Kansan Photo
2.
Monday, June 11, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Dole...
From Page One
speed up the flow of funds from the federal government to local governments.
Dole praised the citizens of Lawrence for their efforts in achieving a beautiful central business district, despite the slow cooperation of the federal government.
"It is important that we have had cooperation between the federal government and the City of Lawrence, but there is no doubt about where the credit goes."
DOLLE SEMEED proud that the effort was launched locally and said, "that is the way it should be." He stressed that concept as the goal of revenue sharing and that he believed that the new revenue sharing plan and the new revenue sharing plan that Congress will be considering soon.
"A strong central business district is important to the entire community." Mayor Hambleton said that if the downtown area becomes conveniently attractive, it would thrive.
She called the completion of Phase I of the urban renewal project only the beginning, and stressed the importance of continued work in order to improve city. Hambleton said that there were still problems with Phase II of the project, and close cooperation would be necessary to complete it.
AFTER THE luncheon, Hambleton led
the 175 persons attending to the corner of Ninth and Massachusetts streets where she cut a red ribbon stretched across the street. A few days later, the downstream urban renewal project.
As early as 1960, the Chamber of Commerce realized the importance of maintaining an attractive and modern central location in an effort to enlist in the aid of citizens, and in 1966, three urban designers drew up a $1.74 million plan, but no federal funds were provided.
More planning was undertaken in 1967, and in 1989 another application for federal funds was made, but again, no funds were available. In 1970, application for funds was again made, and on June 23, 1971, it was approved. By January 20, 1972, finally had the federal backtrack, it needed
The Downtown Lawrence Association began its weekend festivities Friday night with a dance in the parking lot of the First National Bank.
The improvement project started on June 6, 1972. The total cost of Phase I of the project was approximately $1,050,000. A Federal Neighborhood Development Program grant provided $550,000. Phase I included the zig-zag park stalls and street lamps along the 700 through 1000 blocks of Massachusetts Street.
Jerry Is Trapped into Telling Who He Is
comment
By ZAHID IQBAL
Kansan Associate Editor
"It is my room, you know," I informed him, as I bent over and picked up the clippings. "Anyway, there's no paper tomorrow and that's why I'm home early."
The newsroom, for most newspapermen, is their home, in more ways than one. The other place I called home until recently has just become a place to stager into at three minutes before returning to the hundred minutes of sleep before going to the newsroom for more punishment.
"No paper tomorrow!" Jerry seemed unusually perturbed. "What'll I do for
'What are you doing here? he blurted out helplessly.
But last Thursday I got home early, around midnight, and surprised Jerry in the middle of a catap. He let out a yelp, tried vain to conceal what appeared to be clippings from the Kansan for the past couple of days, and turned on me instead.
"Oh, there's TV, the local paper, the Kansas City paper..."
Another conversation with the friendly cat; he promises to tell some exciting tales.
"But you don't have TV and you don't take any of the papers," he protested.
"Oh, come on Jerry," I told him. "You're only a cat, what can there be in the news for
When he spoke, it was with calm dignity.
Jerry's whiskers twitched as he drew himself to his full height of 24 inches and put on his spectacles. He didn't have to say anything. The rebuke in his glance was alone enough to make me feel sorry about him. "Don't tell him," there are cats: I reached over, took Jerry's paw, and was gratified that he slowly withdrew his claws and stopped bristling.
caught him. "It is better to be the head of a room than the tail of a fox," he said. "Specially if someone's trying to chop off the tail. And that's why I'm here, in this hole of room that you call a home, cut off from most news of who is doing what to whom."
Union to Present Petition to City
Firemen Seek Equality in Salary
By MICHAEL HOSTETLER
Kansan Staff Writer
Members of the local firefighters union plan to present a petition requesting a "joint and equal pay scale" for policemen in the City Commission sometime this week.
Alvin Samuels, president of local 1596, said that he was confident that the firemen already had more than enough signatures to force a referendum on the issue.
The petition is the result of two months of door to door canvassing by union members and supporters. Samuels said that the union had received excellent response from the community and that about 90 per cent of those asked to sign the petition did so.
THE DISPLEE between the firemen and the city began on Jan. 16 of this year when the firefighters, who were still in training,
wage increase for beginning policemen, but only a 5 per cent increase for firemen. A total of forty-nine of the city's 62 firemen were killed in the early days of work slow down of an emergency duties.
When city manager Buford Watson threatened to take disciplinary action against the firemen participating in the raid, the union members voted to stop the slow down.
AFTER the firemen stopped their work slow down the Ladies Auxiliary of Local Fire Brigade and gathered signatures on a petition supporting parity for firemen and policemen. The Ladies Auxiliary filed their petition with the police commission accepted it without comment.
That petition was not legally binding on the City Commission, however, and on
March 27 the union announced plans for a petition that would force the commission to let the citizens of Lawrence decide the issue in a referendum vote.
Although he hopes the commission will allow a referendum, Samuels said that there was a possibility that the city commission may take immediate action of its own.
If the commission does not approve the petition within 20 days after its submission, a referendum will automatically be presented to the people. Samuels is confident that the people of Lawrence would approve the referendum, and he said that he would have a more meaningful and long-lasting impact if decided by the people.
WATSON SAID that he believed that there was no basis for firemen and
Watson also said that he believed it was easier for firemen to get second jobs because of the work schedule of three days on and three days off.
policemen to receive the same pay. The duties are dissimilar and it is easier for the city to recruit firemen, and he believes that justifies some pay disparity.
Samuels said that he saw the dispute as being more of a political one. He said that the parity would benefit the police as much as the firemen.
Pastor Explores New Methods Of Worship in Special Services
IN 1970, Watson introduced the concept of pay parity. But in an "anti-fireman" move, he and the commission lowered the firemen's pay, and Samuels believes the same thing could happen to the policemen in the future.
Kansan Staff Writer
By KATHY HODAK
Kansas Stell Writer
"Un-Sunday" services, although unusual and untraditional, are not unthought or untried at University Lutheran Church, 15th and Iowa streets.
The person who presides over the "Un-Sunday" services, which occur every Monday night at 8:30 is Pastor Donald Conrad, a graduate of Augustana Seminary in Rock Island, III, and pastor at University Lutheran Church.
through and put together subsequent services.
A pastor Conrad's method is to prepare a sermon so that in three sentences he can say all of it.
"ABOUT THE only thing that ruled out
is the red hymn, the regular hymn book of
Renaissance music."
"WITH 20 people, you don't have to lecture them," he said.
Dance forms, interpretive or dramatic readings, impromptu hymns, jazz and
A firm believer in the group process, Pastor Conrad allows his sermons to evolve in whatever direction the congregation wishes, through shared reflection. His sentences are presented only to prompt ideas.
"I's a very frequent experience at the coffee period afterward," Conrad said, smiling. "I love it."
Conrad has worked for five years to give his congregation the opportunity to explore new approaches to worship. During the school year, the 10 a.m. service provided that opportunity, which the "Un-Sunday" services offer during the summer.
"An awful lot of people don't want to do anything different when they get to worship. And that's not what we're offering. That's what is being offered everywhere else and they can go there."
motion picture shorts have been incorporated into worship services. Conrad said that, although he was in an experimental worship setting all of the time, there was no such thing as "experimental" worship.
"You can't experiment with worshiping. You worship or you don't. But you can use materials experimentally for worship," Conrad said.
NEW IDEAS for worship, like Conrad's sermons, evolve from the congregation during informal gatherings that follow the service. Week by week, themes for worship are developed by those people, most students, who are willing to help think
this', or 'we wish we could do something else'. So people have shaped and do shape things.
Samuels attributed city opposition to firemen to the fact that the firemen were the only group of city employees that are organized. He said that the city was determined to keep the two departments apart and unorganized.
The idea for "Un-Sunday" services emerged from such a gathering when children were going to be done during the summer. Church members who will be away for weekends during summer months have the opportunity to worship with community or friends at Congregational Church, Cornish Side.
COMMUNITY AND reflection upon the word of God within the context of the contemporary situation are essential to worship, according to Conrad. No matter how unconventional the "Un-Sunday" services are between these elements will remain constant.
Lawrence has grown to include 21 parks with a total of about 240 acres. Among these parks there are 13 baseball diamonds, 5 golf courses and 6 tennis courts located at school sites, a one-mile jogging course, a swimming pool and three horse rides. The park sponsors a variety of summer activities.
Lawrence Parks Provide Recreation For All Ages
The first of June marked the beginning of an active summer for residents of Lawrence who take advantage of the many opportunities by the Parks and Recreation Department.
Programs for children include neighborhood playgrounds, nature studies, daycare centers, and tutoring.
83rd Year, No. 147
Telephones
Newspapers 844-8100
Advertising Circulation: 844-4358
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer. Subscription rates are $ 6 a month or $ 10 a semester. Submit subscription rates are $ 6 a month or $ 10 a semester to 6644. Accommodations, goods, services and employment benefits are provided at no cost. Color, creed or national origin. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of Kansas or the State of Missouri.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
ANY CHILD from kindergarten through junior high age is eligible to take part in the creative instruction, which comprises charcoal, chalk, watercolors, modeling, copper enameling, graphic art and art appreciation in a studio atmosphere.
New staff: Monroe Dahl, editor; Zahil Adab, associate editor; Katie McNamara, senior editor; Jennifer Cannier, assistant editor; Rike Haugh, chief call center; John Pugh, senior management officer; Nicole Goodman, classified manager; Jerry Bush, admin. secretary; classified manager; Jason Krauch, administrator; classified manager; Jessica Malmor, assistant business manager; Jack Mitchin, talent consultant.
The pool sponsors swim instructions, competitive swimming, aquatic programs and public swimming hours for area residents. General admission for children under 12 is 30 cents and for adults is 60 cents. Ticket booklets are available.
**A IN CITY commission meeting on Feb. 27, Samuel appeared before the commission with commission candidate William J. Hodgson along with a wording of the employee manual to allow city employees to speak as individuals to city commissioners, to allow city employees to participate actively in political campaigns, to endorse candidates for city commission.
Samuels cited the city commission's change in the City Employee Personnel Manual as an example of the city's opposition to the firemen's union.
The city commission changed the working of the employee manual somewhat, but employees are still not allowed to discuss job matters directly with city commissions or to endorse candidates for city commissioner or participate in the campaign.
Those who are unfavorable to this type of service probably don't come back, Conrad said, and they don't hang around afterward to tell him.
program, begun in the late 1920's by Maud Ellsworth- Art Studio.
A series of band concerts under the direction of William Kelly, KU registrar, will be held at 8 p.m. on June 13, 20, and 27 at the Bandstand in South Park.
Adults and children are encouraged to take part in classes such as ceramics, bridge, guitar, oil painting, charcoal drawing, woodblock cutting, linoleum printing, watercolor painting and skimming.
Interested persons should call Kathy
bode, director of the South Park Recreation
Center in New York. (718) 369-2000.
Fees for these programs range from $5 to 10 and in some cases the cost of the program is included.
The City Commission claims that these clauses restricts the political activity of the city government and employees. The commission and the city manager believe that the rules protect employees from a spoils system that might arise if the rules were struck from the ground.
Not all who attend University Lutheran Church are Lutherans. During his five years of involvement in contemporary worship, Conrad has met many students of other religious beliefs who attended his services regularly.
Samuelts said that this was "strictly illegal" and a violation of the city employees' civil rights. The firemen are on their law on this matter at the present time.
THE MUNICIPAL Swimming Pool at 4b and Kentucky streets is open from May 26 to
The band will also play July 4 at the Stadium for the Jaycees Memorial Firefighters
SAMUELS SAID that the loss of pay pahay was a blow to the morale and the pride of the Lawrence firefighters. He said that the men were still doing the best job possible in situations, but the officers were having to push the man a little harder around the station.
Even a Jewish girl could be found among the congregation last year. When Maudley Winters arrived, she prepared a Passover meal for the congregation. That evening her mother telephoned to ask whether she was capable of attending. "Yes, Mother," she said. "In fact, I'm
Samuels said that the men had lost pride in their duties around the station.
"Yes, Mother," she said. "In fact, I'm leading it."
"There are few men left who are still proud to be firemen," he said.
But she didn't say where.
The wage scale for firemen ranges from $57 to $714, while that of a police patrolman ranges from $587 to $750. Although the pay scale of police detectives and fire training officers is the same, that of a police lieutenant is 130% to $1650 while an assistant officer is 120% to $1500. The receives wages range from $780 to $1030. The pay of the fire chief ranges from $900 to $1400 and the police chief's wage ranges from $1200 to $1600.
--detailed study. It will present its recommendation to the legislature in 1974.
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I can take offense when I want to, and I did.
Swords
"In Washington, I consorted with the cream of the nation—which incidentally is the only place you'll find it—and saw this woman in the room. You are proud of, being made. From that," he turned round and surveyed the room contemptuously, "to this. He almost spat out at me."
Have you seen a cat blanch? Jerry did. He practically turned white all over, and I had to get him out.
Rugs
"So that's what you did in Washington, did you? What were you—President Nixon's cousin?"
"Okay, you can take me away; I should have known you were working for Them." He held both hands out, as if waiting to be placed on them, and turned his face away.
Cookware
HAAS IMPORTS
I just stared at him with my jaw open. All the things Jerry had said since he adopted me, she had told me.
"Jerry," I said, disbelief in my voice,
"don't tell me you really are President
Nixon."
The utter surprise in my voice must have reassured him. He turned back to me, dropped his hands sheepishly to his sides and grinned.
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"I guess you're not one of Them after all, so it's okay for you to know: yes, I am His cat. And until recently, that was a perfectly legitimate and respectable thing to be."
"Oh it still is, it still is," I hastened to assure him. "I can't believe I have such an illustrious guest. But tell, me Jerry, who They are, why they out to get you, why are you here in the first place—this is all so confusing."
Jerry joked sagely, came up to my side, and patted my hand. "One question at a time," he said, "is this is particularly bad year for those who make other people's business their own. But in good time you shall know all, I Jerry, the hard time Cat House can tell you."
"Tonight?" I begged.
"Later, much, much later," Jerry answered importantly. "But if you are good, earlier. Or even much, much earlier. Who knows, perhaps even tomorrow."
"But Jerry, I have a Right To Know," I protested, having read the phrase in some book. "I am very afraid."
"Goodnight, Jerry," I said as I put out my light." I guess we can talk tomorrow."
I have been told some things I say are funny, but this really broke him up. He was still giggling helplessly when we retreated and hadn't having said nothing in the meantime at all.
Two seconds later his even more filled the room with the constancy of a busy telephone line.
Parks Authority Names Perry As Possible State Resort Site
Local Jail Facility To Be Dinner Topic
Awareness of the fay Jerry was doing me in
aware at all the atk. I answered 'okay'
in awareness at all the atk.
"Maybe," answered Jerry. "Mind you, I'm not concealing anything from you—after all, I eat your food. But what I am telling you when to tell, what to tell and so on. Okay?"
The Lawrence League of Women Voters will hold a dinner tonight at Plymouth Congregational Church. Forrest Swail, the executive welfare, will discuss the recommendations for the Dallas County Committee on Correctional Services and Jail Facilities.
Perry Reservoir has been selected as a
site for the state Parks and Resources Authority,
and a permanent facility.
Perry is one of 11 Kansas reservoirs included in a Parks and Resources feasibility study which was authorized by the 1973 Kansas Legislature.
The authority is expected to choose the firm that will make the study this week. The firm must be again sometime in a take preliminary exam before it sites narrowing the choice to three for a more
Fred DeVictor, assistant director of the Lawrence Parks and Recruitment Department, said that the advantages of having a resort are that it provides the resort would bring in tourism trade.
I
Potential sites besides Perry Reservoir are Cedar Bluff, Cheney, Ehlor Danilo, Erc Kanapolis, Melvern, Milford, Pomona, Tuttle Creek and Wilson reservoirs.
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DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
Monday, June 11, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
31
1
The staff at the KU Student Health Service at Watkins Memorial Hospital is continuing to render comprehensive health services this summer, despite upcoming major changes in both facilities and administration.
By DAN PATRICK
Watkins Services Continue . . .
Effective August 1, Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of Student Health Service, will resign. Dr. Martin Wollmann of Glenside. Pa.. will succeed Schweiler.
Fire Trucks at Spooner Draw Visitors
At the same time, the Student Health Service is preparing to vacate Watkins Hospital for a new, two-story building—almost twice the size of Watkins—east of Westchester and west of southwest side. Occupancy of the new structure is scheduled for September.
MEANWHILE, the health service's heavy caseload is expected to continue throughout the summer. Last year its caseload was 103,424 outpatient visits, or an average of more than six outpatient visits per KU student.
The heavy caseload, according to Schweiger, is attributable to the large array of services offered, ranging from minor first aid and immunization to minor surgery.
Last year, the staff of 12 full-time doctors and three clinical psychiatrists aided in almost every kind of clinical health situation, including methadone treatments for area heroin addicts, a group whose never exceeded nine at any one time.
THE SERVICES at Watkins are rendered
without charge or at minimal charge to students. Free services include immunization lab work, psychiatric visits, and chest X-ray. Pharmacy and pharmacy and hospitalization. Pharmaceutical products are sold by prescription at wholesale plus cost, and hospitalization in one or two 32 beds is $15 a day—about half of what comparable private hospitalization costs.
The health service is funded by KU student fees and receives no state or federal support. Any regular student is eligible for treatment there.
The Douglas County Health Service is supported by state and federal funds and is open to any member of the public, including students.
SCHWEGLER, who is also the temporary public health officer at the county service, said that the facilities there, although limited, were used by students for services that Watkins could not offer, including contrapelives. Contraceptives are administered after a check-up to persons of 18 years of age or older.
Outbreaks of Rubella, a highly communicable form of measles, are occurring now on a number of American campuses and hospitals. These cases are recommended. A simple blood test can natural immunity to the disease and inoculation can virtually assure immunity. Both immunization and general services are available at Walking throughout the summer.
But Cash Short at County Health
By JOHN R. BENDER
Although the KU health service is independently financed, the advent of revenue-sharing is causing financial difficulties in the area of health service.
Dr. Raymond Schweiger, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that there was no problem with the funding of health services at KU. University health services are financed through student fees and $17,000 a year from the Watkins Trust Fund.
Schwegler, who served until recently as interdirector of the Douglas County
'Rock Chalk' Finale, Roadblocks Recall Campus Scenes of 1970
By DARRYL SERPAN and LIZ EVERITT
Steve Smith, Kurt Weiss
Roadblocks and fire trucks on campus plus a gathering of several hundred people at Twelfth and Oread streets added up to an astonishing 30,000 people, ending with the weekend just past.
political process may create problems for the Douglas County Health Department. Kay Kent, the new director of the health department, said difficulties in the future in receiving funds.
ROCK CHALK CAFE GLEN HEART HILL
ROCK CHALK CAFE
Campus police began "selective enforcement" roadblocks last week as part of continuing investigations into recent assault cases, according to John M. Thomas, director of campus security and parking.
Kent said that the 1973 request of $14,358 for the Health Department had been granted. As more agencies seek a part of the revenue-sharing funds, it will be increasingly difficult to obtain the money requested for health services.
ACCORDING TO Schweigel, the contraceptive program was receiving $8,000 a year from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). The Department is also in compliance with the Douglas County Health Department was not in compliance with HEW protocols.
Thomas said over the weekend that the selective periodic roadblocks would continue as part of his department's investigations into recent cases of rape and exhibitionism, including two incidents of indecent exposure on Saturday.
THOMAS SAID that he did not consider the recent reported cases of indecent exposure here as representing more a prevalent incidence rate than on any other college campus "whenever the weather gets nice."
Visually, some campus-watchers may have been reminded of 1983's unrest, curfews and the burning of the Union. Factually, for security police and fireman, it was simply a busy, frustrating few days; formerly the New Haven Cafe (formerly the Rock Church) on its last evening of operation, it was a time for revelry.
Thomas also said that KU rumor control
Brief 'Rock Chalk' Revival Ended Saturday Night
and his office had been unable to trace the source of recent rumors regarding the presence of an escaped mental patient in her house. He discounted the rumors at face value.
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, fire trucks rolled onto campus on two different occasions in response to an electrical fire in Spooner Art Museum.
DAMAGE FROM THE FIRE to the
building was estimated at $500. There was no damage to the art collection.
Down the street, another Lawrence landmark completed a chapter in its history as the New Haven Cafe served its last beer Saturday night.
THE NEW HAVEN, 618 W. 12th St., celebrated the closing with a bit of nostalgia. A sign reading "Rock Chalk Cafe" was placed over the New Haven sign.
Health Department, said that some of their community service health programs had trouble receiving federal funds. The program has been denied funds, Schwefel
Art Staff to Get Portable Offices
Some of the portable office buildings in the center of the KU campus will be getting new tenants, according to Keith Lawton, of facilities planning and operations.
By DAGMAR PADEN
The portables that will soon see new tenants are the two between Fraser Hall
and Watson Library. Both trailers will be
moved after Wescoe Hall is completed. The portable annex attached to Watkins Memorial Hospital will be moved after the new student health center is completed.
Some of these portables will be used by the department of visual arts. Man of the art department, Ms. J. Smith
Classrooms to Be Ready In Wescoe Hall in August
By GAIL VESSELS
Classrooms in Wesco Hall will be ready to use in late August, says Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning and operations. Construction has reached the advanced stages, with the emphasis on the completion of Wesco's classrooms.
Kansan Staff Writer
Lawton said that he did not anticipate the finishing and occupying of faculty offices and the two lecture halls in Wescoe until Thanksgiving or later. While construction on these areas continues, work on certain entryways, sidewalks and corridors will be isolated sufficiently to avoid inconveniencing people using the building.
THE FOREIGN language, English and history departments will have offices in the completed Wescoe Hall, which will contain approximately 50 classrooms, ranging in a capacity from 10 to 90 students. Also included will be two large lecture rooms and two multi-purpose rooms with large seating capacities.
The University's priority to complete the classrooms is because of the ease in occupying them and the need to teach students in the proper setting, Lawton said. The faculty offices will be filled at a slower pace.
Lawton said that there was a trend toward more unprogrammed study areas in buildings such as the study lounge that will be in Wescott, in Wisconsin, and buildings that house their classrooms, and fewer students are going to the library. The schools have an area for concessions as well as for student recreation.
out! areas, Lawton said. These are areas where the student can go outside to smoke a break, but still remain in the building during recess or when under Wescoe for easy access to the buildings on the south part of campus. There will also be terraces around the building.
THE PROJECTED cost of Wescoe is $78,000. The students will pay for $15,000.
The portables are a bridge between projected and present facilities. They are to be removed from the center of the campus as monitors at the earliest possible time, Lawton said.
The portables cost from $20, 000 to $25,000 each. As the state could not finance their purchase, all portables were purchased by the Endowment Association, Lawton said. There are more than 10 portables now in use on the KU campus.
the opportunities that are open under revenue-sharing.
The new building will have many "spill-
The new building was named after W. Clarke Wescoe, who resigned as chancellor at the University of Kansas at the end of the 1890s school year to become a vice-president and later to be president. Last March he was named vice-chairman of the board of directors of the company.
The use of portable office buildings at KU started five years ago. At that time, Strong Annex was demolished to make way for Spencer Library, according to Lawton.
the old engineering shops south of mowen are torn down to make way for the new
Zumwalt said that the increased emphasis on revenue-sharing would force policymakers to involve in the political process. These officials will need to convince the public and public office holders of the need to allocate revenue-sharing money for health care
When this campus is finished with the portables, they will be put to use at University of Pennsylvania, said Lawton. The university research stations have history reservation located near the Lawrence airport and the Sunflower orchard, where the old ordance works outside of Lawrence.
The University plans to get much extended use out of the portables, according to LaTeX.
The cost of transporting the portables to the research stations cannot be estimated at this time, according to Lawton. The cost would depend on how far the portables are to be moved, what type of ground they are to be moved to and other factors.
This need to become involved in the
Schweiger said that the Health Department had since resubmitted its application in compliance with these protocols, but the aid had not been granted. As a result, the Health Department is now charging those who seek contraceptives. Schweiger also agreed that the department was still receiving federal funds for its maternal child welfare program.
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The funding problems in the health service area are related to the new emphasis on providing care for a new director of the Health Services Education Activities Project at Washburn University in Topka, said "People in the health care system are in a new ball game—revenue-sharing."
ZUMWALT SAID that funding sources were drying up. Categorical gifts-in aid are becoming increasingly difficult to obtain. Zumwalt pointed out that a major source of health service aid in Kansas, the Kansas Region Medical Program, was providing medical care by forcing health care officials to look toward revenue-sharing as a source of funds.
From $ ^{s}140^{00} $
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a grantsmarch workshop, sponsored by the Health Services Education Activities Project, was held June 1 and 2. This workshop, Zumwalt said, was designed to assist organizations in understanding the increasing scarcity of funding sources an
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
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You have to读 it but put it word. Worid and. And that's the way it was until you became a second grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
But you couldn't do it.
But you couldn't do it.
You probably stopped reading out loud.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still said every word to yourself.
But you still said every word to yourself.
If you're an average reader, you're probably reading that way now.
Which means you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute.
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4
Monday, June 11, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Team Flops, But Colson Breaks Record
KANSAS
Special to the Kansan
BATON ROUGE, La.—A dismal performance by the University of Kansas track team over the weekend in the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships was slavaged somewhat by javelin thrower Sam Wheeler during a record-breaking throw of 279-9.
The Jayhawk team, which tied for second in the indoor championships and was considered a contender for the outdoor title, had 16 games lost in both the overall standings with 17's points.
Sam Colson
U. C.I.A., the pre-meet favorite, won its third straight outdoor team championship with 56 points. Oregon was the runner-up for the second straight year with 31 points, followed by Brigham Young and Arizona State, who tied for third with 28 points each.
He won the NCAA title with a throw of 279, which eclipsed the old record of 273-3 to three years ago by Bill Skinner of Tennessee.
Colson, from Mankato, Kan., was the only Big Eight Conference athlete to win an NCAA title. He won the competition over Oklahoma and Kennedy of California, who threw 266-5.
HIS TWOR 279-9 was still far short of his personal best of 290-10, which came in a dual meet at Alabama on March 24. At the time, the throw was ranked as the best in the world this year, but has since dropped to third best.
The other points for KU were scored by Porter in the pouch vault and Randy Squid.
Porter, who holds the NCAA Indoor title, finished third in the vaulting competition with a leap of 17.0. The competition was won by Dave Roberts of Rice, who cleared 17.4. It was Roberts' third straight outdoor vaulting title.
Brigham Young, 26; Arkansas State, 28;
Tennessee 24; Texas-Ela Paso and Kent
State 22; Memphis State and Texas 20;
Michigan State 18; Kansas $17\%$.
SMITH, a native of McPherson, threw in fifth with Hickler of Kauanau State at 74.0 and second with Stern of Kauanau State at 74.0.
sports
KU finished in a tie for the championship and Gronkowski finished no lower than this week.
Secretariat Stampedes to Fame
NEW YORK (AP) - It wasn't a race, it was a one-horse stampede. But Secretariat's legion of followers wanted a hero. They saw something bigger than the hell they got.
And then on one hot, steamy afternoon he became a legend.
Secretariat's 31-length victory in thealmist Slak made him the first horse in 2017 to win the PGA Tour.
Team scoring—UCLA 52: Oregon 31:
In a time when stone too often turns to salt, along came a playful cott who really was bigger and faster and better than all the rest, so they called him Super Horse and he
The victory allowed the strapping chestnut son of Bold Ruler to join horse racing his immortals and the three gems of the game. The ridership hiked in the history of the American lust;
- The fastest Kentucky Derby in history.
1:59 2-5 for the 14 miles, with a drive that begins five-eighths of a mile from the finish.
— A Preakness triumph marked by a surge that carried him from last place going into the firt turn into the lead coming out of it and continuing to the second, best fortest of 1.3-3-1 mule classic.
—An incredible time of 2:24 for the Belmont which set an American record for the distance on dirt and smashed the Belmont horse record in three seconds, the equivalent of 13 lengths. His 31-length margin also was a Belmont record. The old mark was 25 lengths by County.
Lucien Laurin, Secretariat's trainer, said Sunday that Secretariat will race again.
"He definitely will race again unless something happens to him—Gio forbid," he said.
But figures do not fully tell the story of Secretariat's Belmont showing, which drove a crowd of 69,138 wild and left veteran horsesmen shaking their heads in disbelief. He began to draw out from Sham, his shadow in the Derby and Freakness, about the brace of the race, then just run away and left Sham and three other rivals badly beaten.
dication contract—$190,000 for each of the 32 shares—Secretariat can race for Moondale Stables until Nov. 15 and then, if he passes a certain number, he must be forced to stud under control of the syndicate.
Under terms of a record $6,080,000 syn-
It wasn't just that Secretariat won—it was the way he did it—in a world-bearing fashion that made one wonder what really was in his head. And all of this without being pushed by other horses or touched by Ron Turcotte's whip.
Brown of Cal-Poly, who recorded a record lean of 7-4.
The Jayhawk's 12th place finish is one of the worst finishes in recent years. In 1970,
Boys Learn an Old Pro's Tricks
BY STEVE TRACY
The Ted Owens Jayhawk Basketball Camp opened its 1973 session here last week with more than 600 boys expected to attend one of the four, one-week sessions.
The players, ranging from ages 8-17.
come from all over the United States to participate in the camp.
Duncan Reid. Along with his staff, many of
Owen's former basketball players left
Jo Jo White of the Boston Celtics will be one of the professional basketball players attending the camp, along with Roger Brown of the Carolina Cougars. Also helping out will be Phil Harman, Ron Lange, and Dale Haase, three former KU players. Many high school and college coaches will round out the staff of 25.
baseball standings
W L J PCT G.B.
New York 29 26 1.04 527
Detroit 29 26 1.04 527
Baltimore 29 26 1.04 527
Rochester 26 26 1.00 2
Alabama 26 26 1.00 2
Cleveland 25 26 1.00 2
AMERICAN LEAGUE
"THE THREE things we work on are ball-handling, defensive techniques and offensive techniques," said Owens. "I think the kids that we have here really great physical quality, and all the boys have great attitudes."
WEEK
Chicago 31 21 596
Minnesota 31 22 574
Kansas City 30 28 534
Oklahoma 27 26 509 4/4
Oakland 27 26 509 4/4
St. Louis 26 28 346 4/4
chicago 1. Cleveland 3. Boston
Cincinnati 2. Miami 2nd
Newark 4. San Francisco
Kansas City 5. New York 6.
Milwaukee 8. California 9.
Boston 8. California 9.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pt1 G.B.
Chicago 23 29 50
Montreal 25 25 50 50
St. Louis 25 25 50 50
In Los Angeles 25 29 463 71
New York 25 29 463 71
Philadelphia 25 23 418 10
Boston 23 32 418 10
Los Angeles FC 38 23 623
Lax Los Angeles 20 24 524 A(4)
Lax Houston 21 354 A(4)
Houston 23 37 550 A(4)
Atlanta 23 34 544 A(4)
Tampa Bay 20 399 A(3)
St. Louis 4, Athens 3, 19
St. Louis 2, Athens 1, 19
St. Louis 2, Athens 1, 19
Los Angeles 4, New York 6
Chicago 8, Cleveland 6
Chicago 6, Cincinnati 6
Kansan Photo by RAYNA LANCASTER
Shakespeare Festival Sawyer Adds Theater Tales to Moving Performance
Tom Sawyer Performs Excerpts from Shakespeare
Sawyer included in his performance several anecdotes from his own past and some explanations of the lines he performed.
Sawyer told the audience that he had not yet figured out whether she meant that that woman is a girl or a woman.
Tom Sawyer, a former KU student, gave a powerful performance Saturday in "The State of Man," part of the Second Kansas Shakespeare Festival and Institute.
By LIZEVERITT And LAUREL DEFOE
told the audience that once in a poetry contest he had performed an excerpt from Shakespeare before Dame Edith Evans, the contest judge. He performed the lines as expressively as possible, both physically and figuratively, thus his judge sat in front of him knitting.
Sawyer performed excerpts from over 20 of Shakespeare's plays and several of his works, including "The three sections, the first dealing with "Youth, Fantasy and Love," the second with "Kingship, War and Civil Strife, and" the third with "Sleep, Death and Dreams."
When he finished his piece, Dame Evans looked up at him and asked "Well, dear, please."
After Sawyer had finished several pieces, he went to the glass of water at a table on stage. After he finished drinking, he looked up and said "and said 'The Kaw has never tasted this.'"
Owens, KU basketball coach, heads the operation with his staff of Sam Miranda and
He also told several stories about his experiences in theatre. In one performance of Henry VIII, in which he was playing Cardinal Wolves, he fell flat on his face on
review
review
or that he should be in another business.
stage, immediately after his most moving solloouv. Sawer said.
Sawyer's performance was as impressive as the works from which it came. He was well received by the audience of over 300 in the University.
Booths set up in the courtyard of Murphy Hall added to the feeling of the Festival. Men and women dressed in Elizabeth clothes were selling flowers, Elizabeth and about Shakespeare. A 'minstrel' group performed in the Jobby and in the courtyard.
Romantic Authors Rewrote Shakespeare for Maidens
By NANCY COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
The two books published that year were "Tales From Shakespeare" by Charles and Mary Lamb and "The Family Shadowmare" by Harriet and Thomas Bowlger.
To make the edges of his saint a little smoother, both the Bowlers and the Lambs attempted to correct his use of "indecent" language. Jones read a portion of the preface to the Bowlers' book in which Thomas Bowler said he wanted to enable a man to bring the place to his family without making a blush to the check of modesty.
"DR. BOWDLER WAS a prig." Jones
In 1807, versions of Shakespeare's plays were published that were said to be suitable for "young ladies advancing to the state of womanhood."
John Bush Jones, associate professor of English, discussed the books in a lecture Sunday afternoon entitled "Shakespeare had a little Lamb: Romantic Renderings and The Musical Legacy" is Renaissance theater. His lecture is the second event in the Shakespeare Festival.
Jones said that the greatest damage in the revisions was done by Mary Lamb.
JONES SAID THE motivation for the revisions was a high moral purpose and a sincere admiration for Shakespeare. The Bowdlers and Lambs considered their job a smoothing down of their saint's edges, he said.
THE LAMBS' BOOK contained prose versions of the plays whereas the Bowdler's book contained edited forms of the plays. Of these, three were the Lambs' book, 14 were written by Mary.
In Comedy of Errors, Jones said, a courtesan was called a lady. In Hamlet, the Lambs imbalanced a moral lesson, although children should treat their parents with respect, in the case of a serious crime, a son break to his mother with some harshness.
The greatest damage done in these versions, Jones said, was the revisions done for decency and the interpretation and editorialization inserted in the stories.
Bowder had declined to make sweeping changes in Shakespeare's plays because he was unaware of the differences.
"One may wonder," he said, "whether the slaughter of Shakespeare is an outburst of hatred."
said, "but a well-meaning prig and an aesthetic one as well."
But Jones said that in the versions by the Lambs, the entire fabric of Shakespeare's stories was altered and the sense of the plaus destrored.
MARY, JONES SAID, had murdered her mother in a fit of admiration 10 years before she died.
The Lambs 'and Bowdlers' influence was felt in interpretations of Shakespeare's plays until the latter part of the nineteenth century, according to Jones. Presentation of uncut plays by Shakespeare has been done only recently, he said.
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Monday, June 11.1973
University Daily Kansan
5
Water Powers Flour Mill
Salt Furnace
Spring Waters Closed Generators for a Month
By PRISCILLA KAUFMAN
Kansan Staff Writer
1936
The standard easterner's impression of Kansas as all cowboys and Indians and barren prairies is obviously outdated. However, it is inevitable that Kansas an inurmountable problem be created an unwater-powered electricity plants.
The Bowersock Mills and Power Co. began to prosper in 1877 when J. D. Bowersock, a successful merchandise and grain businessman, came to Lawrence from New York where he renamed his father-in-law James H. Gower had purchased the bonds of a power company that owned the dam across the Kansas River. Weather and financial difficulties earlier had combined against the power co. The dam was washed out the dam, the company failed.
Lawrence is the home of the one remaining functioning water wheel power plant in Kansas. The Bowersock Mills and Power Co., located at 546 Massachusetts St, has been in existence in Lawrence since the mid 1800s.
The number of water power plants, once a common source of electricity around river cities, has fallen from the country because of modern methods of electricity production. In Kansas, where the supply of water power plants has always been scarce, the number has dwindled to
THE COMPANY today runs seven water wheels 24 hours a day. The wheels are located below the Kansas River Dam, where the water from the dam falls into cups on the wheels, causing the wheels to turn, generating electricity. The power is provided by the Bowersock Flour Mill located at the same site near the Kansas River Dam.
When Bowersock arrived in Lawrence he immediately undertook the restoration of the dam. With the partnership of his father-in-law and a man named J. W. Houghtail he entered the flour mill business at the present site beside the Kansas River. He
Plant Once Sold Cheap Electricity To KP&L Forerunner, Businesses
Old Beams, Native Stone Show Age of Abandoned Storeroom in Mill
Wooden Press
Signs of Unuse Abound
THE STORAGE HALL
THE DUCK Pond IS THE ONLY BUILDING IN THE CITY THAT HAS A LARGE MARKET FOR TICKETS. IT IS USED BY SPORTS FUNGUS AND TO FOLLOVER FROM THE OUTDOORS. THE DUCK POND IS A GREAT PLACE TO WATCH TICKETS BELOW.
7 Water Wheels Run Constantly to Power Last Plant of its Kind in Kansas
took sole control of the firm in 1879 after the deaths of his two partners.
In Bowersock's later years and after his death in 1922 Jackman became full owner of the plant, even though retaining the Bowersock name. Until this year the manager of the company has been a descendant of R. C. Jackman.
IN THE 1933 flood the Bowersock Flour Mill and water power facilities were washed out. Soon, however, Bowersock began restoration of the plant. About this time R. Kani, a manager at Kan, bought a half interest in the business, and the two men worked as partners.
In several weeks the Bowersock Mills and Power Co. will again change ownership. The Kansas Fibreboard Co. of Lawrence will take over the plant.
DURING THE early years of the plant's operation, unlike its present facilities, it did not serve only the Bowersock Flour Mill. Power was also distributed to several businesses between 6th and 7th streets on Massachusetts St.
Bowersock, who was a vital power in Lawrence in the early 1900s, had interest in a theater, bank, garage, ice plant and paper company in the one block area. These businesses, largely controlled by Bowersock, were able to but their electricity more cheaply. The company came from the Kansas Electrical Power Co., now called Kansas Power and Light Co.
At one time the Kansas Electrical Power Co. also bought some power from the Bowersock Co., as they could purchase it at a smaller expense than they could produce
KU Prof's Book To Be Published
A book written by John Dardess,
associate professor of history and East
Asian Studies, will be published July 16 by
the Columbia University Press.
The book, "Conquerors and Confucians," is a political and ideological study of the latter part of the Mongol Yuan Dynasty that ruled China from 1260 to 1388.
Dardess received his Ph.D. in Chinese from Columbia University.
Credit Option Deadline Is Friday
By KATHY HODAK
Kansan Staff Writer
Undergraduate students may choose ta-
tecno credit grade option from today to
next week.
Under credit-no credit system, the student may elect to receive credit for grades of A, B or C and no credit for grades of D. The student will be required "credit" or "no credit" as the case may be.
One course each semester may be chosen under this option, and that course can not be in the student's declared major field. Once the student has submitted his credit no credit option card, he may not reverse his decision.
THE COLLEGE of Liberal Arts and Sciences was the first school of the University of Kansas to experiment with the credit no credit system in the fall of 1968. The experimental period then was extended for two semesters.
During this period the University Council appointed a subcommittee of the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee to advise the President. Kelly, registrar. The credit-no-credit option was then opened to all undergraduate schools of the University in the fall of 1969 but still maintained its experimental status. Education matters and fitness and Education did not participate.
"The option became a reality," Kelly said, "after the final approval by the Senate. We have been operating on the right plan," she added, "it was worthwhile enough to continue."
THE PRESENT credit-no credit system provides that the identity of those students choosing the option will not be revealed to the instructor before the final grade report is issued. That provision was not made in 1968.
KU Summer Programs Promise New Deal for Migrants' Kids
Summer educational centers for children of migrant workers are now in operation in 13 Kansas communities. The centers are arranged by KU from KU to U. S. Office of Education.
Directors of the program are George Hughes, assistant professional education, and William Kirk, assistant KRI.
school term of frequent moves from one school to another. He said that he expected about 1,200 children to participate in the summer program and that attended a similar program last year.
Hughes said that the centers were set up to supplement educational experiences the children have in school.
The program began June 1 and will run through July 31. The centers are located in Bonner Springs, Emporia, Garden City, Goodland, Hoxie, Lakin, Leoti, Liberal, Piper, Sharon Springs, St. Francis, Sublette and Ulysses.
THE PRIMARY reason for beginning a credit-neo credit option at the University was to allow the student enough freedom from the pressure of grades to explore a new area of knowledge. Kelly said that he thought the system had accomplished this, but some students had used it for other means.
Arnold F. Krapper, associate professor of business and newly appointed chairman of the University Academic Procedures and Policies, said that in some cases where students were content with a grade of C, the option system could give them more time to devote to major interests without lowering their grade point average.
Donald Tribble, assistant registrar, said that the credit-no credit option became a strictly confidential matter between the registrars and the office through the registrar's office in 1969.
"We found after the 1968 academic year that instructors, if they knew which students were taking the course for credit no credit, treated those students differently from those who were not." Tribble said.
"In working with it," Tribble said, "find that the students generally use the credit no credit option as an easy way to overcome a course. You don't have to study much."
CREDIT-I NO credit courses do not count in computing the grade point average. But courses marked "credit" do fullfill comments outside the student's major area.
"Many times a student will write, 'This is a requirement and I don't think it should be. And I don't think I ought to have to waste time to study on this thing. So I'm taking it for credit-no credit to get it out of the way,'" Tribble said.
When a student applies for the credio-
nition option, he is asked to specify in
writing the following:
enrolling in the course under the credit no-credit option. "To fulfill a difficult area or course requirement" or "to lighten the study load" are the two most popular reasons given by students, according to Tribble.
LAST SUMMER, about 108 students enrolled in credit-no credit courses. The figure is based on the number of cards on the players' card at the beginning of the summer session.
Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences may obtain option cards from the registrar's office. All certificates may obtain cards from their dears.
Complete guidelines for the credit-
no credit grade option can be found on page
95 of the current "Official Timetable of
Classes: Lawrence Campus."
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
10$^c$ DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
it. Water power was the cheapest form of electricity because of the free river water as a source of power rather than the more expensive equipment needed for other electric production.
IN RECENT years there have been no major mishaps such as the 1903 flood. However, the water wheels, which cannot run if they were to fail, are low, have had to be stopped occasionally.
According to Ed Bungardner, former secretary of the corporation, the most recent instance of this sort was in last April when the plant had to be closed for almost a month due to high water. Bungardner said several years that the plant had been closed.
The plant has been forced to close because of low water only once or twice in the last 50 years when there were improvements of the dams on the river.
Kansan
Photos
by
Carlos
Lisson
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day 21 week to fever 15.06
21 week to fever 1.01 1.01
Three Days 21 week to fever 13.96
each additional day 8.02
First Days 21 week to fever 1.01 1.01
each additional day 8.02
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to GREAT SCHOOL ADMISSIONS BURING ALL CLASSIFIEDS TO 111 FLINT HALT.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE COUNTRY Shop—3 kbls. No. of the items in stock are furniture, cellophane, gas heating and cooking equipment, furniture, gas heating and cooking equipment, monkey snow, 58 gl. steel drains, new wine bottles, large logs, 65 gl. steel drains, new wine bottles, large logs, 10.5 for 25 Fireplace wood, large logs 16.5
WATER-you can drink it. wash it in iD and NOV
wash it in soap. rinse it in water.
we can swamp it on iH. strawberry Fields
on iD. we can swamp it on iH. strawberry Fields
on iD.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
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—
new analysis of Western Civilization."
PIZZA HUF SMOORGASSBORD. All the pizza you
want, on Monday at 11:30 a.m.
11:30-11:40 W 2nd row T-266
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Tower 7-26
For sale - Old fashioned home made bread and good stuff. Good stuff 641-892-006 and place your order
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, 3 bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially furnished. Carpeted, A/C, Kitted. Fenced 840-699. carpent., shed. Garden. Asking $310-613. 409-
LBICA-M-2, w干-qwap supra F₂, F₃, Stomatal
F₄, F₅, F₆, F₇, F₈, F₉, F₁₀, F₁₁,
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F₁₉, F₂0, Best reasonable offer 825.
Pinnacle 5 filerunner.
1968 Charger 385, green/green vinyl top, PS, PB.
1968 Charger 400, green/green vinyl top, PS,
ribcage, rally wheels. Excellent condition. 483-4725
CENTER MOTOR COMPANY
CLOETTES The original 40's look has arrived at the new Nike store. The nature and motif, *Nautilus* at 360 Miles, has been reinterpreted with a more modern touch.
Good running condition, very clean. 90 Buck
16-inch battery. Call 843-1318.
6-18 new yr. battery.
1964 OLD-SMOBILE. Very good condition. A/C/ DRY. Room 314 Maturity during 60 minutes. Evening Rooms. 172-825-3111.
Cello for sale. Good student instrument. Call 815-730. If no answer, keep trying.
FOR RENT
APT. for rent. Across from Oliver Hall, furnished.
1-800-642-3975
immediately available. 842-212-1980
6-12
FOR REST two bedroom duplex with dual chiller
at 864-6531 or call 864-9249 after 5 p.m. 6-11
mths. C
For Ren. Apt. for one person, on campus $100/
642-250. A/C all rooms. Call 844-793-6200.
842-2500.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
For the time being, Lawrence Service is in rental status. Lawrence Service, 7-26
500 14th St., Lawrence, NY 11378
WANT TO LIVE ON A FARM? Space available for firmware for couple or individual Cail Print or phone.
SAVE GASOLINE! Warm to usum and clauses.
We can provide all appliances. No pets. #82-15-20
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Air Conditioned rooms for men, carpeted, fire-resistant walls, private baths and entrances. 2½ kcal food served per person.
NOTICE
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TRED OF STEEP CLIMBING! PARKING in FAR-FLOSS LOTS? from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Cabin, studio, apartment rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates or couples in Santee Apts., 123 Ind. Apt. 9 or 10.
515 Michigan St. B-Clar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que in
Michigan, we can hire a bar. A $240.00 aba-
sle a $24.00 can hire a 74.00 large plate
bar. See the menu for prices of beers and
sauvages. See Han, and sauvages. Open 10,
9am to 6pm. Sun and Tues. Phone 312-869-1111.
V-2-3016
GAY LIBERATION meet's meetings Monday, 7:30 p.m.
in the Gay & Lesbian Resource Center,
240 W. 10th St., Suite 600, Denver, CO 80209
Yee Ans, The BIG TURKEY is back in town. AT
communication will be done through the UDK
communications.
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH*** Small pizza and salad for special price of $1.56 or lower to town pizza.
WANTED
Wanted Ride to KL campus for five day week
weekend. Possible locations: Nova Scotia, Nova
Caledonia, Nova Brasília, NJ 26435 or
19-19.
Want to organize ear pool commuting from Tupelo
Call 272-6290 6-18
Need one female to share University Terrace
210-365-7444 210-365-7445 210-365-7446
5-10 m/19' or Kibla or Kibla-841-1234
5-10 m/19' or Kibla-841-1234
TYPING
1
Experienced thesis typet. Close to campus. 841-
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Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mics. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Have printed letters corrected. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. 7-26
MISCELLANEOUS
PIZZA HUFF DELIVERS A hot pizza right to
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and Saturday at 1:20 p.m. pn. 843-794-
784
You are interested in Robert Rilman and Harriet M. Donnelly, talk about his ideas or Dave at 811-555-7230.
Employment Opportunities
NAVY VETERANS
Earn up to $350 per hour, paid vacation, liberal
retirement, training or other benefits 6 a.m. P.M.
HELP WANTED
Student couple would like student to help with
math and computer science per week on time.
Phone: 862-814-514.
6-12
Phone: 862-814-514.
TUTOR
M.S. in Environmental Studies will tutor in Nat-
ture and Reasonable Rate, Cull Dawl 6-18,
841-258-9100, 6-18
6.
Monday. June 11. 1973
University Daily Kansan
[Photograph of a group of men in formal attire, posed in a row against a curtain backdrop. The men are arranged in three rows, with the front row consisting of five individuals, and the middle and rear rows each containing ten individuals. All men are facing the camera, wearing dark suits and ties.]
Photo Courtesy Sigma Nu Fraternity
C. M. Kelley (1st Row, Left) and the Late William Inge (4th Row, Left) in 1935 KU Sigma Nu Photo
Playwright Dies at 60 . . .
From Page One
began to think of becoming a playwright,
and then of Further Off. From
Heaven, he met with likeness.
He went on to
In 1950 "Come Back Little Sheba" was produced and a hit "a wick" "brought him, in addition to the Pulitzer Prize, the Critics prize and the Donaldson Award."
Born in Independence, Kan., on May 3, 1913, Inga was a self-professed "small town boy." All his plays were set in the mid-West that he had grown up in and knew so well. He was an active performer, making in the lyrical speech of the area, victim to human weaknesses and failures.
entertainment industry and teamed up with men such as Elia Kazan, finally made up his wife, Miriam.
INGE, WHO had made it to the top of the
The refuge he chose, quite naturally, was the Kansas he loved. In 1963 he bought what was one of the oldest buildings in Lawrence—a barn at 803 Avalon Road—to be his home. Even at the time people said Inge was unpredictable and were skeptical
about his ever come to live in Lawrence. They may have been right. In any case, he was wrong.
This is one script that cannot be rewritten and the world will have to satisfy itself with the contribution to playwriting that he has left behind.
Thieu Recalls Envoy from Paris
William Inge has passed on.
SAIGON—President Nguyen Van Thieu recalled a top envoy from Paris Sunday for consultations on the Vietnam peace talks scheduled to resume this week in the
Meanwhile, the shooting and bloodshed
continued in South Vietnam. With no firm understanding among the four signatories on how to enforce the cease-fire agreement, he and his team are be ignored by Saigon and the Viet Cong.
Government sources said Thieu had
5 KU Profs Recognized
Five University of Kansas professors have been singled out for recognition this spring.
Jerry Stannard, professor of history, has been elected to a two-year term as chairman of the history section of the Botanical Society of America. He will assume office at the society's annual meeting at Amherst College in July.
Grant Goodman, professor of East Asian studies, accompanied Gov. Robert Docking on his "reverse investment" trip to Japan. Goodman acted in several capitals, including representation of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Economic Development
John Murphy, professor of law, has been appointed a member of a study panel on the Constitution and the Conduct of American Law. He is also chair of the American Society of International Law.
B. G. Barr, assistant dean of research and director of the KU space technology center, recently received a National Science Foundation travel grant to attend the First International Congress on Technology Assessment in the Hague, Netherlands.
ordered the deputy chief of the Saigon delegation to the bilateral political talks in Paris with the Viet Cong to return for "consultations." The deputy, Nguyen Xuan Phong, also was described as Saigon's key liaison with Henry A. Kissinger in the peace talks between North Vietnam and the United States.
Emeritus professor Richard Honeye, who retired this year after 44 years as a member of the economics faculty, was recently honored at a dinner at the Alameda Plaza Hotel in Kansas City, Mo. The establishment of the R. S. Honeye Honor Award was announced last year. The award will provide scholarships for outstanding students in economics.
Kissinger returned to Washington Saturday night without reaching an agreement in the Paris negotiations. He said he would return to Paris to resume the talks Tuesday after discussions with President Nixon.
The Saigon military command reported another 162 alleged violations of the ceasefire by the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces at 30-hour perid ending at noon Sunday.
The biggest fight reported by the Saigon command Sunday was along the central coast in Quang Ngai Province 100 miles north of Hanoi, said spokesman for the Saigon command, said Communitis-led forces attacked a government position, killing four soldiers and wounding 25. He said the attack was not fatal as casualties to the other side were not known.
First Tango for Pandas
By JUDITHMARTIN
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—Now that it's warm out and the zoo is full of couples strolling about with their arms around each other, even the polar bears power animals are beginning to get the idea.
Two bald eagles who haven't looked at each other in years have suddenly taken up family life, and the Chinese pandas, whose idea of a big thrill used to be attacking a bamboo tree, had a wild weekend giving each other little blits on the neck.
All in all, it's been an exciting week for the staff at the National Zoological Park (NZP), where speculation about who's doing what isn't confined to the lunch hour
THERE IS even something to show for it at a tiny, shivering fuzzy white chick, who is one of the few bald eagles to have been born in captivity. The bald eagle is an endangered species, most of the thriving ones being these which are carved on presidential seals.
The official announcement is that the new eagle was born Thursday, but since the zoo people admit that they hadn't even been sure there was an egg—nests neatly high up and don't welcome casual visitors—nobody knows for certain.
There it is, at any rate, putting an end to talk about a feathered sex problem that was going on for years. It seems to have been a matter of privacy. While there were other birds in the flight cage, the adult birds did nothing but what a zoo spokesman denied. They didn't awfully half-hearted nesting—they'd pick up a sick or two now and then."
LAST YEAR, the other birds were removed, and only three bald eagles were left, until it was clear which was a third wheel, and she left, too.
The remaining birds are the presumably proud parents. We know, at any rate, that we are all part of a tight-knit family.
Privacy has never been a factor for the pandas, who have been watched like hawks ever since they arrived here as a gift of the Chinese People's Republic last year.
A CROWD of eager keepers assembled, not only to watch but also to comment on the proceedings with one another by radio, when Ling-Lang went into heat. She and Hsing-Hising tried to break down the door between them last Saturday.
Methodists Veto Gambling Approve Legal Abortions
Actually, Ling-Ling was in heat for two weeks before Hsing-Hsing, in his adjacent outdoor pen, noticed something funny about her.
BALDWIN, Kan. (AP)—Delegates to the Kansas East Conference of the United Methodist Church said "no" Sunday to legalized gambling and abuse of alcohol and said "yes" to family planning, legalized abortion, welfare reform, the elimination of unprotected sex and study the treatment and rehabilitation of compulsive narcotics users and addicts.
Freedom of the press was strongly affirmed and the delegates adopted a resolution which read: 'We, as Christians, oppose restrictions or future legislation that infringes rights of the news media and the people to protection of sources of information.
"Furthermore we affirm our wholehearted support and belief in the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America which safeguards an essential and basic liberty—the freedom of speech and the press."
A resolution for granting unqualified amnesty to "those who are in legal jeopardy because of the war in South East Asia" was narrowly defeated.
Delegates approved support of American Indians through such groups as the Oklahoma Indian Missionary Conference and the University Scholarship Program at Baker University.
The longest discussions dealt with the treatment of American Indians and with
"The Indian-American liberating groups are trying to alleviate the oppression of white people," said Rev. Pat Freeman, of Lebo, himself an Indian, in speaking on behalf of the
CHIEF PANDA expert Larry Collins, roused from a sleep-late Saturday off by an equally excited keeper, decreed that the door should be opened. People stood by with their hands and loaves because, as Reed says, "Love's great thing, but not when it gets violent."
Well, it wasn't violent. It was beautiful.
Only not beautiful enough.
As Dr. Theodore Reed, the head of the zoo, put it, "She was vocalizing. Well, what do you think she said? Here I am, some kind of monster as calling. You never heard such hongking."
And while the rendezvous was unproductive, it was, however, enough to satisfy Collins, who gave Hsing-Hsang creedit for a good try. "But he's too young and too young from now, when Ling-Ling should be in heat again, it may be a different story.
He urged the U.S. government to take immediate steps to restructure the Bureau of Indian Affairs to give leadership to American Indians.
"Hising-Hsing was the soul of politeness, considerate, gracious," said Reed.
House Vote May Hinder Paris Talks
WASHINGTON (AP)—Henry A. Kissinger is likely to come under pressure at the Paris peace talks this week from another vote in Congress, possibly two, against continuing Indochina war operations.
But it added that in September the North Veitnamese were expected to emphasize ammunition in their supply flow and by late next fall they could again be in position to launch a major offensive similar to that in the spring of 1972.
Meanwhile, a Senate report released Sunday sees little prospect for peace to be achieved in Indochina by political means. It is unclear if the involvement in the southeastern Asian war.
The Senate, which already has voted to cut off all funds for U.S. war actions in Cambodia and Laos, takes up a proposal to cut off the actions in all of Indochina.
The staff report prepared for the Senate foreign relations subcommittee on U.S. security agreements quoted Central Intelligence analysts as concluding there will be no general Communist offensive in the next four months.
The war vote in the Senate is on the Church-Case amendment to cut off all funds for U.S. military operations in Cambodia, and has not approved any specifically approved by Congress.
House Appropriations Chairman George H. Mabon Friday rated prospects 'excellent' that he could put a bill with a parity to the Senate-Less cutoff to a House vote this week.
But Mahon said that before indications became clouded over the weekend of an early supplemental cease-fire agreement adviser Kaisinger and Hano's Le Duc Tho.
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THE HILLSIDE PHARMACY was located at Nindh and Indiana streets and the owner's wiew, Helen Semple, said that although she could not specifically recall Kelley, she did remember his fraternity very well.
Sloan's Testimony To Continue Today
Associated Press Writer
"They used to sit in our back booth and drink near-beer and eat hard-boiled eggs." Semple said, adding that she was always full of eggs. "You could boil boiled eggs the Sigma Nua could consume.
By BROOKS JACKSON
CARL METTNER, 2018 Ohio, remembers Kelley as "quite a ball player." The two played intramural baseball together while they were in Sigma Nu.
Sample said that she occasionally tired of hearing the jukebox in the pharmacy, but that she had saved many of the old records and would give them to Kelley if he wanted them.
Kelley was inuited to Sigma Nu on Feble, 25, 1834. He was named the fraternity's Master.
Kelley graduated from KU on June 8,
2005, and graduated from University of
Kansas.
WASHINGTON—The Senate Watergate committee today resumes questioning Hugh Sloan Jr., the former Nixon campaign treasurer who testified that he refused to lie or keep quiet about the money that paid for the wiretapping.
Perhaps with an unknowing eye on the future, the Veterans of Foreign Wars presented Kelley with their J. Edgar Hoover Award of $1,000 in July, 1970.
letters policy
The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 300 words. All letters are addressed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed.
KU students must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty members provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
Persons reportedly facing indictment include former White House aides John W. Dean III, John D. Ehrlichman and H. R. Haldenman, former atty. Gen, John N. Weinberg, former atty. Gen, John N. Maurice H. Stans, former Nixon campaign deputy Jeb S. Marruder and others.
Cox contends the Senate hearings jeopardize his own investigations, and make it possible that guilty parties will go free. The committee unanimously rejected
Also on today's witness list was Herbert L. Porter, who had been director of campaign scheduling. Sloan testified that he paid $100,000 in cash to Porter but Porter refused to tell him the purpose of such allegedly went for political espionage.
As the committee resumed its televised hearings, special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox was seeking to block news coverage of some future proceedings, a move likely to be opposed by committee Chairman Sam J. Ervin.
COX HAS filed a motion asking U.S. District Court Judge J John S. Sirica to order the Senate Committee to go behind closed doors for testimony from persons facing indictment, or at least to prevent radio and television coverage of such testimony.
Cox's earlier request for a three-month postmenopment of the hearings.
THE JUSTICE Department has announced that it will not appeal the dismissal of charges against Pentagon papers Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
U. S. District Court Judge W. Matt Byrne dismissed the charges because of government misconduct after it was disclosed that Eilersberg's psychiatrist's office was raided at the direction of a White House intelligence squad.
Sloan told the Senate committee Wednesday that four or five days after the Watergate raid, campaign deputy Magruder told him he might have to lie under oath. And in a statement to G. Gordon Liddy, the campaign counsel later convicted in the wiretapping.
Soon thereafter, Frederick C. LaRue, aide to campaign chairman Mitchell, told Sloan "that the Liddy money is the problem, it is very politically sensitive, we can just use the money in high figure." Sloan testified that he paid $190,000 on orders from Magruder.
Sloan said he later voiced concern "that there was something very wrong at the campaign committee" to a number of White House aides at a cocktail party and in the lobby, then in his chapin, then the President's personal appointments secretary, and Ehrlichman.
Chapin"s suggested the important thing is that the President be protected," Sloan said. Ehrlichman said, "I do not want to know."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
TUESDAY JUNE 12, 1973 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
Libya Announces Nationalization Of Oil in Slap at U.S. Policy
TRIPOLI-Libya's fiery leader, Col. Muammar Qaddafi, announced to a large crowd Monday that his revolutionary government had nationalized an American oil company, a move directed against U.S. policy toward Arabs.
Qaddafi打 out at the United States calling it an imperialist power in need of a "strong slap on its cool, aggressive face." The rally marked three anniversary of the evacuation of American forces from Wheelus Air Force Base, near Tripoli. Qaddafi, who took over Libya in a bloodless coup in 1989, has been calling for higher prices on oil exported from Libya to Russia. He also demanded that the one nationalized, Bunker Hunter of Dallas. Tripoli radio said Libya would negotiate with remaining companies on a Libyan plan to eventually assume 100 per cent control.
Kissinger 'Confident' on Talks
WASHINGTON-Talks on implementing the Vietnam ceasefire will resume today in Paris. Henry Kissinger is said to feel "reasonably confident" of reaching an agreement with North Vietnam's Leuc Do. The terms they have agreed upon will, according to U.S. officials, strengthen the original ceasefire. South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thien's government had earlier protested the woring of his orders by the United States and had called for them to appear to be standing firm on his position as communications flowed almost round the clock to and from Paris, Washington and Saigon. Kissinger, however, is reportedly determined not to allow Thieu to disrupt the negotiations.
Inge Burial Thursday in Kansas
LOS ANGELES—award-winning playwright William Inge will be buried Thursday at Mt. Hope Center in his home town of Inverness, N.J.
Inge, 60, was found dead at his Hollywood home Sunday in what police said was a suicide. His body was discovered behind the wheel of a car that was idling in a closed garage. Inge, a KU graduate, won the Pulitzer Prize and New York Drama Critics award in 1953 for his play "Picnic" and an Academy Award in 1961 for his screenplay "Splendor in the Grass."
Ex-Olympic Chief to Marry
CHICAGO—Avery Brundage has disclosed he will marry a 37-year-old German princess, Mariann Reuss. The 85-year-old former president of the International Olympic Committee (10C) made a joint public announcement with Princess Mariann's mother, Princess Stephanie Reuss of Garmisch-Partikchen, Germany. No date was set for the marriage.
As controversial head of the IOC from 1952 through 1972, the robust Chicago multi-millionaire has rubbed elbows with royalty before, and many of the Olympic nations have decorated him with their highest civilian award.
U.S. Funds Aided Nixon Estate
GARDEN CITY, N.Y.-Federal officials say the government付了 $76,000 to landscape President Nikon's San Clemente, Calif., estate, according to a Newday report. The landscape expenses were in addition to $100,000 in improvement expenses previously reported, the newspaper said. Both sets of improvements were ordered in the name of presidential security.
Brandt Finishes Israel Visit
JERUSALEM-Chancellor Brandt ended his visit to Israel Monday in a spirit of conciliation between West Germany and the Jewish state, home of 300,000 Nazi victims. Brandt, unshaken by an earlier helicopter accident, was pleased by prospectus of German-Jewish relations with Poland, where he is the mission leader, dispelled some of the memory of Nazi treatment of the Jews that, for many Israeli, made Germany an outcast nation.
Rov Hits Nixon on Health Care
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Rep. William Roy, D-Kan., attacked the Nixon administration's "arbitrary approach" to the control of health care costs before the Midwest Health Congress here. Roy also detailed his efforts to establish a speech to administrators of health care facilities from six states.
"Health care expenditures are rising $23 million each day and frankly this administration has no idea what to do about it." Roy said.
Skylab Getting Storm Data
HOUSTON - Skylab 1 astronauts have begun to gather data that help scientists make better predictions about devastating storms
By studying the thunderstorm formation from Skylab's unique angle from space, scientists hope to learn more about the storm systems that can produce them.
Some Sun, Some Light Clouds
PLEASANT
The weathermen say the sun won't altogether disappear totally though. They should be late for a temperature should be slight, with the highs in the upper 80s, and Lawrence will continue to be
Gentle winds from the southwest will continue, and once again there is a possibility of thundershowers tonight. Lows Tuesday night in the mid 60s are expected.
NO PARKING
STREET
EMPLOTES
ONLY
City Garages Aren't Landscaped or Shielded from Public's View
Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED
Aesthetics Poses Dilemma for City
By KRISTA POSTAI
Kansan Staff Writer
The confusion of barbur bars and taco stands called 23rd Street is far from broken.
Lawrence, as are the majority of university towns, has become a victim of progress, sacrificing aesthetic beauty for economic advancement.
A PROPOSAL, described as a preliminary draft, presented by the Community Arts Council to the Lawrence City Commission, would, if accepted, award the Arts Council an advisory capacity on all aspects of advising the visual aspects of Lawrence.
It is not, however, a hopeless situation.
Describe the visual clutter of 23rd Street as an "imposition on the people of the city." What is it about the way the street is laid out?
Community Arts Council and associate dean of visual arts at KU, outlined the
"Many people who are building things"
Mckay said, "tend to ignore the aesthetic in"
the construction.
The Arts Council, as it now exists, has little or no real authority and "you can't go out" to see artists. The council is a
something, because they resent that," he said.
MCKAY URGES the reforming of the council into a commission that other governmental bodies, the Parks and Recreation commission for instance, could look to for advice.
He cited the lighting at the Holcolm Sports Complex as an example of where
Turn to AESTHETICS, Back Page
Dean Accused of Coverup
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ousted White House counsel John W. Dean III was at the center of a plot to cover up the Watergate incident, and was indicted in a letter released in court Monday.
They said others should share the blame with Dean, but didn't name them.
"THE EVIDENCE that has been gathered and is still being gathered establishes that you were at the center of a ground kind of corruption," the letter said.
The May 22 letter to Dean was introduced in connection with a request by Dean to postpone his testimony before the Watergate grand jury.
C. ROBERTS
"Ivolved was your exploitation of a position in which you were to foster a perverse scheme to obstruct
"Things that the FBL, the grand jury, and this office were striving to uncover about the implication of others in the Watergate scandal," said Mr. Lippert, conviviality and collaboration with others.
John W. Dean
*ACCORDINGLY, we cannot allow you to trade your testimony to the culpability of the person in question.*
against you. However, as you know, there is a deep interest by this office and the grand jury in the full disclosure of your evidence to ensure that those who should share the blame with you."
The letter was sent by U.S. Atty, Harold Titus and the three assistants who made up the original Watergate prosecuting team. Special prosecutor Archibald Cox has since taken over responsibility for the investigation, although the original
The letter rejected Dean's request for immunity from prosecution, and offered him the opportunity to plead guilty.
prosecutors remain on the job, at least for the time being.
Turn to LETTER, Back Page
Senate Watergate Hearings Deny Justice, Agnew Says
ST. LOUIS (AP)—Vice President Spiro Agnew launched an administration counterattack against the Senate Watergate committee, saying they are thwarting truth and justice.
Addressing the National Association of Attorney General, Agnew said the televised hearings led by Sen. Sam Ervin, co-chair of the panel, the innocent and helped the guilty go free.
The orderly procedures by which facts are elicited and verified in a court of law are lacking each morning when Senator Ervin's gavel comes down and the Senate's trial of
the Nixon Administration before the court of public opinion resumes," Agnew said.
THE VICE PRESIDENT particularly criticized the live television coverage of the hearings, saying the exposure may make it easier for Republicans to politically ensnake and sabotage scandal.
"There is no escaping the fact that the heartbags have a Perry Mason impact," Agnew said. "The indefatigable camera will paint both heroes and villains in lurid and indelible colors before the public's very eyes."
Incoming Chancellor
Dykes Insists to Businessmen That University Serves State
中華民國 78 年 10 月 24 日發行
總統府
臺南市
總統府
總統府
總統府
總統府
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Archie Dykes Speaks About University's Role
BY CONNIE PARISH
AND CAROL GWINN
Kansas Staff Writers
TOPEKA-The new chancellor of the University of Kansas, Archie Dykes, said Monday in his first major address in Kansas that he was committed to the proposition that all teachers should come from Kansas and that he intended to devote its greatest resources to benefit the state.
Dykes spoke at the 49th annual meeting of the Kansas Association of Commerce and Industry (formerly the Kansas Chamber of Commerce) at the Ramada Inn in Toekee.
Dykes, who will take over duties as the 13th KU chancellor July 1, said the welfare of Kansas and of higher education were inextricably intertwined.
Sen. Robert Bennett, president of the Kansas Senate, said there was a strong feeling that the state colleges and universities were dead wood and their legacies of lethargy."
Bennett said the high cost of education
Turn to CHANCEELLOR, Back Page
"HIGHER EDUCATION in Kansas has and will continue to have in the future an intimate relationship with our economy. We must achieve its achievements and our social progress. Investments made today in education will bring progress to Kansas tomorrow," he said.
Agnew later told an airport news conference in Lansing, Mich.; "I don't think there is any possibility that the Senate hearings are going to stop and I not really certain that it is necessary that they do stop."
HE SUGGESTED the Senate committee follow the advice of special Watergate prosecutor Alan Cox, who has acted on the panel once until after court action is complete.
Agnew said in his St. Louis address that
Turn to AGNEW. Back Page
Turn to AGNEW, Back Page
on campus
"THE THIRD MAN," starring Orson Welles as the charismatic but conscienceless Harry Lime, will be shown at 7 p.m. on Tuesday at the illegal profficiency causes the deaths of scores of innocent people. As a consequence, Joseph Cotton, starring as Harry's former best friend, must decide not to turn Harry into the authorities or not.
THE SECOND of a series of therapy meetings for adult stutterers will be at 7 tonight in room 228 of Haworth Hall. The therapy will include group and individual sessions. Additional information is available from clinic director James Lingwall, associate professor of speech and drama.
2
Tuesday, June 12. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Tobias Da Wint
JEFFERSON Alexandria Fairbury Blue Springs Wyoming Liberty Odal
Pymouth Bedice PAWNEE Table Rock Pawees NC Du Bois NEMANA Sabeth Hawkins Seneca Centralia Corning Wetmore Whiting ACKESON Hotton VALLY Norton Falls JEFFERSON Oakland Meriden Longanue Bonner WYAN Jackson TOPEKA ISHAWNE Overbrook Osage City Lyndon Quenoame Malenor Olebo Waverley Burlington Richmond ANDERSON Greer Garrett Westphalia Kincedola Colony ALLEN Iole La Harpe Las Moran Humboldt BOURBON Fulton Fort Scott Bronson VERNON Schell City Nevada Eldorado Springs CEDAR BARTON
Storm Reference Map (Distance From Topeka in 20-Mile Increments)
City Managers KU'S Graduate Students Leave for Internships; Most Choose 1-Year Service in Midwest
By EARLYNNDA MEYER
Kansan Staff Writer
A city managers training program, offered by the political science department, provides curricula in four training areas for students in the program.
The two-year program is designed to prepare individuals for employment in municipal administration, state agencies and national administration and public affairs. A foreign student option is also offered. All but the foreign student option provide for one year on-campus work with a subsequent year of internship.
Enrollment in the program remains
unchanged for each year, each
year the program is restricted in size.
part, because of the lack of faculty.
ALTHOUGH THE program is popular with enrollees from throughout the nation, no expansion is now anticipated, according to Nehring, chairman of the department.
Students secure their internship positions and may work anywhere in the United States, although most elect to remain in the Midwest. Approximately one-third of students are selected communities in Kansas. Other Midwestern states were frequently chosen.
Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio and Oklahoma were each selected by one intern, with two in Colorado and four in Missouri. In addition, one intern is currently em-
played in Alaska, one in California and several in Texas.
DURING THE year of internship students return to campus five or six times for seminars. Following the year of training, they return to campus at least an additional year of employment.
The program is oriented toward fulfilling non-political positions and establishing graduates as permanent members of the community work force.
Emphasis is placed on the relevance of the behavior of the participants and ethical conduct.
Nehring couldn't say how developments in the Watergate affair would effect the attitudes and teaching practices in the program.
City Manager's Training Needs in Transition While KU Program Sets Pace for the Field
By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN Associated Press Writer
Men who go to school to learn how to run city governments still spend most of their time being taught to draft a budget or prepare a bond issue, but dramatic urban problems are becoming an increasing part of their classroom work.
This development emerged over the last two decades as more and more cities switched to the council manager form of management and hired trained city managers.
Another factor was the spread of conflicts over race, education, transportation and housing from the large central cities into the smaller municipalities of the nation.
THERE ARE NOW about 2,200 city managers in the United States. They run two-thirds of the nation's cities over 5,000 buildings and eighty-runners city runs under 25,000 in population.
More and more of these men have graduate school training to do this job and that training is more diverse than ever before.
"What is being taught is quite a variety," said Mark Keane, executive director of the International City Management Association. "It starts from the premise that there is no limit to what a good urban manager ought to know."
KEANE SAID a abbreviated list of what a good manager ought to be familiar with
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 148
Telephones
Newsproom: 864-4610
Advertising-Circulation: 864-4358
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer periods. Multi-subscription rates are $6 a semester or $10 per semester. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised are offered to all students without regard to their status. No other benefits are necessarily necessary hoose of the University of Kansas or the State University of Kansas.
**new staff:** Monroe Dodd, editor; Zaid Shahidi, associate director; Michael Goldman, senior manager; Michael Camuellar editor; Kirk Haugh, chief office经理; Kevin Smith, general manager; Steven Reckman, executive director; Goodwill, classified manager; John Kirch, award-winning marketing specialist; assistant business manager; Jack Mutchin, turnover officer; assistant business manager.
included: psychology and sociology, physical sciences, mathematics and quantitative analysis, philosophy, history and ethics. This was in addition to the standard curriculum of public administration.
Currently, 69 per cent of the managers have college degrees or graduate training; 27% have masters or other advanced degrees.
Perhaps the foremost in specific city manager training is the University of Kansas.
"IN THE OLD DAYS, a city council would look for an engineer because so many of the worst problems were in physical construction: sewers, roads, parks," said Keane. "Now they are looking for a broader range of solutions on management and the social sciences."
In 1934, 77 per cent of the city managers with a bachelors degree majored in engineering, usually civil engineering. Today that total is only 33 per cent.
THERE ARE ONLY a few graduate schools where there is specific emphasis on training city managers as opposed to non-managers. This means that move from city to state to federal jobs.
But the model city manager these days, according to Keane, has a masters in public administration and three or more years of management jobs below that of city manager.
Thirty-one per cent of city managers with bachelors degrees have them in liberal arts now and 12 per cent in public administration.
Perhaps the foremost in specific city manager training is the University of Kansas, Others are Howard University, the University of Michigan and the University Arizona, the three are running programs to train community group members for city management.
Public policy schools produce city managers, but that is not their focus. The public administration schools, in turn, have added more policy analysis in recent years.
Whatever the training, most of those who do it agree with a 91-year-old retired businessman, Richard Childs, who dreamed up the council-manager form of government in 1908 and has lived to see it transform American local government.
longer stand up," said Dr. James T. Jones, dean ofhotel school of hospital of the United States.
"A boy coming right out of school at age 24 isn't ready to be a city manager of even 500 people with a $250,000 budget," said Childs, who has fought hundreds of battles beside managers around the country trying to get his form of government adopted.
"Everybody has come to understand that city managers are involved in policy content and implementation, and policy objection is the political process," Jones added.
'THE OLD ATTITUDE that city managers were outside politics can no
“He needs to get more training in the “Field” children on. “After all, the ideal training should give him a capacity to deal with people who are scared and not be a bookish kind of person.”
Volunteers are needed to officiate in the KU summer intramural program, according to Steve Carmichael of the Intramurals Office.
'73 Twisters Set Records
June Is Tornado Time
Anyone interested in officiating should contact Carmichael anytime at the intramurals office located at 108 Robinson Gym. Officials will be paid $1.60 a hour.
Summer Refs
letters policy
The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 300 words. All letters are to be received in accordance with space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and homebound; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
By LAUREL DEFOE
Tornadoes have struck the United States in record number this year and the battering may continue, according to the National Weather Service.
The service said that there were more than 704 tornadoes between Jan. 1 and May 29, with a month remaining in the peak tornado season. The previous high for the five-month period was in 1957, when there were 504 tornadoes.
The prime season for tornadoes in Kansas is May and June. However, tornadoes can occur at any time and in any state. Mike Carrell of the National Weather Service at Topka told the Kansan that tornadoes had occurred all fifty states and in all months of the year.
Kansen Staff Writer
NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
"The tornado is really a thunderstorm in extreme. All tornadoes grow out of thunderstorms, so I guess you can tail off from them and have a tornado are similar to those conditions that produce a thunderstorm," he said. Less than one percent of all thunderstorms produce tornadoes.
CARELIE SAID that no one really knew the reason tornadoes occurred.
Allen Pearson, director of the National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City, Mo., said the abnormal pattern was persisting and would tend to keep tornado activity at a spring-like peak in the southern United States.
THE WEATHER Service blamed the intensive tornado activity on a stronger than normal jet stream flowing into the United States from the southwest.
With the aid of the Civil Defense, the Weather Service has established a system to warn the public of the possible threat of a tornado.
Carelli offered some suggestions to follow if a tornado threatened.
CARELIE SAID the service used both radar and spotter to detect the storms in the area. The search team at Topaka cover the Lawrence area. Spotter are people in the area who call the Weather Service if they spot a tornado. In this way, the service can trace the path of the storm.
In spite of the warning system, many deaths and injuries have occurred. In areas where tornadoes are rare, Carelli said people simply did not know what to do in case of a tornado emergency, and there were many casualties.
In Kansas, however, people fail to take the necessary precautions, not because they don't know what to do, but because they disregard the warnings.
If ONE is in a car and sees a tornado, he should move at right angles to the storm cloud. If three permits, he should get out of the flat, as far away from the car as possible.
Carelli told a man who drove to the side of the road to escape a tornado, got out of the car and hadd down in a ditch beside his wife. He was crushed and lowered it on top of him, crushing him.
"To escape a similar mirabel, I'd advise persons to get away from their cars," he
When in a building, the safest place is in the basement under heavy furniture. Carelli suggested selecting a small room that would offer strong roof support. Large rooms, such as school gymnasiums and auditoriums, are particularly dangerous
because of weak roof support. Many roofs collapse and bury those inside.
IF THE building does not have a basement, one should seek cover in the bathroom and cover himself with a mattress.
Carelli said that students in residence halls should, if possible, go to the lowest floor. If that isn't possible, the next best place is in the hallway, making certain that doors are closed to keep glass from entering the hall.
Carelli said that most injuries occurred from flying debris, tumbling buildings and from cars on the road. Remembering this can prevent injury.
Philadelphia Police Bag Vintage Prey
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—A neighbor noticed that the phi-bracer is going to go somewhere in the future.
Police investigated and on Saturday, Police, 90, was arrested for possession of nut shells.
Police said several women had complained Kelly was selling drugs. They said the arresting officer had to chase Kelly and reach her before she failed in her attempt to climb a wall.
POLICE said the woman dropped three glazed packets containing a white powder filled with baking soda.
THE Town Shop
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"If I could get my hands on my first grade teacher now, I'd break her chalk."
The old `run`, Spot run `method`.
It all began in the first grade.
But don't blame your first-grade teacher,
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You had to read it out loud. Word by word.
And that is the way it was until you became a second grade. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you still did it, and good work was earned.
If you're an average reader, you're probably reading that way now
Which means you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute.
talk. About 250 to 300 words a minute.
And that's not fast enough any more.
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.
And since the amount of time in a day isn't about to increase, your reading speed will have to.
in order to handle it all.
The Evelyn Wood, Reading, Dynamics course can help.
With training, you be able to see grow *of* words. To read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute. Depending on how difficult the material is.
At any rate, we guarantee to take in triple your reading speed, or we refund you entire tuition. (88.4% of everyone who takes the course accompanies this.)
Do not waste time talking about whom
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 12, 1973
3
comment
hbor going
Public's 'Trial' of Nixon Awaits Resignation or Verdict
day. on of
By HAYNES JOHNSON The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - Richard Nixon's personal calendar now shows 1,310 days remaining in his presidency. He intends, he has said, to make those "the best days in history."
Undoubtedly, every president has aspired to such lofty ambitions, and it is conceivable that Nixon still will achieve his goal. He was able to accomplish that with Watergate storm and proceed with the unfinished business of his presidency. But it is also now conceivable that he could become the first American president to be impeached, either by impeachment or resignation.
In a very real sense, the President already is on trial. Although theres not an official proceeding against him personally, his reputation and capacity to govern are being examined just as surely as if he were on the witness stand.
HE ALREADY has been forced by the pressure of events to give what were, in effect, three depressions on his own role in the case. Each time, he has had to make new admissions and raise new concerns before he can move more deeply into position; each time, he has failed to still the questions that keep hammering at him.
The verdict is far from in, but already his public standing has plummeted from 68 per cent to 45 per cent in the polls, the lowest point of his presidency. Richard Nixon's fall in public esteem has come more swiftly and dramatically than even Lyndon Johnson's. And, try though he has to maintain an air of confidence in his leadership during crises, events have moved so relentlessly that each day brings suspicions of more serious charges to come.
FOR THE PRESIDENT, whether defendant in fact or not, there has been no escaping this trial. The cumulative weight of the evidence, the multitudinous nature of the various investigations, the omni-present public印章 and over the airwaves, the gloomy economic news at home ("Watergate uncertainty"), the stock-raising capital suit, or with further decline of the dollar abroad, the sense of general governmental drift—all these have imprisoned him in the Watergate snare.
Nothing he has done so far—his statements, his refusal to subject himself to further public scrutiny, his trip to Iceland to meet French President Georges Pompidou—has succeeded in freeing him of the case.
THIS MONTH'S White House statement that Nixon would neither talk to federal prosecutors nor answer their questions about the war, he said, the conflict. It raised the prospect of a historic confrontation between the President and the prosecutors. Nixon thus has drawn the line tighter just as the Senate has decided to get to the most critical testimony yet.
No one can foresee with any certainty what that testimony will reveal, or how damaging it might be to the President. There are, however, several major alterations in the law that make the waters are contiguous into the form the Watergate case takes in the days and months to come.
HIS FIRST alternative starts with several assumptions, all of which may turn out to be false: that there will not be devastating pressure against him; that pressure against him inevitably will ease as time passes; that the American people will become satiated—and quite possibly turned off—by the incessant talk of the scandal; that the mood of the country cries out for the need of further crisis, and that impeachment is a price virtually no one is willing to pay.
If these assumptions prove correct, then Nixon's personal trial will be over. He will
The Writer
Haynes Johnson, a national staff writer for the Washington Post, won a 1966 Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Selma, Ala., civil rights story. He is the author of three books, "Dusk at the Mountain," "The Bay of Pigs," and "Fulbright: the Dissenter."
be exonerated, and the course he evidently has chosen to follow—to do nothing more about Watergate—will have been justified. can return to his normal, presidential role.
THE PRESIDENT already has taken the first steps along that path. His meeting with Pompidou will be followed by Leonid Brezhnev's visit to Washington later this month. He'll join him at the international traveling with his scheduled journey to European capitals. All this is a clear public signal that he remains the world's most powerful leader, and that it is time for him to return.
The problem with this course is that the Watergate case has not followed a logical, predictable pattern. It is not an orderly legal proceeding but a series of stunning cases, including the Watergate trial, but many. Some are legal, some are quasi-legal. Perhaps the most volatile of all is being conducted in the strictly unofficial forum of public opinion. Recent events have demonstrated again the importance of being unable so far to stem the Watergate tide.
IN THE LAST few weeks, the inexerable pressure of what Joseph Alsop likes to call "the Watergate horror" has demonstrated just how much the President has been a captive of the case. His three public statements about his role have come reluctantly, and in response to this pressure.
It is no longer unthinkable to suggest that Richard Nixon could be compelled to address the most difficult question: how to save his presidency and avoid the humiliation of an impeachment proceedings.
It is hard to realize that only seven weeks have passed since the President told the American people there have been "major developments" in the Watergate affair. Speaking then, on April 17, he said it wasn't until March 21 that he began privately to realize the dimensions of Watergate. "On March 21," he said, "as a result of serious changes which came to my attention . . . I knew what it was about the whole matter." He added, "I condemn any attempts to cover up in this case, no matter who is involved."
Within two weeks, after an almost daily spate of disclosures about the involvement of his highest aides in the attempted murder of his wife, the police again was forced to explain his position;
WHEN HE FIRST learned of the
WATERGATE Junk-in-kale in free-
fare from a friend in New York,
he took it to Monaco.
he was "appalled at this senseless, illegal action" and was "shocked to learn that employees of the Re-election Committee were apparently among those guilty." It is true, but that he the "immediately ordered an investigation by appropriate government authorities."
As the investigations went forward, he explained, "I repeatedly asked those conducting the investigation whether there was any reason to believe that members of my administration were in any way involved. I received repeated assurances that there were not." Therefore, satisfied, he believed that the charges had been true and that the charges of involvement by members of the White House staff were false."
Three more weeks of further explosive testimony, much of it centering on the President, passed before Nixon offered his most complete public testimony to date. His statement on May 22 was one of the most memorable statements ever issued by an American president.
Until March, that is.
-Within a few days after the Watergate break-in, he was aware that the case was more than an isolated burglary, unrelated to his administration. He was "advised" that "there was a possibility of CIA involvement in some way," a possibility he found credible.
—L. Patrick Gray III, then acting director of the FBI, had "suggested" to him that he might lead higher." Thereafter, it wasn't press reports that he was discounting, nor the advisories of the unnamed people who were involved, but the FBI itself.
He took steps to limit the scope of the Watergate investigation and personally instructed his two key aides, H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrbluhman, "to see that this was personally coordinated" between the CIA and the FBI.
—Long before the 1972 campaign, "I did set in motion certain internal security measures," including wiretaps and some of the people who participated in these acce- tivities. The police, with help or approval, undertook legal activities in the political campaign of 1972.
—He sought "to prevent the exposure of these covert national security activities, while encouraging those conducting the investigation to pursue their inquiry into the Watergate itself. I so instructed my staff, and the general and the acting director of the FBI."
—He conceded that, “with bindsight, it is apparent that I should have given more heir to the warning signals I received along the way. I would state cover-up and less to the reassurance.”
His rationale for his actions was ambiguous. "I wanted justice done with regard to our own lives," he said.
priorities with which I had to deal—and not at that time having any idea of the extent of political abuse which Watergate reflected—I also had to be deeply concerned with insuring that neither the covert operations of the CIA nor the activities of the special investigations unit should be compromised."
In this statement, Nixon drew his defense—that he was acting in the best interests of the American people in order to restructure "national security"—and resisted his case.
HE HAS NOW launched his own strong, indeed defiant, counterattack against those who are suggesting he must bear the blame—not just the "responsibility"—and pay the price for Watergate. "It is time to stop making heroes out of those who steal information from the United States in the newspaper," he told liberated prisoners of war at the White House. "... In order to continue these great initiatives for peace, we must have secret communications. It isn't that we are trying to keep anything from the American people that the American people should know. It is that we are trying to keep something from the press that we press should print. But it is that what we are doing is to accomplish our goal ..."
He assured them that "I am going to meet my responsibility to protect the national security of the United States of America insofar as our secrets are concerned"—and, in addition to his willingness to question him further about Watergate to challenge his authority and motives.
IT IS POSSIBLE this will be his last word
the matter, and that the stern will nubbish
But it is equally possible that circumstances will dictate another course. It is important to keep in mind that Richard Nixon could be compelled to address the most difficult question: how to save his presidency and avoid the risk of an impeachment proceedment?
Given that last extremity, and fully mindful we are entering the purest realm of speculation, here is one alternative presidential scenario that would be both bold and daring, and that quite well could succeed.
The President could address a special joint session of congress, in prime television time, and deliver a Winston Churchill-type of summons to the country: the crisis we are facing is not only the political history. It is not a crisis of war, not a crisis of depression, not a crisis of civil rebellion, but a crisis of the American political system. It is a crisis shared by all Americans, Republicans and Democrats, liberals and conservatives. He already has made it clear that he would be able for that crisis, that be unwittingly contributed to the climate in which it flourished.
BUT LET THE legacy of Watergate be such that it is a testament to the resiliency and genius of the American political system. He is therefore asking the wisest, most experienced American political leaders, men of both great parties-Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskus, Barry Goldwater and Howard Baker- to help him create an environment would be a new open and vibrant coalition form of government.
Together, he and they would work to insure that as we approach the nation's 20th anniversary, in the time he has remaining in office, it truly will be recorded that these were the best days in America's history.
Far-fetched? Improbable? Impossible?
Of course. Just as is the thought of an American president being impeded and found guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors against the republic—or resisting, under pressure, from office.
No president has ever faced those alternatives before. Neither has any付
president ever faced those alternatives before. Neither has any付
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Tuesday, June 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Liberal Arts to Require 'Feedback' for 1.700 Classes
By CONNIE PARISH
Kansan Staff Writer
Next year nearly all University of Kansas students taking courses in the College of Science will have the chance to evaluate their professors using the KU Curriculum and Instruction Survey.
This section of the survey deals with your personal assessment of some of the basic elements of this course. If your instructor has approved publication of his or her results, your responses to these questions will appear in the student guide to instructors and courses. For questions inappropriate to this course, darken the N/A) space on the answer card.
This is because the College Assembly, the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, recently passed a motion to approve uniform application of this survey.
Nancy Harper, director of KUCI5, explained what this would mean. She stated that the survey was initiated by the Student Senate in 1989. Then the Senate set it up as a separate project and funded it. Since then, the survey has been administered the survey on a voluntary basis.
1. For me, the subject matter of this course was ...
THEN IF the instructor desired, the tabulated results of the survey were published for student use in the publication "Feedback." Three issues of "Feedback" have been published and a fourth is being planned for distribution next fall.
The resolution just passed will make one valuable change, Harper said. The survey must be administered in all courses of more than six students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The College includes thirty-two departments and thirteen constituting approximately two-thirds of the course offerings of the entire University.
(1) of little value
(2) of some value
(3) valuable
(4) very valuable
(5) extremely valuable
2. 4
According to a count Harper had done, next year the survey will be administered in approximately 1,700 courses just in the summer. The number of any professors in the other schools within
the university participating on a voluntary basis.
ALTHOUGH THE survey must be administered in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the results will still not necessarily be published in "Feedback," but researchers have three options. 1) Results can be returned to the instructor, the department head, dean, and printed in "Feedback." 2) Results can be returned to the instructor, department head, dean, but not printed in "Feedback." 3) Results can be sent to the instructors only.
Even though the results won't necessarily be published for student use, Harper said the resolution would make the results that were published more valid, since they would be judged against all the data collected. Therefore the University means
Stairs to Lead to New Classes
will be more accurate, and Harper said it
should make "Feedback" more valuable.
classrooms will be ready for occupancy,
but the faculty offices won't be finished
until Thanksgiving or later.
The fourth edition of "Feedback," which will be distributed next fall at enrollment, will be free. The first three editions cost the company $15,000 each. All of the 5,000 copies that were printed each time were sold. Next fall 15,000 copies will be given away, which Harper explained was possible because a new "Rolling Stones" cut printing costs considerably. Will cutting prints considerably.
Wesco Hall, which is still under construction, a building that will be partially constructed when chosen by the city.
THE ORIGINAL goals of the KUCIC were threefold, Harper said. First, it was set up to improve instruction. One way it attempted to do this was by suggesting faculty members go to the Office of Instruction services for improvement in specific areas.
10 30 50
1- |
2- |
3- |
4- |
Second, "Feedback" was aimed at aiding students in choosing courses. Third, Harper said, the survey was to aid the administration, since the Promotion and Tenure Committee uses the results if the instructor so desires.
However, students interviewed by the Kansan indicated they were skeptical about "Feedback's" ability to help them choose classes. Linda Schneider, Kansas City, taught in a common complaint, "I didn't find it used; since the courses needed weren't listed."
Linda Kraus, Lawrence junior, thought it might help if all instructors were required to give the survey. "I don't think very many wouldn't want the results printed," she explained. "It's just that many didn't bother handing it out."
ONE STUDENT, Mark Dickson, Atchison freshman, said he found "Feedback" really useful for choosing one class, but he had to decide the rest of his schedule before consulting it.
Several students indicated that they paid more attention to the advice of students who were in a math class.
James Babcock, Chanute senior, said that he felt that his adviser was more trustful.
Students who had already chosen a
6 Orientation Sessions Planned
The University of Kansas will host six freshman orientation sessions sponsored by Monday-Tuesday and Thursday-Friday last three weeks of June.
Small group interaction, according to Myers, will be the focus for this year's project.
John Myers, director of the office, said he was expecting between 1,206 and 1,400 men and women who will be freshmen this fall to attend the two twoday sessions.
EACH FRESHMAN will be one of 15 to 20 students guided by one of the 12 staff members. The group gatherers will give students a chance to discuss individual
interests and problems while getting acquainted with campus geography and the academic and social sides of University life. He will also select courses for the fall term.
The first day of each session the students will have an opportunity to talk informally with KU students, who will serve as counselors. The second day, they will have physical exams, have photos taken for student identification cards, have an open-book placement tests and hear about student activities, government and housing.
THEY WILL also attend academic deans'
Bankers Study Profitability
The 34th annual Bank Management Clinic will be held today through Thursday at the University of North Carolina.
The theme of this year's clinic is "Profitability Through Flexibility." Many students, including, banking's future; kidnap, rassage; lending's costs; types of credit; the Rural Development Act; Small Business Add-ons; fund transfers; funds transfer system; and agriculture.
The general sessions and meetings will take place in the Kansas Union and in the lounges of Hashinger Hall, where the clinic participants will stay.
About 500 bank officers from throughout Kansas are expected to attend.
Attending from the School of Business as guests of the Kansas Banker's Association
will be: Harold Krogh, professor of business administration; Midred Young, placement director for the School of Business; Ron Ferguson, Lawrence graduate student; Michael Fuller, Lawrence graduate student; Jim Trigg, Ottawa graduate student; James Stokes, Chicagowale graduate student; Jim Koch, Lawrence graduate student; Elden von Lehe, Linn graduate student; and Bob Bond, Lawrence graduate student.
Among the speakers will be Lynn Taylor, dean of the Kansas School of Religion, who will give the invocation at Woodruff Auditorium, and John Conard, director of Relations and Development, who will give the greetings from the University.
"Previews were just a lot of fun. I didn't get anything out of them," commented one
Two KU students interviewed about previews expressed different views.
meetings, talk to advisers and make tentative plans for fall enrollment.
"I found them to be very useful," said another. "I wasn't confused so much."
MYERS SAID that reaction to last year's previews was overwhelmingly positive.
Through questionnaires distributed to participants after the previews last year, 97 per cent of those attended indicated they would attend the sessions to a friend, Meyers said.
The first session is scheduled for Monday and today, and the others will be held alternately on Monday-Tuesday and Thursday-Friday during the three weeks.
The students will make Gertrude Trussle
Hall their headquarters during
Pollack school.
THE OFFICE of School Relations has also planned a number of informal activities for parents who accompany their sons or daughters to Lawrence.
major, such as Phil Thornton, Kansas City, Mo., senior, indicated that they already knew about instructors in their own department, and for filler courses "Feedback" didn't tell enough about the instructor's teaching method to be useful.
On the first day of each preview session, parents will be able to attend a lunchon and discussion of KU student services with members of the faculty and staff.
JOHN FISHER, Monticello, Ind, senior consultant another complaint about the data collection process.
Guided tours of the KU Museum of Art,
Spencer Research Library, the Kansas
Geological Survey and the Space
Research Center are also available for
parents.
"The questions were too cut and dried. They didn't go into the psychology of teaching so much as how much work was done in the course," he said.
Thornton also indicated that the things he found objectionable in instructors couldn't be found.
Joe Lordi, Philadelphia graduate, also complained about what the questionnaire measures. "It measures only technical skills," he said, and statistically qualities only intuited or felt."
Myers said openings were still available for each of the six sessions, and requests were processed quickly.
He felt that the idea of an evaluating tool might be useful if something were done with it.
"TENURE KEEPS many bad professors in," Lordi said, "and if this was a way of rectifying that, I would be for it. Perhaps all of us would have to it and all results should be published."
Dee Dokken, Derby junior, voiced another complaint about "Feedback." "I filled out the survey, but I don't consider myself a very good judge of the instructors." On this basis she was skeptical about the usefulness of the overall survey.
KU faculty members interviewed also were not entirely without criticism of the assessment process.
MICHAEL GAINES, assistant professor of biology, administered the survey and found it very helpful. He thought the diagnostic section at the end was a particularly valuable tool, since the instructor could see his strong and weak points.
He has one objection to it, however.
"The only problem is that sometimes results don't depend on teaching ability as much as on the instructor's personality." If he is a performer in class, he is often ranked more exclaimed, but if he is low-keyed he is often rated lower by the students.
Nevertheless Gaines felt that administering the survey and printing its results should be mandatory, since he thought that those who had submitted to it previously had done so because they felt they were pretty good teachers.
*PERHAPS ITS'Cruel to make others subject to public embarrassment, but it's cruel to the students if there is bad teaching.," Gaines said.
He added that he thought the emphasis at the University was directed more toward research than teaching, which is sometimes detrimental to students.
Pay parity for Lawrence firemen, a particularly controversial local issue this spring during city election campaigning, and the owners' public attention in their meeting session.
Parity for Firemen May Flare Again
Representatives of Fire Fighters' Local Union 1896 plan to submit petitions to the commission supporting the firemen's stand seeking navy parity with the police.
In regular agenda business, planning commission items, a revised site plan for a bank at the northwest corner of Harvard Road and Iowa Street and a petition requiring sidewalk installation in Meadows subdivision are scheduled.
The commission meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the fourth-floor meeting room of the First National Bank Building, Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
According to Gaines, the biology department voted last spring to make administrative the survey and printing the report. Because of the department, but it was not strictly enforced, Lynn Nelson, associate professor of natury, agreed that the survey was useful to personally, and he, too, cked the diagnostic inventory section as especially helpful.
BUT HIS COMMENTS were not without some reservations. "Its usefulness depends on 1) the professor's willingness to take it into consideration and 2) the willingness of the student to take the time and thought necessary to fill out the survey honestly.
“When they get the opportunity to take the survey, many put thought into it. But a woman can do so very hard to deal with. Some simply mark in patterns and put no real thought into it, which makes it a waste of money and a burden.” Ms. Nelson said. “They do take it seriously,” she said.
John Guenther, assistant professor of education, thought all instructors shouldn't be required to give the survey. He explained that sometimes an instructor's own questions were more relevant for his own experiences and questions that have only a short response.
Richard Colyer, assistant professor of English, was definitely in favor of the idea of "feedback," but was critical of the questionnaire used.
HE EXPLAINED that he was one of the first to voluntarily participate in the survey, and thought an evaluating instrument should be used by all faculty at least two of their courses each year. But Colyer did not participate last year, but it is now it's not being well run, and it absolutely essential that you have a really good testing instrument."
He stated that one couldn't narrow the
number of questions to make it convenient, quick and easy and still have a good questionnaire. Coleray he thought the questionnaire, which was longer, was much better.
"Now there is not enough data to be valuable. Bedside, it is very helpful and much more revealing to have written a report in this manner rather than profile answers," Colyer said.
HE HAD A further criticism of the questionnaire.
"The biggest complaint from people I've talked to is that the survey gives students an opportunity to evaluate areas in which they are not really competent."
He thought the evaluations should be in areas where students are competent to judge, for example if the instructor had annoying mannerisms, how he handled class discussion or how receptive he was to questions.
Colyer explained, "For example, they are asked to evaluate your professional qualifications. But particularly in a beginning class the professor probably knows how to teach the student realizes, since teaching isn't a master of parading all your knowledge."
Colyer also thought the results of the survey shouldn't be made a matter of record to the administration. He suggested that results of a survey given in several classes should be given to the department head periodically, but the rest of the results should go directly to the instructor rather than other administrators.
He said that even "bum" teachers would probably try to learn something from his book, but would be more willing to do so if he was independent between the student and professor.
Colyer seemed to sum up a typical attitude when he said the idea of a survey as an educational aid is valuable, but it should be improved for utmost effectiveness.
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Tuesday, June 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
M.D.s Weigh Birth Control Effects
BY LIZ EVERITT
Recent reports on the possible side effects of some birth control methods have had little impact.
Dr. Raymond Schweiger, director of the University of Kansas Student Health Service, said that he had heard about the recent House Intergovernmental Relations Subcommittee hearings on Intra-Uterine Devices and their health service never issued the UIDs.
SCHWEGLER ALSO said that one doctor at the health service has had four or five women come in who were pregnant, with the JUD still in place.
"We have felt that for the most part they are inappropriate. We have witnessed so many failures that we don't have any confidence in them," he said.
Janet Sears, assistant to the Dean of Women, does some birth control counseling, mainly to help women who had received information several weeks ago from the State Department of Health that the state required them to get a blood, one form of the IUD, in state clinics.
Sears said that all birth control methods had their side effects, and that "it's a good exercise in counseling to get people to compare the bother and hassle of the birth control method to the bother and hassle of finding out they're pregnant."
(2)
DR. DALE Clinton, former director of the Douglas County Health Department and now a private practitioner, is skeptical of reports that the IUD may cause more serious complications than the cramps and bleeding that were previously reported.
Dr. Ravmond Schwegler
He said that he believed that government warnings tended to be out-dated and over-aged.
Dr. A. C. Mitchell, a private practitioner,
does insert IUds. He said that he did
advise against using it for women who had
not experienced at least one pregnancy,
but that he had had few problems with those
who had previously been pregnant.
WHEN ASKED about the possibility of more serious complications, Mitchell said that it was important to be careful in the selection of the patients who could wear the knee braces. Both cases were taken, he said, there will be few complications, and those will be fairly minor.
The Douglas County Health Department does not use IUDs, according to Kay Kent, the administrator. She says that she has not heard of any requests for them.
Kent said that she thought that there had been some duplication of services between her health department and the health department. While the health department is not planning to turn students away, she said that it would help if students received a course in service, which they have already paid for.
SCHWEGLER ALSO said that he hoped that more of the students who had been using the health department clinic would use the student health service. He said that if a student would put on her registration slip that she wanted to see a doctor about birth control, the nurses would send her to school so that who were more willing to help in this area.
Clinton said that he believed that there was too much red tape involved in obtaining birth control devices. He said he preferred to get the woman taken care of more than a woman came to him requesting birth control devices. He needed to give her a physical examination.
The student health service and the health department do give each patient an examination before advising any specific method.
MOST OF THOSE asked said that they believed that there was some correlation between the availability of birth control methods and the rate of venereal disease.
Sears said that while she believed that there was a nationwide correlation, there was no correlation.
She based her belief on figures from the
Chagall Rediscovers Own Work Left in Russia Half-Century Ago
MOSCOW—Chagall rediscovered Chagall last week and he went.
The encounter took place on the ground of the Trekyan Museum in Moscow between 1987 and 1995.
By STEPHENS BROENING
vasses he left in Russia 53 years ago and hadn't seen since.
In his honor, museum officials removed them from storage and hung them along with 76 contemporary lithographs and two drawings that the artist had donated to the museum.
LOOKING frail and vulnerable beneath a sparse crown of snow-white hair, Chagall stood before a 1918 painting called "The Naked Head" which touched its surface with a tentative hand.
with tears in his eyes and replied softly;
"More than you can imagine."
Touring the exhibit of lithographs, Chagall stopped momentarily and wedged a small bouquet of lilies-of-the valley behind a picture.
HE WAS escorted by Yekaterina Furtseva, the minister of culture who helps guard the Soviet regime against deviations and art, in the service of the party and state.
To a spectator who asked him if he remembered these paintings well, he turned
The artist came back to his homeland Monday for the first time in more than a decade.
health service, which show a fairly stable rate of VD in Laundry, while the national average is lower.
Schweigel feels that there is a definite correlation, here as well as across the
*WHEN YOU CAN have unlimited contact, it's just a question of what day will you be available?*
VD is treated in Lawrence by some private physicians and by the health department and the student health service. All doctors are required by law to report all cases to the Public Health Department can trace the contacts, who may also be infected.
Clinton said that he believed that any proposed correlation is only speculation, the same kind of speculation that he said was made by Mr. Bush in DES, the go-to "calming after pill."
Persons who want information may call the Douglas County Health Department, the Student Health Service, the Dean of Women's Office or Headquarters. Inc. Both are offices of Women's Office and Headquarters. Inc. operate mainly on a referral basis.
Mert Buckley, president of the student body; Tony Cardone, president of the Chicano Student Association; Gilbert Dean, president of the Black Student Union; and Edgar Heap of Birds, president of the Committee on Indian Affairs.
Faculty members are Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism; Jacob Gordon, assistant professor of African studies; Don Green, assistant professor of human development and family life; and Hobart Jackson, assistant professor of
Members are William Argersten, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies; William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs; Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor to business affairs; Ambree Sarira, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
Roland Hurst, classified employee in the department of civil engineering; and Mrs. Willie Stagg, classified employee in the department of chemistry.
Robinson Pool Costs Nothing, Affords Choice
For those don't want to spend 60 cents at the Lawrence Public Pool, the swimming pool in Robinson Gymnasium will be open this summer.
Physical education beginning and intermediate swimming and life saving classes are taught from 8 to 11:20 a.m. Monday thru Friday. Scuba diving classes are taught from 1 to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Summer session students and faculty members must present their identification cards to obtain admission. Staff members must have a pool privilege card. Cards are issued by the Johnson Children must be able to swim and must be accompanied by an adult.
It is available for recreational swimming from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 3 to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
The sauna is open to only men this summer because of lack of staff.
Nichols said the new board would review the goals and activities of the Office of Minority Affairs, evaluate the long-range plans for the office and review the relevance of such aims to the University of Kansas.
Office of Minority Affairs To Have Advisory Board
Faculty and staff families have the pool from 5 to 6 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursdays 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday has been designated for Faculty Swim.
38
"We want the Minority Affairs Office to be an effective link between the academic departments and all of the minority students," Nichols said.
An advisory board for the Office of Minority Affairs has been announced by Chesapeake.
Prof to Teach Creativity
Another Chagall Work
There are differences in the dollar amount the driver must show he is in a vehicle. He can be charged for damage someone else's property in an auto accident. Also, "no-fault" auto insurance laws in some states have certain incidents affecting out-of-state motorists.
At no additional cost, motorists with auto insurance policies from the more than 300 companies affiliated with the insurance Office will have the insurance automatically extended to provide the amount and kind of insurance necessary to meet the statutory requirements of other insurance policies.
The Insurance Information Institute said motorists should check with their insurance
The new board is composed of four vice chancellors, four faculty members, four staff members.
Travelers Get Insurance Breaks
A recent development has simplified automobile vacation trips to and through other states and Canadian provinces for Kansans.
The laws of all states require that if a driver becomes involved in an accident resulting in bodily injury or in property damage exceeding a certain amount, each driver must report the accident to the administrator of the law.
architecture and urban design
agents to see if their companies were among those using this additional auto
payment system.
As a convenience to visitors, all Canadian provinces recognize a special "yellow card" as evidence of insurance. This card may be obtained through an insurance agent or broker and is easier to carry than an insurance policy.
Mexican law honors only automobile insurance policies that are issued by a company based in Mexico. Those planning a motoring trip to Mexico should contact one of the many agents of Mexican insurance companies, who can be found in practically every city.
Donald Treffinger, associate professor of education and chairman of the department of educational psychology, measurement and research, will serve on the faculty of the 19th annual Creative Problem Solving Institute, June 15-23 in Bailen, N. Y.
With this Mexican policy, the driver should receive a listing of local agents and adjusters who represent the company—the motorist's best friend in case of an accident.
Burn Center's Completion Ends 5 Years of Planning
After five years of hoping, planning and determined fund raising, the Gene and Barbara Burnett Burn Center opened its doors to patients last May. The burn center at the University of Kansas Medical Center and is directed by Dr. David Robinson.
For Robinson, the completion of the $650,000 project is a dream come true. From the beginning the major obstacle was money.
Robinson found no federal or state funds would be available to finance the burn center. But a massive fund raising effort was begun with private citizens, organizations, business firms and foundations contributing.
THE LARGEST single contribution came from Gene and Barbara Burnett of Lawry.
The burn center covers the entire sixth floor of the building and extends to an adjoining building, for a total space of 7,000 square feet.
IN 1970, when Burnett sold Burnett Instrument Co. he, and his family wished to help the Medical Center. When they heard Robinson was trying to raise funds to build a hospital, he decided to help and contributed enough to prepare the initial construction of the project.
Burnett's company supplied the Medical Center with the instruments for fifteen years. During this time Burnett learned of the Medical center's need for a burn center.
The Burnetts knew Robinson as a customer. In 1951 the Burnett Instrument Co. began manufacturing skin grafting instruments.
THE FACILITIES of the center include a circular electric bed that turns a patient to a minimum of pain and special video tape recording to keep a constant watch on a patient.
The center will serve as a training area for medical students and paramedical personnel, staff of 25 nurses and technicians who have also other burn centers in the United States.
Patients are admitted on a referral basis from Kansas and out-of-state areas. The center will accept patients regardless of the pay, as costs are met by public donations.
The burn center has ten beds, of which the tour will be used for intensive care. The patient will be treated to intensive care just after they have been curried to guard against possible infection.
The completion of the burn center raises the number of such centers in the country to 90. Before the burn center's completion, a total of 14 hauls had to be taken to Tulica or Chicago.
The University of Kansas English Department has announced winners of various awards for the 72-73 school year. The awards were selected by a department committee.
Winners of Helen Rhoda Hopes Writing Awards were Robin Rothrock, Shawnee Mission junior, and Cynthia Britton, Hutchinson junior.
Scholarships, Writing Awards Winners Picked
In the Carrburgh Memorial Poetry Contest, William Gallagher, Lawrence graduate student, won first place. Second place went to Gregory Stock, Shawnee Mission sophomore, and third place to Barbara Rakley, Overland Park freshman.
The Selden Lincoln Whitcomb Fellowship was awarded to Michael Vall, Prairie Village graduate student. The Kenneth Rockwell Scholarship was presented to Paul Lim, Somerset, N. J., graduate student.
Gary Taylor, Topeka sophomore,
received the Natalie Calderwood Writing
award. Winners of the David Ohle-Warren
Fine Writing Awards were William Fisher,
Lawrence graduate student, and Thomas
Averill, Topeka graduate student.
Edna Osborne Whitcomb Writing Awards were presented to Carol Salvo, Avca, Pha., freshman, and Virginia Wolfe, Overland Park graduate student.
Winner of the James B. Kennedy
Scholarship was James Swafford, Topika
upperclass.
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FOR RENT
APT, for rent. Across from Olive Hall, furnished
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available. 842-212-6. 6-12
For Rest, Apt. for one on campus, $100/
tn. furnished, A/C all bills paid Call 843-982-
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For the latest up to the minimal listing in rental housing call Lawrence R. Hewlett, 824-653-1077.
WANT TO LIVE ON A FARM? Space available in a large farmhouse for couple of individuals.
SAVE GASOLINE. Walk to campus and class room with all appliances. No pets 842-109-6750
(including gasoline).
FOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRSED OF STEEPHILL
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camping, dining, shopping and security. Pool, security service. Reasonable rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates or couples. In San Antonio, 123nd, I9th, Apt. 9 or 10.
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GAY LIBERATION meets Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Union. Counseling/RAP -844-3504 for referrals
B-112 Union, 844-4098 Box 234, Lawrence.
GAY LIBERATION IS 15 PEOPLE LIBERATION
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Want to organize car pool commuting from Topeka daily. Call 272-6290. 6-18
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Forest Place
Phone
843-1431
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Tuesday, June 12, 1973
University Daily Kansan
LAWRENCE MOTEL AIR CONDITIONES WINTER RATE 350 GUP Mobi NOVACANCY
Kansas Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED
Some Old Signs Exceed Size Limit
"As you approach it you see a forest of telephone pools with lights," McKay says. "We've got one inside."
such advice, in his opinion, would have been beneficial.
From Page One
**AWARE THAT** the lighting was necessary. McKay thinks a better way—more visually pleasing method—could have helped. The research thinks might have been the cheapest way.
Other areas, too, are far from aesthetically pleasing.
The city garages at 5th and Mississippi streets "which aren't even landscaped to shield their attractiveness" and 2nd Street, just off the turnpike exit, which "as door to Lawrence is pretty discouraging" were other sites criticized by McKay.
"IT'S SOMETHING that's going to have come, but if you try to put it, it's not going to work."
An advisory commission, if formed, would in a variety of ways discourage the creation of eyey eyesores and "in five or 10 years if the people of Lawrence feel we have been abused" (bibl). The commission would proceed further to the realm of advising private concerns.
Aesthetics Poses Dilemma...
The City Commission has approached the proposal rather hastily because, as Mayor Nancy Hambleton said, "If I'm a good judge of the attitude of the commission, it's too far reaching and not acceptable."
Describing the Community Arts Council as "a very capable group of people" she said, "they just don't know the kinds of things we're dealing with. Everything we do
affects the visual aspect of the city in some way. It's just too far reaching.
LAWRENCE, IN her opinion, has not good skill during the anesthetic erosion and bruising.
A sign ordinance, now in effect, limits the size of signs to 90 square feet and forbids construction of flashing and overhanging sums.
Although there are signs present in violation of these requirements, they were either built prior to the enactment of laws or due to a variance because of social circumstances.
THE COMMISSION, Hambleton said, has been discussing setting a time limit for the elimination of these pre-ordinance signs but "you've got to have some sympathy for the businessman," she said. "Those signs were expensive."
In reviewing presently existing city areas termed unattractive, Hambleton discussed
Also in effect is a site planning ordinance establishing requirements, proper sewage for example, that must be fulfilled before a building is constructed.
"The lighting was planned by an outside concern and there was a problem lighting it
"IN REGARD to the Holcolm Sports Complex—we weren't presented with too much interest."
"The appearance wasn't something we were totally unaware of, but no one offered a chance."
Suggestions from the Community Arts
Group would have been welcome. Ham blight
in the community.
Letter Charges Dean...
From Page One
single count of conspiracy to obstruct justice. The offer has been rescinded by Cox pending a review of all immunity and plea-bargaining decisions.
U. S. DIST. Judge John J. Sirica put off until today a ruling on Dean's request for immunity or a delay in testifying before the grand jury.
Sirica is also set to rule today whether to prevent radio and television coverage of Watergate hearings, and whether he has the authority to delay granting a request to give immunity for Senate testimony to Dean and former Nixon campaign deputy Jeb S.
The Senate's hearings record at 9 a.m. (advance time) today and live broadcast (advance time)
SIRICA'S RULING on the immunity questions will determine whether Magruder and Dean can appear before the committee this week. Former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans, the Nixon campaign director, already is scheduled to testify.
The disclosure came in a financial report to the General Accounting Office by the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President.
Also Monday, the President's former personal lawyer Herbert W. Kalmbach, was quoted as saying that money he raised to pay to Watergate defendants and their lawyers was a "White House project" and "had approval of high authorities."
THE COMMITTEE said Kalimbach approached finance chairman Maurice H. Stans last June 29, less than two weeks after the committee released all available cash for the project. The committee gave him $75,000, including $30,000 that came from unidentified Philippine citizens in possible violation of visa regulations from foreign nationalists, the committee said.
Robert Smith and Deane Ackers, professors of civil engineering, will investigate the flood losses prevented by the Control Project, under a $110.00 contract.
Although Kalmbach didn't disclose the purpose of the money at the time, he told government auditors recently that it was $125,000 in his lawyers and paid through intermediaries. Kalmbach raised a total of $210,000 for this purpose, including $75,000 from Stans. The committee confirmed Monday that this was the first such bid said had was for a White House project.
Kalmbach reportedly is ready to testify that Dean and former White House aide John D. Ehrlichman instructed him to raise the money.
In other Watergate developments:
—WHITE HOUSE Press Secretary Ron
Profs Study Flood Loss
in brief
Grad Students, Profs Get Fulbright Grants
The students are Bonnie Brown, Lawrence; Jean Robinson, Lawrence; Michael Dorge, Leaward; Harold Lowe, Tex.; and Victoria Stanley, Pittsburgh.
The faculty members are Carl Lande, professor of political science and East Asian studies; Elizabeth Schultz, associate professor of history; and Henry Snyder, professor of history.
Fulbright-Hayes grants have been awarded to five graduate students and institutions.
Ziegler said he was mistaken last March 26 when he reported to newsman that the President had called Dean to express "absolute and total confidence" in him. The newsman also told him that President never called Dean at all that day. Erlrichman said in a sworn deposition recently that on March 26 the President was becoming increasingly suspicious that Dean was involved in the scandal. Ziegler said he was "under pressure" because of a "wrong impression on my part."
-Senate investigators met behind closed doors with convicted Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt. The session lasted more than six hours.
-The Washington Star-News reported that David Young, a former White House
Agnew . . .
From Page One
the "point which many people have begun to question is whether this is the right time for a revolution."
Agnew said punishment of the guilty, exoneration of the innocent and revelation of the truth of the crime best be achieved in the courtroom within the limits of strict procedures and rules of
"WHAT IS CRITICALLY lacking." Agnew said, "as the Senate Select Committee does its best to ferret out the truth, in a rigorous set of procedural safeguards.
The state prosecutors attending the association's 67th annual meeting gave Agnew a standing ovation after his 30 minute talk, the first direct administration speech. Senate hearings, which have been conducted in connection with embarrassing to the Nixon administration.
AT THE WHITE HOUSE, Press Secretary Ron L. Lindiger said he felt "the Vice President as Vice President was expressing his views." Ziegler said the administration was "not taking an official White House role in the process of the Ervin heartings."
Dreiling Querulous of Dole
trial. Ehrlichman has said he didn't find out about the break-in until after it happened. A former aide to Ehrlichman, Egil Krogh, said that account in a sworn deposition.
staff member, has testified that Ehrlichman knew in advance of the 1971 break-in by Hunt and others at the office of Office 638. He was also the defendant in the botted Petition Papers
TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas Democratic Chairman Norbert Drelling said Monday that Sen. Bob Dole, R—Kan, “has a lot of questions to answer to Kansas.”
Dreiling said it took the Senate Watergate hearings last week to "force disclosure that the Committee for the Re-Election of the President, 391,000 for a Vietnam trupe in August, 1971,"
Dreiling said Dole's answers should begin with the reason for keeping the $3000
Kansas state now indicates he thinks the publicized coverage of the Watergate hearing should be limited? "Dreiling remarks to remarks Dole made Saturday in Lawrence."
Dreiling said the disclosure in the Watergate hearing also raises the question of who gave the publication, Congressional information about the Dole trip to Vietnam.
Dreiling said that publication reported the Dole trip was muddled at his "personal expense."
Court Rules on Clear Air
"Is it more than coincidence that our
WASHINGTON (AP) — A deadlocked Supreme Court Monday cleared the way for enforcement of a lower court decision to force the State Department to partition of clean-air areas around the nation.
The majority victory for environmentalists came from a 4 to 4 vote. While not deciding the issue on the merits, the Court said that the decision of the U. S. Circuit Court here,
Last year, circuit judges declared that federal law prohibited the degrading of clean air even if the quality would still meet federal standards.
The case pitted environmental protection against industrial development. The suit began when four environmentalist groups set out to protect areas where the air is cleaner than that required by federal regulations.
The government appealed the case to the high court, arguing that a policy of "non-degradation" would hamper economic development in clean air areas and make the task of lessening pollution elsewhere more difficult.
The high court deadlock, made possible by the unexplained absence of Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. from the case, lets the issue rest with the Environmental Protection Agency, the target of the lower court decision.
They claimed that the stated purpose of the federal law was to "protect and enhance" air quality, and that left no room for pollution. The U. S. Circuit Court agreed.
Weiskopf Confident Of Chances in Open
The court issues no opinions and does not announce a breakdown of the vote in ties.
PHIADLELPHIA (AP)—Tom Weiskopf, fresh off his second victory in a row and his third in four starts, took a long look at his team's roster. U.S. Open Golf Championship this week.
"I had a goal. I'd never before won two tournaments back to back. Now I've done that. Now I have a new goal. I want to win the Open. To do it, I will have to play awfully good—better than I have the last couple of weeks.
"I'm really looking forward to it," said the man who, with the dramatic suddenness of a summer storm, has become the game's hottest performer.
"But if I can drive it in the fairway and keep on hitting my irons like I've been doing, well, I think I'll have a very good chance."
Weiskop's triumph at Philadelphia came on the heels of victories at the Colonial
sports
In those four weeks he's won $117,148,
tone at a total of 45 strokes under par and put
down in the rankings.
National and the Kemper Open. He was second in the Atlanta Classic.
A asked if his sudden streak would put even more pressure on him in the U.S. Open at Wimbledon.
"If you stand there and think about water to the right and trap to the left and the trouble and all the things that can go wrong, you're creating your own pressure.
"But if you stand over the shot and say 'I have the ability to execute this shot,' then commit yourself to it, well, that's something else."
"Someone, I don't remember who, said that we all create our own pressure. I think that is not true."
ROME (AP) —叶尼斯 of Romania crushed Manuel Orantes of Spain 6-1, 6-1, 6-1 Monday to win the men's title in the Italian Open Tennis Championships.
It took Nastase less than an hour to win the $16,000 first prize. Nastase moved into the final in the morning by beating Paulo Bertolucci of 6-2, 3-6, 4-3, 3-6.
Nastase Wins Italian Open
Frenchmen Win Le Mans
LE MANS, France (AP)—Henri Pescarelo and Gerard Larrouse of France their royal blue Matra Sinca to victory in four hours of the Le Mans endurance race.
baseball standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE East
Chicago W 24 23 FT 68
Montreal W 23 29 500 13
Lark W 24 27 470 7
Pittsburgh W 24 47 70 7
New York W 23 29 44 10
Philadelphia W 23 29 40 10
Wednesday
San Francisco 39 22 628 (18)
Los Angeles 39 22 628 (18)
Kansas City 37 25 630 (19)
Cincinnati 31 26 543 (53)
Atlanta 31 26 543 (53)
Dallas 20 29 399 (17)
Monday's Results
Los Angeles S. Philadelphia 3
Houston A. New York 3
St Louis 12, Cincinnati 4
San Francisco 7, New York 1
Tuesday's Games
LAKE BUENA SONORA PARK
Los Angeles at Montreal, night
San Diego at Monterrey, night
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, night
Raleigh at Louisville, night
St. Louis at Columbia, night
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W 30 PCT G.B.
New York 29 337
Detroit 29 26 337
Baltimore 29 26 337
Pakistan 26 28 300
Milwaukee 26 28 300 2
Cincinnati 21 35 335
x—late game not included
Tuesday's Games
"We probably need a new facility. We do not presently have an adequate facility. We do not presently have an adequate facility to house city vehicles." she said.
No Planning Resulted in Visual Clutter
THE CITY garages too present a problem.
Chicago 31 21 596
Nashville 20 17 484
Kansas City 31 21 325
California 27 26 500
Gaskett 28 26 494
Oakland 28 18 346
Monday's Results
November 19, 2022
Texas at Cleveland, night.
Kansas City at all-night,
night.
Minneapolis at Minnesota, night.
New York at Oakland, night.
12
City control over private building is not something totally unheard of, according to
Architectural review boards do exist in some cities and are something that could be a problem.
BUT LAWRENCE is not yet ready for
such a drastic change from either Hambleton's or Mckay's point of view.
The fact that there is a need for concern is not.
Whether the solution to the problem of visual disruption is a matter to be solved by an advisory committee or to exist in a question open to speculation and debate.
"Lawrence is an important town in the state of Kansas." Hambleton said.
There is no reason why it can't also be nice to look at.
Incoming Chancellor...
"The utilization of these institutions as places of purposeless rummation can no longer be tolerated."
Dykes said that the purpose of KU was the trifold function of teaching, research and PKU.
"THROUGH THIS HISE, our legislators will be giving high priority to a determination of the place, function and scope of the state colleges and universities.
From Page One
and the high demand for excellence in education required colleges and universities to make their offerings more practical and more economical.
Wearing a crimson and blue KU tie, Dykes said that Kansas' greatest resource had been and would continue to be its people, and money spent by Kansas to develop the talents and abilities of all its students, young, rich and poor, black and white.
ACTIVE INVOLVEMENT outside the University by faculty and students enriches the teaching-learning process, said Dykes. The department provides knowledge for application to society's problems, but keeps faculty members "on the cutting edge of their discipline and makes their teaching more meaningful, engaging and intellectually more stimulating."
"The outward reach of the University—its full integration into the life of the society of which it is a part—will give new viability and strength to the University while contributing more directly to the improvement of life for all people." he said.
L
The outward reach of the University can perhaps be seen most clearly in its service to students.
DYKES SPECIFICALLY mentioned Gov. Robert Dowd's efforts to increase Kansas' participation in international trade as a forward-looking effort.
"The progress of higher education is dependent upon the progress of our state, and the state cannot go forward toward its goals without a robust system of higher education," Dyfs said.
Docking, who returned from a "reverse investment" trip to Japan last week, said in remarks preceeding Dykes that the trip was a "resounding success." He mentioned that several Japanese industries had expressed interest in Kansas.
Docking pointed out that from 1968-1972 more new industries had located and existing industries had expanded in Kansas than in the previous 11 years. He also said that more new industries had been created in the next year than any other time in the history of the state.
PER CAPITA income in Kansas is higher than at any other time, Docking said. He said that during his administration, per capita income increased 3.2 per cent over the national increase.
Lawrence Chamber of Commerce President Jack Brand also received an award at the KACI meeting for the local chapter. This award can be used to promote Lawrence and Kansas.
---
About 500 people attended the reception at which Dykes was presented with a watch and Mrs. Dykes was given diamond earrings. Robert Calperv, chairman of the Associates.
Dykes was honored Sunday before coming to Topeka at a reception given by the members of the Chancellor's Associates, an organization of Knoxville, Tenn., area business, professional and civic leaders formed by Dykes a year ago.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
WEDNESDAY JUNE 13,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
Black Leader Seeks Rejection Of Chief Kelley as FBI Head
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A black leader here says he will to testify against the appointment of Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley of Kansas City as director of the FBI when the Senate Judiciary Committee holds a hearing on the death of Christopher P. Scott, Circuit Court clerk and head of Fire Freedom Inc., a political organization of blacks, said Kelley was responsible for the deaths 6 blacks in the April 1986 riots here after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King
Watkins said, "... If innocent whites instead of innocent blacks had been killed, he would never have gotten the appointment." He said he was opposed not only to Kelley's appointment, but also to a law enforcement officer, he said he was insensitive to the needs of minorities and the poor.
Six Killed in Belfast Bombing
Early-Warning Satellite Fired
BELFAST—Six persons were killed and 33 injured in a bomb explosion in the sleep village of Coleraine, Northern Ireland, in the worst single act of terrorism in a year. Fires swept shops after the bombing by a group of people on the donderry. Violence in this region has been rising recently, but the mainly Protestant population of Coleraine has seen little of it. After the explosion, townspeople were walking around in a state of shock and greatly hampering the rescue operations. Among those injured children riding home from school when the bomb blast took place.
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla.—The Air Force has launched a superspy satellite expected to give split-sec notice of missile firings from Russia. No advance notice of the launch, which was heard 30 miles away, was given. Several minutes after the Titan 3C rocket—the most powerful in the Air Force space inventory—was launched, a single-sentence statement was issued to confirm the launching.
Sadat Hails Libvan Oil Move
CAIRO-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has greeted Libya's nationalization of an American oil company by calling it "a great contribution to our struggle." He said it marked the beginning of a battle against American interests in the whole Arab region," and said he would try to make it unable to protect its interests in the Arab region if it continued "defying the Arabs by supporting Israel without any calculation."
Kansas Gas Shortage Likely?
WASHINGTON—The Office of Emergency Preparedness has tagged Kansas as one of the four states most vulnerable to gasoline shortage, "possibly next month." The Automobile Association-of-America, in its weekly fuel survey, has found that, of 99 stations in Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri, 58 per cent were operating normally, 39 per cent were limiting hours, and 9 per cent were running out of gas for the second day of the holiday distribution program being conducted by division of the Interior Department, oil company executives expressed the hope that government control would be only temporary and urged greater incentives to develop oil supplies.
Leavenworth Police Probed
LEAVENWORTH-An investigation of the Leavenworth police department has been started by KBI agents after members of the predominantly black community in northeast Leavenwort charged several officers with harassment and "police-state tactics." The probe concerns incidents of violence, that followed the arrest of a black. The incidents left three policemen injured. Two of the policemen have already resigned and a third has been placed on indefinite suspension.
38 Injured in Ink Plant Blast
PHILADELPHIA—At least 38 persons were injured when an explosion and fire raged through a South Philadelphia ink plant. Properties Commissioner William Costello said two of the injured were men in possession. He said 37 of the injured were firemen and one was a policeman.
The fire, of undetermined origin, sent billowing fire and thick,
blows into more than 200 feet into the air. The flames could be seen
several miles away.
It's Going to Be a Coverup
It's going to be cloudy today, and though the temperature may be as high as in the 80s, sunshine will give the weather disappointing.
DREARY
The weather has been much worse in other parts of the country. Tornadoes have hit Indiana and Texas, floods have hit Oklahoma, hurricanes have squalls have moved through the middle Mississippi Valley.
There is a possibility of thundershowers in the afternoon and night temperatures will be in the 60s.
Manufacturers Fail to Employ Transient, Part-Time Labor
Industry Little Aid to Students
I will not desecrate the Constitution. I will not violate the laws of this country. I will not commit any crime. I will not harm my own life. I will not harm others. I will not be a victim of violence or cruelty. I will not be a threat to the safety of others. I will not be a burden on others. I will not be a waste of resources. I will not be a waste of energy. I will not be a waste of space. I will not be a waste of time. I will not be a waste of money. I will not be a waste of effort. I will not be a waste of faith. I will not be a waste of hope. I will not be a waste of trust. I will not be a waste of integrity. I will not be a waste of honor. I will not be a waste of loyalty. I will not be a waste of patriotism. I will not be a waste of national pride. I will not be a waste of social justice. I will not be a waste of environmental protection. I will not be a waste of human rights. I will not be a waste of gender equality. I will not be a waste of diversity. I will not be a waste of cultural heritage. I will not be a waste of religious freedom. I will not be a waste of secularism. I will not be a waste of monarchy. I will not be a waste of oligarchy. I will not be a waste of dictatorship. I will not be a waste of totalitarianism. I will not be a waste of authoritarianism. I will not be a waste of fascistism. I will not be a waste of communistism. I will not be a waste of Marxistism. I will not be a waste of Leninistism. I will not be a waste of Trotskyism. I will not be a waste of Bolshevikism. I will not be a waste of Socialistism. I will not be a waste of Nationalism. I will not be a waste of Globalism. I will not be a waste of Multinationalism. I will not be a waste of Intercontinentalism. I will not be a waste of Subcontinentism. I will not be a waste of Subregionism. I will not be a waste of Subterraneanism. I will not be a waste of Subseaism. I will not be a waste of Submarineism. I will not be a waste of Subtropicalism. I will not be a waste of Subzonalism. I will not be a waste of Subzone
Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED
Their Hearts Are in It
Girls' Staters look skyward during flag raising ceremonies Tuesday. Their session of government in action ends Saturday.
Stans Denies Guilt
BY HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
WASHINGTON-Maurice H. Stans disclaimed all knowledge of the Watergate affair and other political espionage which was his job to raise the manager, old age's expense.
He also said he was told that former White House counsel John W. Dean III authorized the raising of money for payment to Watergate defendants and their lawyers and that he gave $75,000 for that purpose, not knowing the reason.
"I was not very familiar at all with the operation of the campaign committee." President Nixon's chief fund-raiser told him that he was "only familiar with their objectives."
Stans said the lawyer, Herbert W. Kalmbach, told him "I am asking for it on high authority," and would take only cash, not money. He said he was not told then on whose authority.
"What went through your mind as to who this person might be?" asked Joseph. Senate leader.
STANS, frustured in efforts to defer his testimony, said he gave $7,000 cash to Nixon's personal lawyer 12 days after the Watergate break-in after being told: "I need all the cash I can get. This is for a farewell." He said he would take care of the patient. You will have to trust me."
Stans said he learned from Kalmbach only six weeks ago that "the request to raise the money came from John Dean." Dean was fired, April 20, as counsel.
STANS said Kalmabach told him, "he asked Dean whether it was a legal trans-act. So he went to the police."
"Being unwilling to proceed on that basis"
(he Kalmbach) went to Mr. Ehrlichman
Nixon on TV?
WASHINGTON (AP)—It is rumored that President Nixon may go on nationwide television tonight to disclose new moves to curb inflation. The White House declined last night to confirm the rumors but reports from New York indicate that the stock market had moved ahead in light trading as a result.
John D. Ehrlichman resigned April 30 as Nixon's chief domestic adviser.
Mr. Ehrlichman told him it was a legal transaction."
KALMBACH has told the General Accounting Office that the $75,000 was part of $210,000 he raised specifically for the Watergate defendants.
Stans said that when Kalmbach approached him, he told the attorney he had no cash, but “I did have two parcels totaling $75,000 that were outside the committee and I gave that to him.”
Stans testified "there may have been some unintended technical violations" of campaign finance laws, but that his lawyer said he had been limited to what he read in the press.
STANS had sought to defer his Senate appearance on the ground that he is under federal indictment in New York in another case. But the committee brushed that plea aside.
Stans gave the committee a lengthy rundown on two controversial contributions totaling $114,000 that found their way into the bank account of Bernard L. Barker, one of the seven defendants convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wirewrapping in the 2007 film *Onleaks*.
In his version, the sequence was legal because the money was contributed prior to April 7, 1972, when a new law requiring disclosure of contributions went into effect,
HE SAID the money could only have gotten into Barker's account "through the bands of G. Lordd Lippold," who was legal counsel for Nixon's arm of Nikon's rejection committees.
Liddy is one of the convicted Watergate conspirators.
See STANS, Back Page
By CATHY O'BRIEN
Kansan Staff Writer
The growth of industry in Lawrence may be of great advantage to the city, but it does not as much for the students at the University.
Darwin Eads, director of student employment, said that when a new business came into town, his office sent them a letter and card stating the need for jobs and the times that certain students would be available to work. The businesses are not enabled, Eads said, in part-time or transient people. They need labor that will stay.
The University is considered a reason for industry settling in Lawrence by many.
But, as Eads said, "We, KU, support Lawrence cultureally as well as financially. The least they could do is provide some jobs at decent wages."
Two major manufacturing concerns that have located in Lawrence within the past three years are Gustin-Bacon, a part of the Certain-teed Products and Kuiu Radio.
Gustin-Bacon, manufacturer of railroad and trucking components, came to Lawrence because of labor supply and access to transportation. The plant itself covers about 10 acres and employs 200 persons.
The reason for employing few students, according to Fairax, is that there are no part-time shifts and the company needs a steady work force. This is necessary because the company and customers who hire it must provide a device that transient labor can not provide.
THE UNIVERSITY is considered a big factor in the labor supply of Lawrence, according to William Salome, vice president of the Chamber of Commerce. But Tom Farfair, operations manager for University, that only four students were employed.
Gustin-Bacon, Fairfax said, does hope in the future to set up part-time shifts. This can not hppen, however, until the company is more settled.
KING RADIO currently employs approximately 180 persons. It hopes to employ a larger number of staff members.
Unlike Gustin-Bacon, King Radio does not "knowingly" employ KU students, according to Bonnie Mills, personnel assistant. They have no summer or part-time people and no part-time shifts except in the technical department.
Because there are two shifts in the technical department, Mills said, there may be a few KU students working there. But as a rule there are none.
See INDUSTRY, Back Page
Federal Syphilis Study Condemned
By JEAN HELLER Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON-A government-appointed committee investigating a controversial federal syphilis experiment reported Tuesday it found the study unjustifiable. The panel proposed sweeping reforms in the policing of research on climate change.
on campus
FRIDAY IS the deadline for undergraduate students to enroll in a course under the credit-no credit grade option. Juniors and seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences may obtain option cards and others. Our other members may obtain cards from their deans.
ALBERT GERKEN, University Carillonneur, will present a carillon recital at 8 tonight at the World War II Memorial Campanile.
A MUSIC teachers' seminar sponsored by the department of music education and music therapy and the National Piano Foundation continues today. The seminar will end Thursday. Robert Pace, head of piano instruction at Columbia University's Music Department, is leading the seminar. It is open to both school and private music teachers in the area.
THE SWIMMING pool will be open for recreational swimming for summer session students, faculty and staff members from 7 to 9 tonight at Robinson Gymnasium. The pool will be open for faculty swim from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
"Society can no longer afford to leave the balancing of individual rights against scientific progress to the scientific community alone," the Tuskegee Syllabus Study Ad Hoc Advisory Panel said in its final 47th edition of a statement of Health, Education and Welfare.
The nine-member, biracial citizens panel spent eight months probing the 40-year Tuskegee Study, a syphilis experiment run by the U.S. Public Health Service in predominantly poor, rural Macon County, Ala.
DURING THE experiment, which was begun in 1932 and ended last year after disclosure of the study's existence, more than 430 black men were denied treatment for their syphilis so doctors could study the disease. At least 28 and possibly more than 200 patients had been a direct result of untreated syphilis. Countless others may have been crippled.
—There is no evidence that a protocol—the plans and justifications for an experiment—ever was written for the Tusknee Study.
Among the committee's findings and recommendations:
—There is no evidence that any type offormed consent was obtained from participants.
THE STUDY was sloppily conducted, too tainty taming what little information the experts had.
—The study was ethically unjustified in 1932, and the long-term study defined in 1936 was scientifically unsound because the blind risks promised only manager results.
—Penicillin therapy should have been available to the participants no later than
research projects and such a policy should be formulated.
-There is no policy for compensation of research subjects harmed in clinical
NO UNIFORM HEW policy for the protection of research subjects exists and no uniform federal policies exist for protection of subjects in government-sponsored research apart from HEW.
—Congress should establish a permanent body with the authority to regulate at least all federally supported research and, ideally, the body's authority should extend to all research whether federally sponsored or not.
Two Women Put Themselves Squarely Behind the President
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—Two Oklahoma City women say they are tired of hearing people knock President Nixon because of the Watergate scandal. In reaction, they have formed The Friends of the President Club.
Emma La Fawer and Alta Waggoner, who are sisters, are inviting the whole country to join her at the festival.
"I'd like for people to get out of their old Nixon Now More than Ever" buttons and turn the knob down.
She suggested that Nixon supporters could help by putting out their last year's campaign ad.
She suggested a good slogan would be "Stick With Dick."
La Faver worked in the local Nixon headquarters during the 1972 presidential campaign.
Waggoner is a registered Democrat, but she voted for Nixon. She said, "You should go along and support your president, whoever be is."
"If we don't stop them over there, we may have to fight them in Oklahoma City some day."
She said she thought it was important that President Nixon receive strong support now because of a bill in Congress that would give the president's power to fight the war in Cambodia. "I
A. S. G.
2
Wednesdav. June 13. 1973
University Daily Kansan
A. H.
Kansan Photo by A.B. SOLSKY
Head Over Heels . . .
Phil Gish, a May graduate of Shawnee Mission North, almost flips at the sight of the cheerleaders kicking their heels in the background. They are participating in the International Cheerleader Foundation Staff Training Week and will travel in groups of four to colleges and high schools to train cheerleaders after their week of instruction on the KU campus.
Senate To Keep Buses Running; Student Fares Increase to 15 Cents
By CATHLEEN SCHEIER
Kansan Staff Writer
Students who try to escape the heat from steaming pavements this summer may do so by riding a campus bus to classes, but they have to be willing to pay a higher fare.
In an agreement made between the Student Senate and Lawrence Bus Company it was decided that one-way fares would be increased to 15 cents for students and 25 cents for non students. Last year the fare was 10 cents for campus runs and 25 cents for trips. It may be necessary for a student to show identification because of this change.
DURING THE MONTH of June and July, buses will operate on a 12%-hour day and will handle only one third of the passengers service during the fall and spring semesters.
Yet, according to Mert Buckley, Wichita junior and student body president, this is a good start.
"I think it ought to be offered in the summer as well as during the school year," he said.
THE REASON for the rate increase is that the senate is now trying to run the bus system.
The Bus Company will account for its gross receipts to the senate. At the end of each month, if the actual receipt of fares is less than the service hour, the Senate will pay the difference.
If the receipts exceed $8 per service hour during any given month they will be used to pay for those services.
The new 15 cents rate will remain in effect next year, but pass cards will also be required.
Phone Volunteers Needed
Headquarters, Inc., drug abuse and personal crisis center, is in need of funding.
"We're looking for lots of different kinds of help," said Evie Unkier, the new director of Headquarters. "We need people who are around for more than the women."
Ric Silber, the former director who is leaving his post to return to school, said that Headquarters lost about 25 volunteers at the end of the spring semester.
Most of the volunteer vacancies are for phone duty. Unekef said that the phone volunteers should be interested in diverse fields such as nursing, librarians, and also should be sensitive to people.
requires a knowledge of Lawrence and a desire to do public relations work.
In addition, bookkeeping positions are available to volunteers. These jobs involve file organization, general office work and "lots of energy", according to Unkefer.
Headquarters, 1632 Kentucky, has evolved from a center primarily serving the University to a service for all of Lawrence. Silber said that although about 80 per cent of students come from students, they are now receiving an equal number from other townpeople.
Headquarters is also looking for volunteers to do community liaison work, which
The center's 24-hour hotline telephone number is 814-2345, and Unkefer and Silber said that they had received an average of calls a week during the regular school year.
Many Factors Found Hazardous
Professional Team Investigates Engineering, Road Safety and Traffic Accident Causes
MANSFIELD, OHIO (AP)—Dr. Vicki Cohen, 26, is an experimental psychologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
She is a member of the accident investigation team of The Highway Safety Foundation, a non-profit organization based here. She is also professor at California State University, Hayward, teaching what
Class lessons by the University of Kansas music faculty will be available for the first time to the junior high campers. Ten students will be allowed in each class.
The music camp will include two bands of 150 players each, an orchestra of 125 musicians and two choirs of 150 persons each.
All of the groups will have daily rehearsals in preparation for the final joint concert Friday, June 22, in the University Theatre.
All instrumental players are required to participate in choral activities as well as band activities.
No Laws Enforce Fire Safety Checks
In fall 1970, Kathryn Kihm, a Chanute sophomore, was burned to death at the Renz Apartmentts. Ken Jorgenson, city building inspector, said at that time that if the complex's dwarfry had been enclosed property, Kihm probably would have escaped.
Three KU School of Law students have been assigned to the Douglas County court system as interns for a training and study period.
KU Students Intern With County Courts
A building must meet the fire standards of the building code at the time of construction, he said. Those standards depend on safety of the building and the number of stories.
JORGENSSON said that no one was sent to check specifically the fire standards of an apartment after it had been built. He said they would be there if a suspect being splayed by him was during construction.
Jorgenson said this week that there were no periodical fire inspections of apartments in Lawrence through his office, although the city has a system to inspect commercial buildings on request.
By ANA GABRIEI Kansan Staff Writer
Having completed their second year at the School of Law, the three will work under a cooperative program of the Law School, the University Association, and the Kansas Supreme Court.
However, when the code changes it does not mean that the buildings constructed under the old code are in the wrong, Jorgenson said. He said that the building codes were revised every year and usually published every three years.
The junior high school division of the 36th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp begins today and will continue through June 22.
3 to Face Charges In Injury, Death Suit
HE SAID that it would be impossible to
handle the fire under the new fire
regulations, of safety, new rules.
Bank Building Renovation To Create New Museum
Her parents filed the suit April 16, 1971,
asking for $237.589.06.
Fire officials said that apartment owners would work to correct fire hazards on their buildings.
Three defendents will be brought to trial on June 20 in Division II of Douglas County District Court for the trial of a personal attacker and six suit involving the death of Kabirbh Khum
"it's not fair to say that 'x' number of buildings do not meet minimum standards, because they did at the time they were built," Jorgensen said.
Kilman, then a 19-year-old KU sophomore from Chanute, died Oct. 13, 1970, 17 days after suffering burns in a fire at the Renz Apartment, 1301 La.
Principal defendants in the suit are Phyllis Renz Mecauhey, Oxon Hill, MD., owner of the apartments; Constant Connor, a former apartment manager at the time of the fire.
Phase one in the campaign to build a local community museum, the acquisition of the historic Watkins Bank Building at 10th and 12th Street, which has been completely complashed. Phase two, the renovation, restoration and the creation of the Elizabeth Watkins Community Museum has just begun.
"We're just winding it up," said John Andrews, campaign director for the fund drive to finance the museum that began in 1985. "It's not something we are the main jobs to be done now, be said."
83rd Year, No. 149
Telephones
Newsroom: 844-6810
Advertising-Circulation: 844-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANASAN
The restoration and renovation will be
Junior High Music Camp Opens Today
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters, Monday through Sunday during the summer periods. Mail subscription fees are $ 6 per semester or $ 10 per period. Mail subscriptions are billed to 60446. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised are offered to all students without regard to their financial status, and no one is necessarily necessary of the University of Kansas or the State University of Missouri.
done in stages. Then the museum will begin its acquisition of various elements that relate to the heritage of Lawrence and the Douglas County.
THE CREATION of Watkins Community Museum will serve many functions in Lawrence. Promoters of the museum say it will be an important building, a relic of the city's historic past. It will also act as a focal point for efforts to increase the city's sense of community pride and preserve various elements in its creature and Douglas County, Andrews said.
**new staff:** Monroe Dodd, editor; Zainid Jalal, associate librarian; Ralph O. Perry, associate librarian; Jimmy Gunn, senior manager; Kai Hsiao, chief财官; Chris Mackenzie, chief research officer; Stephen Goodall, classified manager; keiruch swanson, classified manager; keiruch swanson, classified manager; Jack Mitchum, assistant business manager; Jack Mitchum, assistant business manager
General categories of programs planned for the museum will include exhibits, school services, public education and community services and income producing programs.
Inar Horay, Ottawa, is working on a five week research and observation assignment in the Douglas County county, ending June 22.
Watkins Community Museum is designed to provide exhibits, educational programs, workshops, lectures, films, art shows and other diverse elements that will add a sense of cultural and social awareness to the community. Andrews said.
The museum is named after the late Elizabeth M. Watkins, a benefactress of great importance to Lawrence and 'the University.
The museum will house the Kansas All Sports Hall of Fame and parts of University of Kansas collections relating to the cultural and natural histories of the region that are not presently displayed at campus museums.
Volunteers should call 841-2348 to set up an interview. Phone volunteers are required to go through an 80-hour training program.
she terms "the whole schmear" of beginning psychology.
Pass cards with a student's name and ID number will be available to students for about $15. The card will allow a student to ride the bus as often as he wants.
"As a psychologist, I'm involved in classic definitions of group behavior, memory and so on. But closer to highway engineering than in the field of manufacne engineering," Cohen said.
COHEN SPENDS her time pursuing traffic accidents.
"We weed to study all the things that affect muscle power—diet, nutrients, sleep. Now we're interested in man's control of the automobile as a machine, how he processes information from the environment and uses it for better control."
Cohen thinks man does a tremendous job of driving every day in what she calls a "crime scene."
"At the foundation we have several police radios going all the time. When we hear a
cell involving serious injury accident and property damage, the team goes," she
A traffic engineer, a mechanic and a behavioral scientist are members of the team ready to go to the accident scene, inspecting the scene and patrol, a photographer and a paramedic.
Silber said that about 60 per cent of the funding came from the United Fund, 30 per cent from the Student Senate and 10 per cent from donations.
AT THE FOUNDATION, we deal in real life problems. The thing about deaths in automobile accidents is that they're spaced. If, for example, Galveston, Tex., was wiped out overnight, we'd all be disturbed and angry. But we lose that many people in automobile accidents and no one cares or notices.
"WE'RE LIMITED in what we can do to improve the system. We must bring it up to match man's capabilities to make driving easier. There are several philosophies of improvement," Cohen added, "and that's where the accident investigators come in."
Headquarters plans to redecorate this summer. Anyone with carpentry skills, sewing skills or just the desire to help should contact them.
"We have an automobile accident death almost every 10 minutes. It's horrific," he said.
THEY CHECK for mechanical defects, problems with the accident environment such as poor lighting or bad signs, and they talk to the people involved. The paramedical person can assess injuries and consult a medical computer bank, and look at the way the ambulance service cares for the injured persons.
"We do only 50 to 100 cases a year in detail. It leads us to some general hypotheses about the cause of accidents," she said.
Cohen says we have the same options available in highway safety as in aircraft safety, but have so far failed to take advantage of them. She says poor visibility and bad use of signs makes driving more difficult.
In files containing more than 1,800 accident cases, the foundation checks and counterchecks causes of accidents. They confirm that use of seat belts cuts deaths. They support advanced driving training, they cover all driving skills up to date. They express concern with errors in signals, speed controls or highway markings.
Vison standards also need standardization across the country, Cohen said. Color vision, depth perception and vision are often key factors in accidents.
THEIR RESEARCH indicated that tire tread of one eight inch is the minimum depth, rather than the federal standard of one sixteenth. Accidents caused by unsafe tires often occur, the foundation adds. Changes are being urged.
Theored Holmebek, Arkansas City, and Donnae Steelie, Arlington, Va., will work eight weeks in the county attorney's office doing research and investigation.
The British-born psychologist says that some day highways will be completely automated, with man just an observer. But, she adds, he'll still have to monitor a set of questions and keep his eye on the machinery.
"We talked with people in the traffic courts, those involved in accidents and those who weren't, but all cited for some violation. On that basis and on the basis of vision testing, we found that poor eyesight was often a cause of accidents."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 13, 1973
3
d ID
s for
nt to
have court study
By JOHN R. BENDER
New NDSL Bill Passed
Conflict Between Nixon and Congress Lessen Financial Aid Programs for KU Students
Conflict between the Congress and the President has caused a diminution in financial aid to University of Kansas students for the summer session.
The conflict between the Congress and the President concerned which financial aid programs should be retained. Nixon ordered that the U.S. government grants (BEGO) and College
Work-Study programs.
Congress, however, wanted to retain older Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants and the National Direct Student Loan (NDSL) programs.
Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said the number of NDSL loans was limited this summer because of the possibility that the program would be ended. In seeking to restructure the federally funded student aid programs,
Nixon had indicated that he wanted the NDSL program eliminated.
BELIEVING THAT THE program might be ended, the Student Financial Aid to limit the NDSL grants to those students who must graduate at the end of the summer, Rogers said.
After this decision was made, Congress passed a compromise bill allocating money for the NDSL program and Nixon signed the bill into law.
Rogers said be did not believe the summer aid program had been seriously damaged.
"The summer financial aid program has always been small," Rogers said.
He pointed out that the NDSI program was usually small and that there were few scholarships awarded during the summer. He pointed out that the restricted scholarships for those who
wanted to accelerate their academic program.
ALTHOUGH NIXON SEEMS to want to end the NDSL program, Rogers hopes that the program would continue. He said KU program is the most successful program. Furthermore, the school is beginning to get back money from past loans in payments and interest. An additional $500,000 is available for student loans, which the payments received on past loans.
for aid have not yet been circulated, which will make it difficult for freshmen entering this fall to receive the financial aid they may need, he said.
150 Expected in Pre-School Lab
According to a department of Health, Education and Welfare circular, these applications were supposed to be available for distribution by the end of May. When applications will be available through college, universities, high schools and post offices.
By CAREY GROOM
Bill Hopkins, director of the John T. Stewart Children's Center in Waworth Hall, expects about 150 children to be busy in that building throughout the summer.
Kansan Staff Writer
Human Development and Family Life's child development program, under the guidance of Judy LeLanc, director of the pre-school laboratory, operates six classrooms, each of which is headquartered in an instrumental research classes of behavior modification.
They emphasize research and training to the University, and a service for the parents and children of Lawrence. Each classroom has a specialist in information working on a variety of dimensions.
"WE LOOK AT everything from an experimental approach," LeBlanc said. "At our school, we want to develop the child. We try to quantify, to see if our system is working. We ask questions about how a child learns, and what factors affect their learning. How to help all children develop and learn."
"Simply, we observe, record and graph children."
Nancy Peterson, assistant professor of education, said that in addition to HDFL there are many sciences that are studying the behavior modifications of children. Peterson is in charge of a pre-school program and a Trainable 1 program for mentally retarded children, who are either classified as trainable or educable.
THIS PROGRAM works in cooperation with Lawrence Public Schools. The classrooms are designed specifically to service the children and provide training for KU students in a variety of professional programs including special education, literacy, occupational therapy, audiology, psychology, speech therapy and others.
"Many of our KU students come in and at first are aweed by the needs of the handicapped. But when they are finished many are inspired about what can be accomplished and how much these children need to get a person. We don't turn children away if we want them out of setting that is appropriate to the training needs that the child has."
BRIAN JACOBSON, Lawrence graduate student, has several rooms set up for children to assist them in remedial learning. For children who are in lawrence, children are from Lawrence, although they
Jerry Chaffin, associate professor of education, is working with a first grade group from Pinckney Elementary School in Lawrence. These children were predicted by their kindergarten teachers to be those who would have a hard time in the first grade, but his students try to provide them with experiences that will help them admi
In spite of the confused financial aid situation this summer, Rogers said that there should be no problems this fall. It has not yet been learned how much money KU will have for its NDSL program, Rogers is at $20,000 has been received for the College Work-Study program and $202,000 for Supplemental Education Opportunity Grants.
KU Trip to Abilene Set for Saturday
A bus trip to visit the Eisenhower Center
in brief
Participants may visit the museum, library and boyhood home of former President Dwight Eisenhower. Those in residence can obtain Abdelle Town, which is located nearby.
The approximate time of departure will be 9:30 a.m. and the bus will return at about Transportation fees for the trip to the hotel is $8.25 and a 50 admission charge to the museum.
The trip is the first of five for the regular summer session bus trip program. The KU 2X-passenger air-conditioned bus will be depart from Robinson Gymnasium.
Kansan Photo
A minimum of 25 persons must make
travel at 866-422-1242 hours preceding
the trip.
sqm
Pay membership in the University of Kansas Alumni Association is 20,996, the largest in the Big Eight Conference and larger than the membership at many of the larger schools in the Big Ten and Southwest. They also rank high in the percentage of former students who voluntarily pay dues according to KU's Alumni Association.
train parents to control problems in their own children through behavior managing and techniques. These children are noted in social spans, aggression and hyper-activity.
are not necessarily working through Lawrence agencies. These children are grouped only by age and not by any kind of disability. Behavioral techniques are used
KU Gives Behavioral Training to Lawrence Children
Parents are also in need of training, and Born Green, assistant professor of human development, is a professor of education.
Other activities in Haworth include a "hodge-podge" class taught by Trudy Rowbury, instructor, of human development for various types of disturbed children; an instruction program taught by Gale Severn, teacher; speech and drama; a music therapy course taught by Fred Tims, teaching associate; a perceptual motion class taught by Karen Collins, graduate student, and an occupational therapy class for the physically disabled, taught by Milie Capeland, director of the Center for the Mental Retardation.
in this setting.
"One effective way, one way that needs more emphasis, is training parents to help children succeed."
Free blood will be provided beginning July 1 by the American Red Cross for rescuers of Douglas County, the University of Denver, and staff, students and their immediate families.
Walker has also been serving for the last six years on a half-time basis as director of the Statewide Academic Extension. He and his team are coordinated off-campus continuing education programs among the six institutions under the Kansas Board of Regents.
Howard Walker, dean of contumination education on a half-time basis for the last six years, will return to a full-time position July 1.
"the response from the students was fantastic," said Elizabeth Bennett, administrative assistant of the Douglas School. We collected 1,570 units (pints) of blood."
Walker to Be Full-Time
Alum Members to 20.966
The blood will be offered because of two successful drives conducted by Pershing.
Bennett said that a pint of blood cost about $40. This year the approximate number of units used in Douglas County will be more than 1,130 and will cost about $46,000.
Years Change Roles of Deans But Not Concern for Students
Douglas County To Get Blood Free of Charge
An old contention is that the primary function of the deans is that of disciplinarian to students living in residence halls. He or she said that job had been made with distinction with discipline to do with residence halls. Residence directors, residence assistants and other staff members of Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Corbin, Lewis, Hashinger and/or Hallaries are under her supervision. She also works in sororities and scholarship halls.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said that her sole function was to produce adults, not keep them as adolescents. She tries to keep her students in their place and tells them that their place is wherever they want it to be.
SOME of Taylor's other duties include advising all colleges-within-a-college, the Orientation Committee, the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH), the All-Scholarship Hall Council and the Reading and Study Skills Program.
Kansan Staff Writer
By JAN ERNSTMANN
The functions and roles of the deans of men and women in University life are
The Dean of Women is very active in women's movements, including the Commission on the Status of Women. She is a leader in women's equality, but feels that the expression "Women's Lib" is a putdown.
Taylor has been dean of women since 1956 and when asked what changes have taken place, he responded, "I haven't."
Three University of Kansas students have been awarded cash prizes in the first annual Edward S. Robinson Essay Contest sponsored by the department of philosophy.
The Robinson Essay Contest was initiated this year in memory of Edward Schouten Robinson, a member of the philosophy department from 1946 until his death. He served as a professor in the department from 1963-65 and was widely known as a philosopher and scholar.
Winner of the first contest are Michael Green, Kansas City, Kan., graduate; David Schmidt, Great Bend graduate student; and Jim Swinder, Lawrence graduate student.
Each prize winner received a $30 cash prize as well as an invitation to present his essay to a meeting of philosophy graduate students.
10
Philosophy Essay Winners Get $30
ALDERSON
F. W. H.
The BEOG program, Rogers said, will provide aid to freshmen for the 1973-74 school year. In future years, the program will also be open to upper class students. Application for this aid will be sent directly to an agency under contract with the Office of Student Affairs. The school the applicant plans to attend will be sent the money the student is awarded.
F. M. Hirschfeld
"Everything's changed in the last decade." DONALD Alderson, dean of men, like Dean Taylor, is connected with colleges and staffing. He resides in residence hall staffing and contracts, orientation and scholarship programs. He is also involved with human relations committees, fraternities, minority students and various programs throughout the university. Alderson is supervisor for Elsworth, McCormay, Joseph R. Pearson and Tempain Hills.
TAYLOR
With regard to students living in off-campus housing, Alderson said that aid is limited unless the individual student initiates a request for assistance. Both Todd and Alderson said they were interested in the personal problems of students.
Alderson has been dean of men since 1948. Some of the changes he noted were a larger staff and more office space due to increasing enrollment. He said another large change was more direct involvement by students in decision-making.
Dean Alderson takes a personal interest in drug abuse problems on campus. He said drugs are "not a serious problem" on campus now, but "there are some abuses." He stated that it was "difficult to say yes or to the question of drug abuse on campus.
The roles of the deans of men and women have changed much through the years, but the role of taking a personal interest in their activities will never change.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION PLAN effective this date amended as follows.
Hogers said KU received between 50 and 75 percent of the amounts requested for these two projects.
According to Rogers, the BEEOG program has already run into problems. Applications
IV-C:2. Both men and women are eligible to take as much as one year for a leave of absence without pay for child-rearing purposes or other family responsibilities with no loss of status or benefits. Consistent with Civil Service policy and Board of Regents regulations, each employee shall be guaranteed two such leaves, if requested. Such leave time shall not be included as time of service for purposes of tenure, promotion, or sabbatical leave.
V-C-2: Both men and women shall be eligible for leaves of absence without pay for purposes of child rearing or other family responsibilities under the same policies and conditions as are stated under rule IV-C-2.
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June 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23
University Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain: 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard a17:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices: $2.00—Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 864-3982
4
Wednesdav. June 13, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Isan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Lampposts Get a Rubdown
Layers of paint, polish, rust and dirt come slowly but surely off as two lampests behind the statue of "Uncle
Jimmy Green" in front of the School of Law building are prepared for a new look.
By NANCY COOK
Kansas Stall Weiser
Two University of Kansas laboratories were set to collect data today as part of experiments connected with the space station, Skylab.
KU Scientists to Go to Ottawa
KU investigators for the atmospheric science experiment will gather ground data today in Ottawa on weather and soil conditions. The images will include pictures of rain patterns and cloud cover will be taken from Skylab. Later the ground data and photographs, plus information from weather stations in the test area and from automatic satellite transmitting data, will be uploaded.
William Spencer, project engineer for experiments conducted by the remote sensing laboratory, could not be reached Tuesday for verification of the testing date.
THE ATMOSPHERIC science experiment is concerned with moisture patterns on the earth's surface and weather and soil analysis. Results from the experiment will be applied to agriculture in predicting drought and telling farmers when to irrigate.
Joe Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said Tuesday that he had received a phone call from NASA indicating that the data-collection went to ahead as planned for his experiment. Eagleman is principal investigator. The team was led by KU's atmospheric science laboratory.
Until the astronauts return with the
Intramurals Registration Extended
The deadline date for registration in the Summer Session Intramural Program has been extended to 5 p.m. Friday according to the web, sponsor of the intramural program.
Heeb said that response has been good but that some people might not have known it.
Labs to Collect Skylab Data Today
"We'll extend the date on all sports but tennis," he said. "Tennis is the most popular and is where the emphasis is today." The focus of his singles competition and three teams in the
sports
sports
doubles."
Heeb said handball, paddle ball and horsehorses had not attracted many entries but the other sports, especially slow pitch softball, were attracting many entries.
badminton, paddle ball and miniature (Putt-Putt) Golf.
"We're delighted with the response in our pitch softball, he said. We have 13 pitchers on the roster."
Heeb said there would be no regulations on when a person could practice and that anyone interested in participating should call his office at 864-3372.
Activities that are offered as part of the
Activity Plan include:
softennis, tennis, barbells, golf, handball,
basketball, volleyball.
The deadline for ordering reserved seat tickets to "Kansas Jayhawk Night" at Kansas City Royals Stadium has been extended to Thursday, according to Vince Bilotta, associate director of the alumni association.
of the KU Alumni Association and consists of reserved seats and a post-game party in the Royals Stadium. Bus service to and from the stadium is also available.
Spencer explained that an antenna pattern was a beam of energy sent out by a microwave device on Skylab. He compared the beam of energy to the beam of light sent out from a flashlight. In both cases, a parabolic reflector behind the source of light emitted the energy out in a beam instead of allowing it to be radiated in all directions.
'Jayhawk Night' Tickets Still Available
The trip to the June 18th game is sponsored by the Greater Kansas City Chapter
"THE PRIMARY purpose of the experiment is to record antenna patterns." Spencer said, "but signal characteristics are probably just as important."
The shape of the beam of energy—pulse shape, strength, amplitude and frequency of signals—is what is measured in this experiment. Spencer said.
THE PURPOSE of the remote sensing lab's experiment is to measure an antenna pattern and to test the effectiveness of the antenna system on board Skylab, according to Spencer.
Data for the experiment will be gathered with five different sensors at two different test sites covering an area in Kansas estates and three other areas. The barn and 60 miles each side of that line.
"One photograph (from Skylab) will cover about 88 miles on a side," he explained. "It's a different view than we've ever had before."
Bilotta said that over 1,500 tickets had been sold and that many faculty and staff people would be attending, including Chancellor Raymond Nichols.
The S193, which is to be tested in this experiment, measures the amount of energy that is reflected from the earth back to Skyla. From the amount of energy that is reflected back to the space station, or "backscattered," scientists can tell whether the surface at a specific point is rough or smooth. If the surface is smooth, energy will be backscattered; if it is rough, a let of energy will be backscattered. Spencer said.
EAGLEMAN SAID the information gained from the experiment would be
photographs, results of the experiment won't be known. Eagleman said.
Information of this type would be important in determining wind and wave action on the oceans, he explained. He said unmanned satellites with S193s aboard could be sent up to determine wind and wave action on a nearly continuous basis. Such satellites could cover all the earth's oceans in a matter of hours, he says.
NFL Vows Cooperation In Player Drug Probe
—Two teammates are suspected of dealing in cocaine,
NEW YORK (AP) — The National Football League said Tuesday it was "ready and willing to cooperate" in uncovering drug use and trafficking by any of its players but not by the NFL, that four of its stars were heavily involved and under surveillance by narcotics agents.
The report, published by the New York Times, notes federal state and local taxation on the $300 million.
—Another player is believed to have partly financed a cocaine dealer's operat
"The fourth is suspected of smoking hashish and having connections with large businesses. The four were not named and the league said they had no formation on material contained in the Times story, especially considering that the team is identity sources or deal with specific persons."
"As always, as has been in the case in the past, we are ready and willing to cooperate
baseball standings
Detroit W. 18 L. Pdt. G.B.
New York 20 56 526
Boston 30 26 526
Milwaukee 77 26 519 1/1
Baltimore 26 25 519
Cleveland 26 25 519
Chicago 31 | 22 | 585 | -1 |
Minnesota 30 | 24 | 554 | -1 |
Oakland 31 | 24 | 554 | -1 |
Kansas City 31 | 29 | 517 | -1 |
California 31 | 27 | 517 | -1 |
Texas 18 | 6 | 500 | -1
AMERICAN LEAGUE
INFORMATION ON wind and wave action is now gathered by only 15 ships in prescribed spots, Spencer said. Their effort to forecast storms and weather is limited.
Cleveland 5. Texas 4
Baltimore 6. Chicago City 4
Chicago 6.
Milwaukee 4. Minnesota
4. New York 2
Boston 4. California 5
The S193 is a combination of a scatterometer (an instrument that measures the ability of a surface to scatter energy back to the source), a radiometer (an instrument for measuring the intensity of radiant energy), and an altimeter. Spencer uses the S193 gives much more information than those instruments used separately.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pts. G.B.
Chicago 32 32 401
Montreal 26 25 310
Boston 26 25 310
Pittsburgh 28 42 462
New York 28 42 68
Philadelphia 23 34 414
**West**
San Francisco 39 24 619 619
Los Angeles 39 27 619 619
Mexico City 35 28 619 619
Cincinnati 31 27 534 534
Atlanta 25 31 534 534
San Diego 20 31 534 534
Results
Los Angeles 8, Philadelphia 10
Montreal 7, San Diego 4
Mexico City 9, San Francisco 4
Athens 4, Pittsburgh 6
St Louis 11, Cincinnati 5
Director of the remote sensing experiment in R. K. Moore, David Farman is a member of the NSF Board.
with any law enforcement body or bodies who may have information beyond what we have accumulated in this or any other matter." the league spokesman said.
The 26 teams on the league also refused to comment on the reports. But a recently settled suit against the San Diego Chargers filed by Houston Rider, who was charged with endangered drugs shortened his career, brought out reports of widespread drug abuse.
The game features the Kansas City Royals against the World Champion Oakland Athletics. The game is scheduled to be NBC's Monday night back-up game and will be nationally televised if the primary game is rained out.
And in the last two years, there have been four cases of drugs involving NFL players—Lance Rentzel, Don Parish, Duane Thomas and John Howe. None of those involved were charged with a criminal offense originally was indicted by a grand jury on charge of possessing marijuana for sale.
The NFL has been hesitant to acknowledge reports of spreading drug
Other features of the evening include the Jayhawk mascot throwing out the first ball, the KU flag flying from the stadium and the playing of several famous KU songs.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -- Former heavyweight champion Muhammad All declared Tuesday, "I've learned my part played too much. Half the time I didn't run."
Lesson Learned, Says Boxer Ali
Both experiments, like the entire Skylab mission, have had problems which prevented some earlier data gathering. An additional problem was that weather conditions prevented gathering of
Promoter Dorean of the sponsoring Forum Boxing Club predicted a California record live gate of more than $700,000 and Bob Arum of New York said more than one million people were expected to watch the 12-round fight on closed circuit television.
Tickets to the game are $3 and bus fare from the Kansas Union to the Kansas City stadium and back is $3.75. Those interested should call Vince Blatta at 864-4760 or stop by the Alumni Association office in room 103 of the Kansas Union.
Two University of Kansas professors have been invited to attend a discussion of the Namibian art of Japan, which began with lectures at universities today at the St. Louis Museum of Art.
Ali and Ken Norton, the California who bipped Ali's jaw and outpointed him last March 31, appeared at the Forum, site of his 10 rematch, for a formal signing ceremony.
"This time I'll be serious. I'm already working and in the fight I'll be dancing from here."
Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies, and Richard Spear, associate professor of East Asian studies, are organizing a meeting which is organized by conference conjunction with the first exhibit to be held outside japanese of large, painted folding screens.
Professors Viewing Japanese Screens
stereo components
newmen TBAC disc players
CLASSICAL RECORD
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ODYSSEV
---
"Know what you are and act from your full potential."
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
SIMS
Lecture Students International Meditation Society
data for the atmospheric science experiment on two days.
Wednesday June 13
7:30 p.m. Council Room, Kansas Union
As Taught by
MAHARISHI
MAHESH
YOGI
WORK ON THE remote sensing experiment was delayed one day last week so that the astronauts could have a day of rest after repairing a solar panel.
Even though the space station was not directly overhead when the experiment was conducted last Saturday in Ottawa, Spencer said, "It was a very very satisfactory and
He said it was the first time an antenna pattern had been received from outer space. All the results of that operation have not been evaluated yet.
highly successful operation."
ANOTHER investigation the remote sensing lab is conducting is the compilation of a catalog of backscatter and radometric data from Sylkab from all over the world.
Skvlab Furnace Employed
HOUSTON (AP) - Skylab's astronauts used a superhot electron beam Tuesday to melt metals in a space furnace and test a new coating. The company dollar business of space manufacturing.
Conrad's cremates, Dr. Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Welch, internat-
ronal anesthetist at Salk Center.
Skylab 1 commander Charles Conrad Jr. fired up the furnace to test techniques which experts believe could lead to production of perfect ball bearings, superpure metals and very strong materials that are impossible to make on earth.
--forming a series of medical experiments. The astronauts were in their 19th day of a mission on the moon.
Wetiz and Conrad also operated a battery of earth resources cameras during a photo tour to North Dakota, over the Great Lakes, Chessington Bay, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Carribean.
Data from the photosensors on Tuesday's run will be used to make wildlife studies in North Dakota; survey pollution in the Great Lakes; study Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Baltimore urban land use, and evaluate the ecology of the Chesapeake Bay area.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 13. 1973
5
C
CAFE
OPEN
Empty Buildings Recall History Of Local Town
山头
A feeling of history and the freedom of the open countryside match the rhythmic cycle of an old river road winding through the farm land of Douglas County.
Along the road, just 10 miles outside Lawrence, stand weathered buildings and houses. The town is Lecompton, a ghostly reminder of former prosperity. A few modernized store buildings have still held amid the erics, but some of these also are without tenants.
Lecompont was first settled in 1854 by A. W. Glem, who in one year transformed the town into the largest and most
In 1855, Lecompton became the territorial capital and the county seat of Douglas County. The U.S. government gave
When the capital was moved to Topeka, federal money was cut off, James Lane, Kansas politician, provided the funds necessary to complete the building, which later housed Lane University, and then purchased closed doors (below left) of the once-intended capital building.
Kansan Photos by Ben Weaver
CORNERSTREET CINEMAS
Lecompton Was Site of Capital
Lecompton, stripped of its status as territorial capital, suffered a second blow when the county seat was moved to Lawrence in 1838.
Weeds began to grow in the once busy streets and work on public buildings all but ceased. By 1903, Lane University had closed its doors.
Historically, Lecompont played a rather formidable role in Kansas polities during the pre-Civil War days. The town is known as the "slave capital" of Kansas.
L. H. Rogers (bears), a retired firmar
L. H. Rogers, describes himself as the unofficial
bishopian of Lecompte. He now lives on the old of the lt. Hq. Gov. Stanton administration.
At 77 years of age, Rogers feels so bored that he isn't up on his Kansas history as much as he used to be. It is a shame, he says, that more people don't read up on their local history. Lecompton has more value than some people know, he added.
Most buildings on the Lecompton old River Road aren't in use any more and farm implements have rusted to a halt. Amid the shameless of time and property, a water pump (right) remains operative, as testimony to days that were.
I will never forget the time when he was my first dog. He was a very gentle and intelligent dog. I will always remember him.
DEW PITT
DENVER MIDDLE
COUNTY
BRUNSWICK 1948
35
African Guerrilla Force Proposed For Raids in Two Black Nations
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—Ineproposed establishment of a white South African guerrilla organization to carry out reprisal raids in the neighboring black-led areas of Zimbabwe and Tanzania has met with widespread concern and walks of life in white-dominated South Africa.
Ishomeh, Douglas Lord. Lord, a former British army sergeant major, was commanding officer of the first British merchant force which he formed in London in 1968.
Proposed by the former head of the defense force, Gen. S. A. Mellev, the idea has been to support a of a former Congo mercury and to former Congolese Premier Moise
Commenting on the suggestion, Lord said: "The terrorist situation in southern Africa is dangerous and it will explode if it is not checked in time. We've got to start a campaign to recruit a recruiting campaign for a volunteer group to be sent into Zambia and Tanzania."
'Effortless Process' of Meditation To Be Explained Tonight in Union
An introductory lecture on Trans-
national Meditation and The Science of
Creative Intelligence will be given at 7:30
a.m. in the Room of the Kansas
University. The lecture is
The speaker for the lecture will be Steve Haines, Prairie Village senior. Hannes is a scientist in the science of creative mediation and the science of creative meditation. Studied the meditation techniques in Spain and Italy under the guidance of Maharishi Vidyaguru, developer of transcendental meditation.
Hansen says tonight's lecture will contain "a vision of possibilities one can expect to gain if they practice transcendental meditation."
HANSEN says transcendental meditation is "an effortless process" and "anyone can learn it." He said that meditation requires little physical effort and no special philosophical engagements.
Transcendental meditators are said to experience restfulness, refreshed energy and mental clarity.
THE COURSE will relate meditation to many different fields. Doug Mackey, assistant instructor of English, and Kevin Condon, assistant instructor of Geology, will be the principal instructors. Both Mackey and Condon are teachers of transcendental meditation and the science of creative intelligence.
"Meditation has lost its mysticism in the western world and has become a scientifically verifiable technique," says Hansen.
Hansen will help teach a KU course this fall entitled "Topics and Problems in the Science of Creative Intelligence" (LA&S 48). The course will be worth three hours of lower-division credit in liberal arts and sciences.
There will be regular lectures for advanced meditators this summer at 7:39 p.m. each Thursday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union, according to Hansen.
He says that a preview lecture of next
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"Let's play the game their way—an eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth," he continued. He stressed that he was putting forward his personal views, not a government standpoint, and added that he was amazed at the response to his idea.
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NORTH SIDE SIDEN Country Shop 3-books. No. of the Kaw River Bank Bridge on Bay 50-4k Antiques, used furniture and cabinets, dressers, stoves, bleachers to speed old pot baskets and bowls, 1" built basins & 2" bulbed basins and 1" bulbed basins & wood crates; cheese tubs; 4" coral pier grill set; bronze and wheat earthenware corner grate set; bread boxes; 9" open curved gate with wrought iron handles. Open 9 to 7, days. 843-8150 Herbert Alterbey.
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515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Qe. We Bar-B-Qe in
Michigan. A slab to cover here $450, large rb plate
and a slab to cover here $450, large rb plate
and a slab to cover here $450. Point of beef $325
bar-b-Qe. Sound of beef $325 bar-b-Qe
bar-b-Qe. Sound of beef $325 bar-b-Qe
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6-27
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See WAXMAN CANDLES for the more fragrant
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Want to organize car pool commuting from Topeka
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Student couple would like student to help with house cleaning, four hours per week, time flexible.
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LAWRENCE KANSAS
Great Eastern Ohio
Saltwin
Phone
643-1421
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Wednesday, June 13. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Pondering the Options
Domna Caldwell, incoming freshman from Shawnee Mission, ponders her choices in the dean's meeting during
orientation in Joseph R. Pearson Hall Tuesday. The air conditioner was broken and students were sweltering.
Dreiling-Dole Tiff Renewed
TOPEKA (AP)-Norbert Dreiling, Kansas Democratic Party chairman, renewed Tuesday a request that former Republican National Chairman Sen. Robert Dole answer questions about the Republican National Committee's employment of James W. McCord, convicted Watergate conspirator.
In Washington, Dole, asked about the Dreiling statements, said Tuesday night, "I'm not going to make any answer to any one by the Kansas Democratic chairman."
such expenditures." Drilling said in a prepared statement releases through its website that the company is "operating."
"It is most interesting to note that the McCord salary for May and June was presided over by committee on April 6, May before both members had come into effect requiring public disclosure of
"It is of additional significance that no one near the national GOP committee has been able to explain why McCord was paid in advance for those two months when he did not apparently had been to pay him retrospectively for his services as a security consultant."
Dreiling said McCord had been paid a $666-month salary as an employee of the Republican National Committee while Dole was chairman.
Drilling said that Dole, who had been quoted extensively in the press as desiring a full paycheck, "was very happy."
"I would suggest he begin this policy with his own office," Dreiling said.
Mayor Backtracks on Firings; Kansas Town Has Police Again
CONWAY SPRINGS, Kan. (AP) - Robert Enlow, Conway Springs police chief, was regrouping his eight-person police force after a one-week unplanned vacation.
At a June 5 city council meeting, Mayor Leo Ternes announced unexpectedly that he intended to dismiss Enloe; another full-time officer, the department's dispatcher and five volunteer officers. But Ternes recanted that he had been advised by an assistant attorney general that a mayor did not have the power of arbitrary dismissal.
Ternes, elected mayor last month, said he had received complaints about the department. An arm he maintained, the force of his police unit, was involved in his Action June 5 was preceded by a request
for an opinion from the attorney general's office, regarding his power over the airport
Members of the council said they believed Terres' action was based on personality rather than circumstance.
Curt Schneider, assistant attorney general, advised Ternes, the council and members of the police department Monday night that the opinion of Atty, Gen. Vern Miles, not weighed dismissal preagregates, but only the power of appointment, but
Ternes, who could not be reached Tuesday, issued this statement:
"I did misinterpret the attorney general's opinion. So, the former police officers are on duty and are dismissed and are back on duty. I am sorry for you. You are people who were involved in this turmoil."
The silver-haired Stans, Nixon's secretary of commerce until he took over the finance side of the campaign, is under indictment for conspiracy, obstruction of justice and perjury in connection with a campaign contribution by Robert L. Vance.
Stans Denies Guilt
From Page One
His lawyer, Robert W. Barker, asked the committee not to question Stans until that case is closed up, saying his appearance did not harm him a chance of an impartial jury."1
BUT CHAIRMAN Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., speaking for an unanimous committee, the Senate investigation couldn't wait the Senate investigation has had a habit of treading on leaked feet.
L. Porter, who said he had been told that Mitchell, while still attorney general, was shown filmed copies of private correspondence from the campaign of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, then leading aspirant Democratic presidential nomination.
Preceding Stans as a witness was Herbert
Stans was the 17th witness in the 9th day of the hearings that began May 17, and the highest ranking member of the Nixon campaign organization to testify to date.
Industry Little Aid . . .
THE APPEARANCE of two other key witnesses was made possible Tuesday through a ruling by U.S. District Court J. Serafa J. Serafa. He granted testimonial immunity to quisted House counsel John W. Dean III and to Magruder.
From Page One
A lowering of the unemployment rate and an increase in money movement in Lawrence are cited by Salome as two of the effects of industry on Lawrence.
IF KING radio hired a lot of students, Milsa said, they would be running the risk of being let down when the school year began because we see a shutdown of some of their production.
Salome said that today the unemployment rate was close to two and one-half per cent, and that this rate was about as low as it could go. People will always be between jobs so that an unemployment rate of zero is impossible, he said.
ACCORDING TO SALOME, the labor supply is largely composed of KU students and their spouses. While there were no figures available through Gustin-Bacon and King Radio of the spouses employed, the majority of KU students employed was very small.
Lawrence, situated near the geographical center of the United States, is continually expanding its industrial assets. Reasons are access to transportation, city location and access to the transportation center of Kansas City.
In order to encourage the development of industry, the Chamber of Commerce organized the Lawrence Industrial Corporation to develop and purchase purchases and develops industrial sites.
In addition to the Lawrence Industrial Corporation there are Industrial Revenue Bonds. Bill Gaut, head of the Lawrence Industrial Corporation, said that, according to Kansas law, to obtain a bond the company must have fulfilled six requirements.
TRANSPORTATION is readily available by way of the highway systems, especially the Kansas Turnipke, sixteen truck lines, the Union Pacific, Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroads and AMTRACK. Kansas City International Airport, within 90 miles of the city, is a definite advantage to any industry that might locate in Lawrence.
IF THE manufacturer qualifies, he does not have to pay school taxes and is given lower interest rates. However, state and county taxes must be paid and a service agreement signed with the city for such services as fire protection.
It must provide jobs, be a manufacturing concern, be non-real, financially sound, non-competing with local concerns in the environment and it must not upset the environment.
Gaut said that because of the legal costs necessary to obtain the bond it was not worth the effort to companies to obtain a bond worth less than $500,000.
--professional secrets and techniques for play. One of these faces could be a KU basketball star tomorrow.
Gustin-Bacon is the latest to make use of the Industrial Revenue Bonds.
In Lawrence manufacturing concerns use all utilities and services, therefore adding more cost.
Lawrence area. According to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, about one-third of the population derives its income directly from processing and processing industries located here.
A survey conducted a few years ago by the United States Chamber of Commerce of nine countries shows that for every 100 new home additions, 3 more new other new jobs were added, $39 more people added, 79 more autoes were registered, 10 more households were created, 3 more stores opened, retail sales increased $331,000, and personal income increased $710,000.
JIM KELLY
Kansan Photo by A B. SOLSKY
Getting Their Teeth in Early
Youngsters from all over the country collect at the Ted Owens Basketball training camp and are let in on
Firemen Present Parity Petition
By CONNIE PARISH
Kansan Staff Writer
Pair parly for Lawrence firemen was main brought to the attentio of the City Chambers.
John McArdle, a representative of Fire Fighters' Local Union 1598, presented a petition that had been distributed to the women's stand on gay parity, with the policy
The Commission voted to give the petition to Clerk for determination of its validity.
IN PRESENTING the petition, McArdle said that the city had justified disparity between residents with people as do the police, the fire fighters work as a unit under a supervisor, not as individuals as do the police, and the fire brigade has a great deal of time on standby while on duty.
He argued that fire fighting was also dangerous and important. He said the team had to be prepared and that some apparently didn't want them. McCardie said he was referring to Mayor Nancy Hambleton's previous statement in a letter from the staff, who recommended was okay with her.
Hambleton responded that the Commission had to depend on its professional staff for recommendations as they had done on the parity issue.
MEARLD SAID that perhaps the decision on pay parity should be brought to the voters. City Attorney Milton Allen said it had to be legally determined whether this would be an item for referendum, as such items were usually administrative decisions.
In an earlier action the commissioners approved a slightly revised site plan for the Capital Federal Savings and Loan, which is located in the corner of Harvard Road and Iowa Street.
Hambleton said while it did not reflect on the motion before the commission, she had seen the plans, which call for a blue tile window and a matching curtain. The materials were not compatible in a
restricted commercial area adjacent to a residential area.
COMMISSIONER Barkley Clark said that there seemed to have been limited commercial planning in an area that was supposed to be restricted commercial.
In another agenda item, the Commission voted to act on a petition requesting the installation of sidewalks in the Prairie district. The commission's director of public works, stated that 38 of the 75 resident owners had signed the petition, which he determined was sufficient. The Commission authorized the committee to prepare a resolution ordering the sidewalks.
Action on a proposal to amend the Lawrence City Code to permit junkyards, salvage or auto wrecking yards in general industrial districts of medium intensity was
deferred for a week. The proposed amendment would permit the additions on two conditions.
FIRST, ALL exterior storage and processing areas within 100 feet of major thoroughfares, residential, commercial or restricted industrial districts would have to be removed from the wood fence at least 6 feet high. Second, there would be no burning of junked, salvaged, or discard materials and the area would be attacked to exceed 8 feet above ground level.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission had recommended denial of the amendment. Local environmentalists had also expressed a desire that salvage yards not be permitted in general industrial districts.
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Plant Care Hints
843-6380
Touch of Living Green Aids Apartment Life
By JIM HUFNAGEL Associated Press Writer
Even if your apartment garden measures no more than six inches in diameter and consists of only one plant, you are still in touch with Mother Earth. Here are some ideas to help you add that touch of living green to your apartment.
Many plants do very well under apartment conditions, but because flowering kinds need strong light they will not do as well. They don't need water and food. All but the food are free,
WATER: A PLANT in a small pot may need watering two or three times a week; a large one only once. Plants in glazed pots need watering less often than those in clay, as they are more susceptible to drying before rewatering. If you plan to be gone for a week or more, water the plant.
and that might cost you as much as 39 cents
for a two-year supply.
Light: Set your plants where they get good, bright for as much of the day as possible, remembering to open the draperies every morning.
set it out of the bright light, and drop a plastic bag over it. It should be happy for up to two weeks. For a larger plant, just wrap a plastic pad's drop cloth over and around it.
Food: Plants should be fed once a month during the bright days from April through November. Use a soluble or liquid food, and water it in well. Weiple the leaves with a damp cloth every month or so to improve the plant's appearance and general health.
Pests: A systemic insecticide added to the soil will rid your plant of most bugs.
Affirmative Action Board Named
The appointment of 9 persons to the permanent Affirmative Action Board was announced by Chancellor Raymond Nichols.
The board is designed to provide advice on all policy matters concerning affirmative action. It will review the progress under the Affirmative Action Plan, advise persons and committees on the elimination of discrimination and advise the Chancellor on the appointment of affirmative action personnel.
Others appointed for one year to the board are Dwayne Evans, Lawrence graduate student, and Reynold Iwamoto, professor of chemistry.
Edith Black, administrative assistant to the dean of the School of Social Welfare, will be the chairperson and will serve a one-year term.
Artificial light: You might decide to go all
APPOINTED TO two-year terms are
Beverley Anderson, assistant professor of business; Phyllis Jones, assistant to the dean of women; and Harold Stagg, microbiology.
Those serving three-year terms will be H.
Leslie Adams, assistant professor of music
education; Francine Garcia, registrar's
office; and LZ Horne, Topeka junior.
Nichols said that the ad hoc Affirmative Action Board, which served for more than a year and drew up the affirmative Action ordinance, was directed to the University of Kansas, was now discharged.
He paid high tribute to the members of that board and its chairperson, Juliet Shinnock.
NOW TO THE choice of plants. If you're forgetful, adopt a plant from the sasaiveria tribe, which seems to thrive on moist soil and requires water it. Flowerlike bracts of bromeliads have a colorful topknot which lasts for months. They are easy to grow if you keep the little "vases" formed by the bases of the leaves, water and irrigate the soil every two weeks.
"FEW PERSONS have worked longer or harder on so difficult a problem," Nichols said. "The group had to build the structure of our work and the guidelines which real guidelines are scarce. The
University is deeply indebted to Professor Shaffer and her colleagues for their leadership in the construction of a new official policy."
out and set up a growing area under lights.
Corrected fluorescent tubes provide an
optimal environment.
Black is the only member of the ad hoc group who was named to the new board.
Or try dracena, which provide year-round color from leaves that are striped, mottled or splotted with yellow, charteurse or cherry red leaves. The plants get by with only minimal attention.
Some other larger plants that grow quite well with a little attention are fathesbera, deffenbachia, philodendron, figs, palms, begonia, Norfolk Island pine, podcarpus, rubber plant and schefflera. Or if your space is more limited, try such small plants as aphelandra, cactus, fern, ivy, peperomia, succulents and syngonium.
Second Summer Band Concert Set for Tonight in S. Park
The second in a series of six summer band concerts will be at 8 tonight in the South Park bandstand.
The featured soloist will be M. David Bushue, assistant professor of wind and percussion at KU. Bushue will play "Concerto for Horn" by Ralph Hermann
Included in the concert will be selections
A community band organized by the American Federation of Musician Local No. 512 will perform. William Kelly is the conductor.
from the opera "William Tell," the musical "The Merry Wives of Windsor" and the movie "Mary Poppins." Also on the program are "Wonderland" and "The World is Waiting for the Sunrise."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THURSDAY JUNE 14,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS
Now, It's Phase 4 Nixon Reveals New Recipe for Eggs and Meat on Every American Table
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON—President Nixon ordered an immediate freeze Wednesday night on all retail prices, including those of the supermarket and grocery stores, for a maximum period of 60 days.
The move, which does not affect wagues,
was announced by Nixon in a nationwide
storm of protests.
The price lil forbids charges higher than the maximum in effect during the period jilu.
It covers everything from auto to toothpicks but does not include raw agricultural products.
Nixon said the freeze period "will be used to develop and put into place a new and more effective system of controls which . . . will involve tighter standards and more mandatory compliance procedures than under Phase 3."
In Congress, Republicans said the economic controls are "on target." But Democratic reaction ranged from doubtful to damaging.
United Auto Workers president Leonard Woodcock said a food-price freeze "will only create artificial shortages and black market prices."
Nixon's action on food was stronger than controls during the 90-day wage-price
freeze of 1971, when only processed foods were covered.
The freeze was followed by a less stringent wage-price control program called *TPC-C*.
The Phase 3 program, containing largely voluntary compliance, went into effect in
Nixon met frequently during the past week with his economic advisers, many of whom reportedly recommended against a freeze.
On Thursday, the administration received the bad news that wholesale prices, which presage consumer price changes, had gone up 2.1 per cent during May.
In his 15-minute speech Wednesday night, Nikon declared that "prices are going up at a rate of 20% per month."
WAGES—There will be no freeze on wage increases, as long as wage settlements remain, in the President's words, "responsible and noninflationary."
PRICES - A freeze will be imposed on all retail prices for at most 60 days. No retailer may charge more than the maximum prices in effect June 1-8. Only raw agricultural prices are excluded; this will allow a farmer to sell his produce at the highest price he can get. Present controls on interest and dividends are not affected. Rents free from controls in January will remain free.
Here's the White House Plan
He called on Congress, "on an urgent basis," to grant him new and flexible authority to impose export controls, particularly on food products whose prices are uncontrolled by foreign demand in this year of poor growing conditions in much of the world.
EXPORTS—Congress will be asked to grant new authority to the President to impose export controls, especially on food and equipment purchased up because of foreign demands. The House will ask for congressional authority to selectively reduce tariffs for such items as meat, plywood and zinc, and to sell more commodities in governmental stockpiles.
"We will not let foreign sales price meat and eggs off the American table," Nixon declared. "In allocating the products of America's farms between markets abroad."
AUDIT$-$There will be financial audits of companies that have raised prices more than 1.3 per cent above January climings. If the costs were rising, the prices will be rolled back.
Nixon asserted that his tougher anti-immigration blueprint "will deal with the rise in immigration."
news capsules the associated press
prosperity or your job." He ordered a thorough audit of the books of companies that have raised prices more than 1.5 per cent above January ceilings. If the boosts were not justified by rising costs, he promised, "the prices will be rolled back."
The government had ordered no rollbacks since Phase 3 went into effect in January.
and those in the United States, we must put the American consumer first."
since Phase 3 went into effect in January. Nikon's actions did not affect present controls on wages, interest and dividends. In January will remain free of restraint.
NEW YORK-K new federal indictment was announced Wednesday against financier Robert L. Vesco, who already has been charged in connection with a $250,000 cash contribution to the Nixon re-election campaign.
U.S. Returns Second Indictment Against Financier Robert Vesco
The new accession charged Vesco with defrauding International Controls Corp., which is formerly formed, of $250,000 to repay a loan held by Vesco and the former owner.
In the week leading up to the President's speech Nixon had been under increasing pressure to tighten the economic controls. He was also called for freeze on everything but wares.
The original indictment charged Vesco with conspiracy to obstruct injustice
Nixon said he decided against a wage breeze because "wage settlements reached $20 billion."
The charges said Vesco donated the money to the Nixon campaign in hopes of getting favorable treatment during an investigation of his ties to Russian oligarchs.
Bonn Asks Membership in U.N.
BONN, W. GERMANY—Chancellor William Brandt's government announced Wednesday that it would apply within the next two days for full membership in the United Nations. The announcement was made by government spokesman Armin Gruenweild a day after East Germany submitted its official membership application to U.S. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim.
Gruewenwald also indicated that Bom planned to proceed with a June 20 exchange of notes, in which the two Germans are to implement their historic normalization treaty, despite a renewed bid by Brandt's planned opposition to delay the exchange through legal maneuvering.
Brando Floors Photographer
NEW YORK- Free-lance photographer Ron Bailaelle wanted a couple more pictures of Marlon Brando. What he got instead was a hard right hook that broke his lower jaw, Galella, who was involved in a suit brought by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis on his persistent pursuit of himself and her and her family, said he followed Brandon and Dick Cavett which they went to Chinatown after taping ABC TV's "Dick Cavett Show."
He took about eight pictures of Cavett and Brando, both wearing dark glasses, as they walked two blocks toward a restaurant.
See PRESIDENT, Back Page
"the bang! Out of the blue! One punch," recalled Galella. "I didn't even see it come. It was very unfair for him to give no warning."
LONDON—Tennis players and officials were still deadlocked Wednesday in a dispute that could lead to a mass boycott of the Wimbledon tournament by the world's top stars. Jack Kramer, executive director of the Association of Tennis Professionals, reported that the New York City tournament displeased over Niki Pelic, the Yugoslav who is under suspension because he refused to play for his country in the Davis Cup.
The I said, "I'd like to have a couple with your glasses off." Brando
said, "I'd have enough pictures." I said, "That's the type of
variety I'd like."
After the incident, Galilea drove to Bellovele hospital where doctors nine stitches to close a cut in his lower lip and braced the fracture.
Wimbledon Threatened by Tiff
LONDON—Princess Anne has picked Nov. 14 as the day she'll be getting to the church on time to marry L. Mark Phillips, now stationed with the Queen's Dragoon Guards in West Germany. The wedding in Westminster Abbey will coincide with the 25th birthday of her mother, Catherine of York, and it will take place six days before the 28th anniversary of the Westminster wedding of her mother, Queen Elizabeth II, and Prince Philip.
Date Set for Royal Wedding
Mild, pleasant weather is forecast for Lawrence until late this afternoon, when clouds are expected to get in the way of what might have been a sunshine half day. Toward evening the situation is expected to be even less bright; scattered rain and fog will continue. They may continue during the night. Day time temperatures should be in the mid 60s; low tonight should be in the mid 60s.
Getting Worse Toward Evening
CLOUDY
By MICHAEL GOLDSMITH
Repaired Vietnam Truce Signed, But U.S. Bombing Not Prohibited
Chief U.S. negotiator Henry Kissinger said nothing in the new pact would prevent American bombing in Cambodia. In Saigon, Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam of South Korea issued a statement that would continue until Handel's troops were withdrawn from that neighboring country.
PARIS—The four parties involved signed a new Vietnam cease-fire accord Wednesday with the goal of strengthening the nuclear deterrent, the renewed truce goes into effect Friday.
Associated Press Writer
Lam told a news conference today that success of the renewed cease-fire would depend upon "the goodwill of the Communist side."
A Viet Cong statement issued in Saigon called Wednesday's pact "a victory for all those who want the Paris agreement on human rights be respected and seriously implemented."
Kissinger, who represented the United States at the double signing ceremonies here, told newsmen before boarding a plane for Washington: "We have renewed hope that peace in Indochina can be consolidated with our allies. If we find the tranquility which is their due."
North Vietnam was represented by Politburo member Le Duc Tho, who negotiated the new agreement with North Korea for four weeks. Representatives of the Saigon
government and the Viet Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Government also sigmed.
The agreement, which Kissinger termed an "amplification and consolidation" of the
Jan. 27 agreement among the same parties, re-emphasize key parts of the earlier
throughout South Vietnam at noon Friday
Vietnamese time—11 p.m. Thursday,
Lawrence time—and for strict im-
pose
"JULIUS CAESAR" opens at 8 p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre in Minneapolis, a nonprofit Romantic Composers", a lecture by Edward Williams, associate professor of music history, will be given at 3 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
See VIETNAM TRUCE, Back Page
It calls for the new cease-fire to begin
THE M.T. OREAD Bicycle Club will sponsor a short tour Sunday. Cyclists will depart at 11 a.m. from the band shell at South Park. The tour is open to all cyclists.
A TRUMPET RECITAL by David Neely,
St. Louis, Mo., senior will be presented at
8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall
of Murphy Hall.
MONTANA RIDING COMPANY
The Eisenhower Center in Abilene is the attraction of destination of a KU-sponsored bus trip that will leave Lawrence at 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Reservations must be made by 9:30 a.m. Friday with Larry Heeb, whose telephone number is 843-3372.
on campus
A HOLLYWOOD SATIRE double feature is the SUA comedy classic offering at 7 o'clock tonight in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. James Cagney stars in the first movie, "Boy Meets Girl," and Humphrey Bogart stars in the second, "Stand in Single," which will begin at 8:30. Friday night's 7 o'clock movie will be signed Bergman "Hour of the Wolf," and Susanna Karp "Winter Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night,' with English dubbed in. Both begin at 7 o'clock in Woodruff.
Kansan Photo by CARLOS LISSON
And Off He Goes
A horse and its rider are soon parted at rodees such as this one held on the outskirts of Lawrence Wednesday. An uneasy rider blites the dust and his steed decides to go on alone.
Health Food
Processed Foods Retain Vitamins, Proteins; Supermarket Food as Good as Any, Says Prof
By JOHN A KING
Kansan Staff Writer
Personal preference should be the only factor involved when a person decides whether to buy food from a grocery store or a health food store, Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, said Wednesday.
Processing now retains a great amount of
the vitamins and protein in most foods, Cross said. Food processing is important in the transportation of certain foods across the country and to foreign countries.
WITHOUT processing, many people would never get certain types of food that are not able to grow in certain areas, she said.
Cross said it was a matter of taste
whether a person decided to buy fresh, frozen, or canned foods.
The methods used to speed up meat production through cattle growth stimulates did not cause a loss in protein in the meat, and have caused more fat in the meat, she said.
CROSS SAID that the food purchased in
PROCESSED FOODS, Back Page
Supermarket Food of Poor Quality, Dangerous Asserts Lawrence Health Food Store Owner
By LAUREL DEFOE
Anna Burger, owner of the Downtown Health Food Store, said Wednesday that foods in supermarkets were nutritionally bad and have decreased in 'beir quality.
Kansan Staff Writer
Burger said that today's methods of growing and processing food were responsible for the lack of nutritional value in supermarket food.
"Potato chips are mostly fat and salt and not much else," she said.
SUCH FOODS as sugar-coated cereals and corn chips areimmunally, according to
"Food is processed for appearance, preservation, convenience and gimnicks." Burger said. "It has to look good or we won't eat it; it has to be able to sit on the
shelf without spoiling and be easy to fix because today's consumer hasn't the time to spend fixing a meal or canning their own vegetables."
Fresh produce in supermarkets may not be as fresh as it seems. Often, stores hold fruits and vegetables in their back storage to keep them fresher before they're available to the consumer.
SHE DOES post a list for the customers that gives names and addresses where customers may buy fresh produce. Burger said this way not only unaided freshness, but also was less expensive to the consumer.
"The customer doesn't have to pay the cost of packaging, transportation, handling, and storage with the
See HEALTH FOOD, Back Page
2
Thursday, June 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Security Deposit Gripes Prompt Three Lawsuits
By CAROLGWINN And DARRYL SERPAN
And DARRYL SERPAN
MANAGER'S OFFICE RIDGLEA
Three separate suits against the Ridgle Apartments, now Front-Ridgle Apartments, were filed last March by the Kansas Attorney General's office, the Douglas County Attorney's office, and Lawrence where the apartments are at 524 Front Road.
Kansas Photo by A.B. SOLSKY
Complaints Center on Security, Damage Deposits
The Douglas County Attorney's office has filed a criminal action suit for unlawful deprivation of property against Integra and the former owner of the apartments.
The suits resulted from complaints by students last spring that they were not receiving damage and security deposits after they vacated their apartments.
MIKE MALONE, assistant county attorney handling the Ridgeline case, said that he would try to postpone the hearing set for June 18 until fall with a 60-day continuance because some of his witnesses and his client were not in Lawrence for the summer.
A spokesman at Vision Investments, formerly part of Intone Corporation, said in a phone interview that the corporation had announced that its investments were new owned by another company.
A Lawrence legal source said that he had doubts that the Intron Company ever
A spokesman at Frontier-Ridgle said that the new owner was Talley Commercial Properties in Wichita. However, a Wichita telephone operator said that there was no connection.
Ralph Lavat, manager of Frontier-
Ridgeline, refused to comment on the bill.
RUSS READ, attorney for Lawrence Legal Aid, said that there was a good chance students would get their money back
Read said it was possible that his civil suit would be dropped if the Ridgley Apartments were destroyed.
had not yet received their damage deposits call Ridgale to get the name of the prospective buyer, and send the buyer their names, who had received their deposit of the deposit they had paid.
Raoul Berman, board member of the Consumer Protection Association (CPA) and former co-manager of the University of Kansas CPA, estimated that more than 100 people and $7,500 might now be involved in the delayed payments.
He said that he had received 27 written complaints about unreturred security procedures.
BERMAN SAID that a possible suit against Ridgeline by the Attorney General's office would deal with the referral system through which former tenants received
their deposits and an additional "finder's"
referred a new tenant to the
apartments.
The CPA has reason to believe the referral system is a direct violation of the antitrust law. It is against Berman. This act prohibits the use of any chain referral agreement in which a buyer is induced to buy merchandise that costs more than the price of the item, provided that the taver owner receives a cap on purchases.
Berman suggested that tenants talk with their managers before leaving their apartments if the lease read that the deposit would be returned with in a reasonable amount of time; to make sure that the deposit money would be received within six weeks.
Postal Council Discusses Change
The Lawrence Postal Customer Council met Wednesday, for the first time since 1969, in the Council Room of the Kansas State University to discuss future changes in the local postal service.
During the first part of the meeting, customer service representatives from Kansas City, Mo. and post office officials met on Tuesday for lectures on changes in the postal service.
Jack Harris, Lawrence postmaster, said the purpose of the meeting was to obtain an exchange of ideas between the postal department and Lawrence industries and organizations that either send or receive large volumes of mail.
THE PERSONS who lectured were Paul
"Much of the postal authority that originated in Washington, D.C. will now be originating in the districts," said Neidhardt.
Neidhardt, customer service representative; John Hurst, customer service representative; Don Wetzel, Lawrence assistant postmaster; Edward Eiffert, Lawrence buk manager; Ciancian Chancelor president; President Jack Harris, Lawrence postmaster.
"It was on the district level that express mail between the cities and the get-your-mail-in-early campaign first developed. We started by sending a program for cities with large airports."
HARRIS SAID the get-your-mail-in-early campaign had reduced dramatically the
Weekend Book Sale at Library To Market 8,000 Donated Items
A variety of prices for 8,000 books and records on sale Friday and Saturday at the Lawrence Public Library, Seventh and Vermont, create a book buyer's paradise. The sale is the first annual Carnegie Library sale at the Lawrence Library (CALL) book fair.
The works, which CLL members collected during the spring, will be sold on the south and east portions of the library from 4 to 9 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 a.m. Saturday.
Lawrence Mayor Nancy Hambleton will discuss increasing women's involvement in city government here at a joint meeting of two women's groups tonight.
Hambleton will draw upon her own experience in the discussion of political structures, organizations and channels of membership on local boards and commissions.
Bonita Dillard, book fair chairman, said that a wide selection of sale materials, including many classroom books at low cost, be maintained by KU students, would be available.
Interested parties are invited to attend the discussion, which will be at 7:30 in the library of the Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont.
The organizations meeting together are the Lawrence chapters of the National Organization for Women and of the Kansas Women's Political Caucus.
NOW, Caucus Meet Tonight With Mayor
Harris said that changes were coming about rapidly in the postal service, causing much concern.
Last spring at Kansas City International Airport a new mail facility began operation. It handles large bulk mail for the Kansas City district.
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and summer semesters and Monday through Thursday during the spring semester. Pervious mail subscription rates are $a & samster or $10 a month. Mail subscription fees are $64,664. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisements are offered at no students without regard to the student's academic record, nor necessarily those he or she attends the University of Kansas or the State University.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
83rd No. 150
ELECTIONS WERE held.
$1 billion will be spent on 21 large bulk facilities and 15 smaller ones, said Harris. Chicago will be the first bulk mail center. Philadelphia will be the first bulk center will probably be completed in 1975.
Telephones
Newsroom: 864-4810
Advertising-Circulation: 864-4358
new staff! Morton Dodell, editor Zaid Alimani associate editor David Karp, chair Chris Haigh, chief HR officer Michael Hayman, general manager Michael J. Haugh, chief IT officer Mark Garrison, senior executive Goodwill, classified manager, Jon Karch, executive director Martin Turler, assistant business manager Jack Mickler, marketing executive Tommy Lindsay.
The used books include book on hobbies, cooking, travel, biographies, classics, poetry, history, geography, languages and religion and some best sellers in mint
The second half of the meeting was an open discussion between the persons who lectured and about 50 persons representing institutions in Lawrence, both on and off campus.
proportions of mail placed in the mailboxes between the hours of four and five p.m.
Girls Elect State Leaders
Life and National Geographic magazine
sets are available and a 1962 set of En-
sign cards is also available.
the new officers, who will take office immediately, are: John Conard, director of university relations, president; Charles Willis, director of the Kansas Color Press, vice-president; and Susan Schott, secretary of the Kansas Color Press. secretary.
The Girls' states, who have been meeting this week on the KU campus, will hear Gov. Warren Buckley speak.
Marguerite Kitchen, of Kansas City, Kan., was elected governor of Kansas Girls' State on Wednesday. Am Carpenter of Wichita was elected lieutenant governor
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18Y JAN ERNSTMANN
And KRISTA POSTAI
Kansas Staff Writers
Profs' Study Says, 'Yes
Testifying June 8, in Washington, D.C., on the social and economic effects of military base closings before the House Pensions and Benefits Subcommittee. Darwin Duceau, professor of economics at KU, said that the value of losses in some communities.
When Military Bases Shut Doors, Can Local Communities Survive?
Ducoff, who participated in a study begin in 1964 following the announcement of the closure of 80 military bases in the United States, told the House committee that the state of the economy was the main factor in the decline of a community making an adjustment.
The study, sponsored by the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, was a cooperative project of Diaffo, Ronald Olsen, professor of economics, and Marston McCluggage and Charles Warrine, professors of sociology.
Warriner said that he and McCughage began their investigation in 1966, with a study of the closing of Schilling Air Force Base in Salina.
Schilling was closed in 1964 because the Department of Defense decided there was no need to renew it.
The study of Schilling revealed more of a problem solving situation than a crisis, Warriner said. Salma had the competent answer, but it would have become a crisis, he added.
The former air base now serves as Salina's municipal airport. Some of the
buildings and facilities are now used by aircraft-related firms and manufacturers,
Much of the usual adjustment process is self-corrective, Daicoff said, and according to the study, towns and people faced with base closings adjusted quite well.
The future, however, may not be so
bright, according to Daicoff.
The effects of base clings in 1973 are at this moment unpredictable, he said.
The closing of Forbes Air Force Base will have a moderate impact on Topeka, said the state like Massachusetts and Rhode Island facing possible severe repercussions.
Bonds Needed to Finance Jail
A resolution to be presented to the Douglas County Commission today would initiate action for the construction of a county judicial-law enforcement building.
Heck explained that the building fund, established in 1963 at one-half mill and expanded in 1968 to one mill, could be expanded to 1.75 mills to cover the bond issue.
Commissioner Arthur Heck said that a $2.8 million bond issue would be required to fund the building, but that the bond issue would not require a vote.
This will add only .75 of a mill to present county taxes.
The owner of a house with an assessed valuation of $20,000 would have a $15 insurance premium.
A mill is $1 for every $1,000 of assessed valuation.
The total cost of the building is estimated at $3.6 million, Heck said. Additional costs will be met with revenue-sharing funds from the county and the city of Lawrence.
Mayor Nancy Hambleton said the city commission had agreed to contribute about
$500,000 toward the construction of the county judicial law enforcement building. The city jail and police department will be located in the new building.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 14. 1973
3
Source Says Ehrlichman Admits Burglary Approval
WASHINGTON (AP)—Former White
Ehrlichman reportedly testified Wednesday.
approved a proposal that turned out to be theurgery of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatry practice.
PETER TURNER
Kansan Photo
Sweet Hour of Prayer
For some, spirit is captured in a place. For others, it resides in the mystery of words and song. Yet for all, it is as
powerfully fragile as evening's delicate light.
Injury and Death Suit Settled Out of Court
A personal injury and wrong death suit resulting from the 1707 death of Kathryn Khim, Chanute sophomore, has been settled. The settlement was announced Wednesday.
Klum suffered injuries from burns and smoke inhalation in a fire on Sept. 27, 1970, at the Renz Apartments, 1301 Louisiana. She died at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., 17 days later. She was 19 years old.
The terms of the settlement provide for the defendants to pay Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Kihm, Katrynn's parents, $75,000 and the court costs in the case. The plaintiffs had been asking for $237,588 for wrongful death, injury and medical and funeral expenses.
The defendants in the suit were Phyllis Renz Mecaughue, owner of the apartments; Continental Construction Co., general contractor in building the apartments; Don Eley, apartment manager at the time of the fire; David Nelsen, president; M. Katrubyn Nelsen and Gary Aylesworth, who were in the apartment at the time of the fire.
I'll just stick with the black and white. It looks like a crowd of people, possibly at an event or concert. There's a boy in the foreground with his hand on his chest. The background is filled with other people, some facing away from the camera. It's hard to tell if they're in a crowded area or just standing around.
Kansas Photo by A B. SOLSKY
Camper Eunice Stallworth Checks Tryout Results
Kansas Photo by A.B. SOLSKY
Summer Activities Begin For Music, Art Campers
By DAGMAR R. PADEN
Kansan Staff Writer
Among those enrolling was Eunice Stallworth of Hartlesea, Ala., a 9th grade clarinet player and a sister of Bud Ballard of Seattle Supremes. Stallworth himself came to KU in 1967 to play trumpet in high school music camp.
Though many summer camps are closing,
Midwestern Music and Art Camp activities
at KU's 10-day junior high art and music
camps began Wednesday.
Enrollment in the music camp is 336, a 5 per cent increase. 70 students are in the per cent increase.
TWO BANDS will have 125 musicians. The bands have no difference in quality, Russell Wiley, director of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, said Wednesday.
The concert band is directed by Richard Brumett, director of instrumental music in Winfield. The other band, symphonic band, is directed by Robert Foster, KU
All music camp students, except for 30 wind instrument players who are both band and orchestra members, will sing. The A Cappella Choir and Concert Choir each have 145 members and are directed by Milburn Carey, director of the Tr-State Musical Center, American Council, director of choirs at Baptist Southern University in Baliwo, M.
director of bands. The orchestra is directed by Larry Williams, Lawrence High orces
Ehrlichman's testimony at a six-hour closed-door session by the House Intelligence subcommittee was reported to chairen by Clausen N, Nedzi, D-Mich.
But Ehrlichman reportedly told congressmen, he did not, recall there was anything in the memorandum proposal that referred to the break-in.
ALL TRYOUTS for students in the music camp were completed Wednesday because
In the art camp, instructors try to give students a broad definition of what art is, Frank Young camp director, said Wednesday. Art is not presented in its pure studio sense, but students work with the basic elements of color, shape, texture, line and light and shadow to relate them to two-and three-dimensional forms, he said.
"He did approve a proposal," Nedzi said.
"The substance is not clear."
"I don't want to admit or deny or comment on anything just now," he said.
Erichman, in a rare departure from his usual willingness to talk to newsmen after the war, is one of the few.
Nedzi said Erichlman testified he did not recall learning of the break-in in Elsberg's payroll office in con-fidence with the Pentagon and the investigation until after it had happened.
"He did not clearly remember," Nedzi said, "but he said there may have been a reference to a trip to the West Coast for investigative work."
The Washington Post reported Wednesday that Watergate grand jury prosecutors have a one-page memorandum addressed to Ehrlichman that describes in detail plans to burglarize the psychiatrist's office.
Quoting government sources, the newspaper said the memo was sent to Ehrichman by former White House aides David Young and Eilog Krogh and was dated before the Sept. 3, 1971 break-in at the office of the Beverly Hills, Calif., psychiatrist.
Women's Exile from Saunas Not by Any 'Chauvinist' Design
Before the women's libbers get all steamed up over the sauna not being open to women this summer, they ought to hear Wayne Osmann's side of the story.
By JOHN R. BENDER
Kansan Staff Writer
Ossess, professor of health, physical education and recreation, said Wednesday there were two reasons why the sauna was not currently available to women.
The first reason is that the hours of operation for Robinson Gymnasium have been shortened during the summer. The gymnasium was closed during the summer. Ossessia said that the hours women could use the sauna last semester were 6:30 to 9 p.m. on tuesdays and Thursdays. This period of the evening corresponded with the time of the gymnasium facilities by women.
Osness said that only one woman had expressed interest in using the sauna this summer. He said he would be happy to provide time for women to use the sauna if interest were shown and a responsible manager was involved, guiding the sauna during the women's hours.
The second reason that the sauna has been closed to women thus far this summer is because of the high cost.
Osness said that this was not a fully satisfactory situation since it required that someone be present to make sure that the men in the locker room were disturbed.
The need to share the sauna is created by its location in the men's locker room. During the spring semester, a curtain was put up during the hours the women were allowed to use the sauna, making it possible for the women to get to the sauna.
It has been suggested that persons wear bathing suits in the sauna so that both men and women could use it together. Ossane said that he did not think that work would because most people, especially men, preferred to use the sauna in the nude.
The best way to solve the problem of whouses-the-sauna-when is to install a remote-controlled device.
The sauna here has had tremendous appeal for women, more so than on other campuses, according to Osmess. Because of their size, the women should have their own sauna.
To get a women's sauna installed, the women are going to have to fight the same fierce battle.
Osness said that the cost of the women's sauna would be about $2,000. The sauna in this room could cost $2,000, but because the expected use of women would be less, a smaller unit might be sufficient. Once the funds are raised, it will be possible to have the sauna installed, Osness said.
The money for the men's sauna came from an endowment, Osness said, but it required a good deal of work by some faculty members, notably Bryant Freeman, professor of French and Italian, to get the money. The men's sauna might also be raised through personal donations or the student Senate as well as through an endowment, he suggested.
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KIEF'S
Malis Shopping Center
Lawrence, Kansas
JOB OPENING
Administrative Director of Consumer Protection Assn a non-profit corp.
SALARY: $400—beginning Aug. 15, 1973
DUTIES: Coordinating CPA research, educational activities, and complaint management in the Board of Directors for administrating all CPA operations.
QUALIFICATIONS: Demonstrated administrative ability necessary; other public interest or social service/ activity required; other public interest or social service/ activity required.
HOURS: Full-time but flexible.
Submit resumes by July 16, 1973 to:
Consumer Protection Assn.
Box W *Student Union
Lawrence, Kansas 46044
If there are no questions, leave name and phone number at the CPA office, Room 299, Student Union.
If there are any immediate questions, call 864-3506 and leave your name and telephone number.
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BIKINI PANTIES 66¢
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4
Thursday, June 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Eldridge House to Complete Extensive Remodeling
started in August 1972 will probably end in the middle of August this year.
The Eldridge House has had a strange and exciting history connected to its previous renovations. The New York City Home (now the Eldridge House) in 1853. It
MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL
Eldridge to Get External and Internal Remodeling
SQUARE
Eldridge House Lobby Soon to Become Private Club
Groups to Study Tenure
Chancellor Raymond Nichols will announce Friday the appointment of four subcommittees to study different aspects of tenure.
He said he would appoint five members to each of the subcommittees and that each group would be given a specific topic to study.
Nichols received a recommendation from the University Senate Executive Committee that he appoint the subcommittees to study and report on matters members at the University of Kansas.
About 70 per cent of the KU faculty now holds tenure.
Until he contacts his appointees, Nichols declined to discuss further details of the case.
The office of Minority Affairs must be concerned with following disadvantaged groups and addressing their needs.
Supportive Educational Services, which provides tutoring and financial aid for minority student, is not doing the full job in providing living help and carrying them through.
Nichols also discussed a suit against KU involving discrimination based on sex. The suit was filed in Douglas County District 10 by the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights.
The suit was dismissed last week after the utility paid the plaintiff, Jan Smith. 905
Ameritrade Inc.
Nichols said Smith was denied a job because an employee in charge of hiring a man for a job 'on the basis that lifting he/she is more appropriate for a man than a woman.'
Glover Plans Second Attempt To Legalize Marijuana Use
Nichols said that the employee now understood that sex couldn't be used as the basis for denying a job that under normal circumstances might go to a man.
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, has a plan for growing marijuana legally in Kansas, he said at a news conference Wednesday in Lawrence.
Glover said that he would introduce a bill in the next legislative session to legalize the use of marijuana.
The bill would authorize county clerks or commissioners to sell licenses to persons
During the last legislative session, Glover proposed a bill to legalize the possession of marijuana in Kansas, but the bill never got out of committee.
Some persons who voted for Glover in the last election have told him vehemently that they never would have done so, he said, had he given his position on marijuana.
His stand on the legalization of marijuana is based on personal conviction and he must
soon became known as the Free State Hotel since the emigrant company was against slavery. In 1856, Sirff William Jones and a group of pro-slavery men set it ablaze.
In other areas, Glover announced that he was appointed to two intern study committees that would investigate land use and special federal and state affairs. The committee will do most of its work before the next legislative session in January.
COLONEL S. W. Eldridge bought the house from the company, renovated it, and called it the American House. Until 1833 everything was going fine for the hotel as it played a valuable part in the early history of New York in the early struck, and burned it to the ground.
do what he thinks is right, he said, even when his constituents oppose him.
The committee on land use will study the land mines of Kansas, especially those in southeast Kansas, and decide what options are feasible for recamiation. Glover said it could provide a viable if the state could provide a framework or mechanism to funnel federal funds.
The committee on special federal and state affairs will study six bills dealing with nine regulations, disaster procedure housing, minorities, civil rights and penal reform.
Colonel Eldridge rebuilt the hotel once again. The Eldridge Hotel, as it was then called, lasted into the early 1920s. In 1924, he and his wife constructed another one in its place.
The new hotel opened on April 8, 1926. With minor changes, it is still the same hotel as when it was founded in location (Seventh and Massachusetts streets) that the Free State Hotel occupied 120 years ago. Since 1700, the Eldridge Investors Partnership
"IN THE 1920s through the 1950s, the "Eldridge Hotel was the place to go in Lawrence," said Hightower. "It had most of the important functions of both Lawrence and the University of Kansas meeting in its early years." The hotel, homecoming started and ended here.
"The large banquet room downstairs, equipped with a restaurant and a bar, was the main center of attraction to the campus. The managers of the hotel were going to change the plaques on the wall to signify the formulation of the Big Six teams. The managers of the hotel were going to change the banners and placques to the Big 6, but were unable to find materials to match the
"in the 1960s, the atmosphere changed as less college students came to the hotel,"
said Hightower. "This happened mainly because of the expense."
Kansan Photos By Rayna Lancaster
$200,000 was spent remodelling hotel rooms from 1962 through 1964.
THE CHANGE from hotel rooms to apartments came in 1970 when the Rockledge Investor's Partnership became a retail company whose change came the name Eldridge House.
- it requires assistance the occurring room to the apartments and to the main floor areas. The big Room will have minor repairs and will still be used as a banquet room.
Marble Counter Top to Be Bar in Private Club
A western decor will change the Crystal Room into a stakehouse-style restaurant including a large Conestoga wagon. The room will become a family-style restaurant.
The main lobby is being converted into a private club. The lobby's fountain will remain as it is, and the marble-topped desk will be changed into a bar.
BANK OF NEW YORK
9
Big 8 Room, Once the Big 6 Room, Will Be Repaired and Repainted
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HALTER TOPS
ASSORTED STYLES
COLORS & PATTERNS
Values to $9.00
Now $3.99
GOOBAH
711 W. 23rd in the Malls
10-9 Mon-Fri. 10-6 Sat.
Good through Saturday
БОООВАН
2nd
kansas
Shakespeare
Festival & Institute
1973 Present
"Julius Caesar"
June 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23
University Theatre Murphy Hall Curtain: 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices: $2.00—Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 864-3982
Most Couples Prefer Spring Wedding
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 14, 1973
5
Danforth Accommodates Varied Ceremonies
THE HYDROGEN CENTER OF CHARLOTTE, FLORIDA
Kansan Photo by A.B. SQLSK
A Groomsman Decorates the Bridal Couple's Car Outside Danforth Chapel
To reserve the chapel, Beaver suggested that the couple contact her at the Registrar's office at least two months in advance of their trip. That way, that they can reserve the time they want.
The charge for using the chapel is $5 for the two hours, plus $5 for a rehearsal.
During peak periods, the chapel sometimes handles up to five weddings a day, spaced at two hour intervals to allow time for flowers to be arranged, the guests to be seated, and a very hard greeting to still have time to reply. "I do."
When couples cancel out, Beau said, "I usually ask them if they want to set another date, but they usually don't. I always wonder about those."
Danforth is also used as the meeting place for a Christian Science group on Tuesday evenings and the Oread Friends on Saturdays. It holds about 90 people.
Spring break and the end of spring semester are the peak times for weddings at Danfort, according to Jan Beaver, who handles reservations for the chapel, where there are usually some summer weddings and several at the end of fall semester.
'Hilarity With Serious Overtones
The small brick building secluded by fires between Spooner Museum and Fraser Hall on Jayhawk Bldr. had a cool dark interior, but the walls were adorned for either the romantic or the pragmatist.
Whether the traditional white lace and satin wedding, barefoot blue jeans and gingham marriage, or just a simple wedding, weddings seem to fit Danforth Chapel.
By GERALD EWING
Kansan Staff Writer
At this time when all of Washington is embroiled in the Watergate controversy, nothing seems more appropriate than a little film, a historical film, "Milkhouse-A乳 White Correspondent."
The film begins with a clip of the famous press conference in 1962, when Nixon, after losing the governor's race in California, would never enter another political race.
The film is done in a documentary style, made up of film clips in the many facets of Richard Nixon. Interpreted are comments about his administration and Joe Whitcover and Joe McGinnis. The clips are juxtaposed so that the film comes across as bilious comedy that preys on our fears.
From here it moves backwards to show Nixon in his renowned role as the chief Communist hunter in the 1948 Alger Hiss-David Chambers espionage controversy.
citizen.
It proceeds on to a capsulization of the
It culminates in the ultimate example of the American dream as Nixon, the poor kid who had to fight for everything he got, wins the 1984 Presidential election.
The makers of the film, chief Mary Larson, combine comedy with an overtone
It is an intriguing film, possibly distorted about the political life of the 37th President Obama.
hilarious and heart-tending "Checkers Speech," which saved Nixon's political life.
review
The film moves quickly through Nixon's years as Vice-President under Eisenhower, his narrow defeat in the 1960 Presidential Election and his role as Nixon-private
baseball standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. P. Pt. G.B.
Chicago 25 74 69
Montreal 27 25 51/9
St. Louis 27 25 49/9
New York 25 29 49/3
Pittsburgh 25 29 453/8
Philadelphia 25 29 453/8
Results
Philadelphia 16. Los Angeles 3.
Montreal 3. San Diego 2.
Minneapolis 4.
Atlanta 18. Pittsburgh 3.
St. Louis 6. Cincinnati 1
New York 5. Boston 4
San Francisco 39 25 609 †
Los Angeles 77 24 567 ‡
Missouri 77 24 567 ‡
Cincinnati 31 28 325 ‡
Atlanta 31 28 325 ‡
Dallas 26 34 128 ‡
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W. 1, L. Pct G.B.
Detroit 31 7, 52
Indiana 30 27, 52
Detroit 31 7, 52
Boston 27 6, 59
Baltimore 27 6, 59
Cleveland 27 6, 59
Chicago 32 22 593 ->
Minnesota 30 25 593 ->
Kansas City 30 25 593 ->
California 28 27 509 ->
Oakland 28 27 509 ->
Tampa 28 27 508 ->
Result
Texas 4. Cleveland 2
Kansas City 2. Baltimore 8
Washington 6. Milwaukee 4. Minneapolis 5.
California 4. Boston 5
New York 3. Philadelphia
Nicklaus to Begin Open Title Defense
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP)—Jack Nicklaus, with 13 major championships and close to $2 million in golf wins, opens defense of his U.S. Open here today. Nicklaus is dashing on-force to win the title. If he does win, the Tour will be Jones' Jones's record of 13 major golf titles.
Challenging for the title will be Tom Weiskopf, the hotest golfer on the tour, Australia Bruce Crampton, and veterans Kevin, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player.
Local Tennis Buffs To Play in Tourney
Friday is the deadline for entering the Lawrence City Tennis Tournament, scheduled for Saturday and Sunday. The tournament is sponsored by the Parks and Reserves and is open to all Douglas County residents, including University of Kansas students.
Entry forms are available at the Parks and Recreation Department, 9th and Massachusetts streets; the South Park Recreation Center; the Community Building; and the Robinson Gymnasium and Allen Field House courts.
The tournament will be staged at the Allen Field House, Robinson Gymnasium, Veteran's Park and Lawrence High School courts.
From $ ^{s}140^{00} $
Call or Visit Us Today.
Apartment Hunting?
Entry fees are $1.50 for the junior division and $2.50 for the senior division.
Studios to Duplexes,
Furnished, Unfurnished.
Come feel the hills and valleys of your feet.
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meadowbrook
exercise sandals
shoes
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813 Mass. St.
Come rest your feet in the hollows and the rises. Experience the coolness of polished beechwood against the warmth of bare skin. Feel the little mound, call the totering, that helps you turn more steps into a beautiful toning and awakening for your legs. Scholl, the original Exercise Sandals. Red, blue, or bone cushioned leather strap. Flat or raised heel. $12.95.
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THE BAND
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Mon.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-Midnight
Sun. Noon-Midnight
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Bargain Bingo Sale
June 14.15.16
Thurs.Fri.
SAT.
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faces & Trees
Place an ad. Call 864-4358
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
One Day
15 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $0.01
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $3.00
each additional word: 5.02
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Ambulance staff, good services, and employment
with hospitals. Provide patient care in ambulance,
CLASS A ambulance, ambulance LEAFER, BING
ambulance, ambulance LEAFER, ambulance BING
ambulance.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE COUNTRY Shop—3 Mks. No. of the furniture, furniture, gas heating and cooking equipment, furniture, gas heating and cooking equipment, monkey stools, 50 gal. steel drawer, new refrigerator, refrigerator, large wood log 15, 10 m³. Fireplace wood, large logs 15, 10 m³. 2nd copy price. Basket alfalfa, broom and wheat vegetables. Open 9 to 9 a.m., 7 days. 842-3139. Herb vegetables. Open 9 to 9 a.m., 7 days. 842-3139.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale
There are two wavs of looks at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't,
You're at a disadvantage
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
*Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town
Creek, 708-352-1990.*
You're at a transavantage. Either way it comes to the same thing—
PZZA HUT SMOSCASSORD. All the pizza you
get from our store is on Monday-
7-30 1:30-1:30 MON, W 2nd only 7-85
1-30 1:30 MON, W 2nd only
CLOETIE The original 400 book has arrived at the library and is now available for nature and mountaineering. Nestiaja at 210 Massa House, 83073 Brasov, Romania. (Tina Schroeder)
Good running condition, very good. ' 60 Buckle
good tire quality, good life. Good tire life.
5 new yr. battery. Call 843-1331.
For Sale 1972 TRIUMPH 1000. Excellent Condi-
tion. 3400 miles. VAHARMA 3600 miles.
4300 miles. CAH 844-0088.
MOTORCYCLE
condition, Yamaha 85 ce with helmet, very good.
Yamaha, Yamaha 85 ce
6-19
Call 843-3803.
For Sale. 1790 Volkwagen Kharman Glia Compact car, great looks, great range, great call, Wally or Cindy (Wally or Cindy) for $25,000.
Saint Born baby护理 - AARC Registered Chlam-
soul Saint Born baby护理 - AARC Registered Chlam-
soul Baby Nursery and old baby dares. Available
Nursing supplies and old baby dares. Available
For Sale 1965 WV, Rebuilt engine, Red with
Salm. App 1965 WV, $65-Call 824-7187-6-21
3-61
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, 3
bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially
furnished. Carpeted. A/C, Skirched. Pressed on
shelves. a shed, garden. Askings $1690-
5099.
76 inch browns and plaid couch, folds down to
small table with 6 quizzes, used just 6 couchs
FOR RENT
For Rent, Apt. for one person, on campus,
941-200-5800, C/A, All bills paid Call 610-
843-200-5800
"FREE RENTAL SERVICE"
For the year, call Lawrence Revenue Exchange, 718-354-0296 or www.loews.com.
WANT TO LIVE ON A FARM? Space available in a large farmhouse for couple or individual.
SAVE GASOLINE to walk to campus and classes.
Support all appliances with all appliances. No pets. 841-253-9600.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRRED OF STEEP
TOOL TO YOUR EAST. Take a 2 bedroom
bed, directly across Miss from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
caron buildings, parking parked free. Free Cars
rate; free WiFi; free rateable rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates.
In Samuet Ave., 1123 Inc., Apt. 9, or
call 843-1213.
Private room for girl+share kitchen and bath.
Bed & Bath rented at $60/week.
unpaid fees plus $45 per month. Call 814-309-1280.
Basewater Apartment for two or three people—nearest downtown, $160 per month including utilities and newown, $150 per month including utilities and newown.
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air conditioned and off street parking. 844-725-1088 725-1088
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cooking facilities. BURNS KU and rear downstairs.
NOTICE
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que in
Michigan. A slab to eat here can be 425. Large slab
plate. Chicken platter. Chicken plate of beef 325 Bey-
ster. Complete round and fond sand. Tux-Pipe
V 2-1800 515 Mich.
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCET** *Small pizza* and **PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCET** *153 at $84 a month* - 20% off. Only, Mon.-Fri., 11-5.
THE HIE in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
OpenUntil 7:31 AM. Phone Office:
834 7655 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
at
10C DRAWS
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
1021 Mass.
THE HARBOUR 1021 Mass
Five Days
15 words or fewer: $3.50
each additional word: $1.03
Have a dog. eat, rabbit, fish, or bird? If you do, please have them clean up! Beads, seed, and petroleum from people like Sergeant James and his team. Give these beauties beaches, colors, and all other toys in your care. GRANTS DRIVE IN PER CENTAGE 842-2011
**waxMAN CANDLES for the more fregan**
choose from WAXMAN CANDLES, W 18th
chance from WAXMAN CANDLES, W 18th
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION, 731 N. River Avenue, River City, NY 10584; five days, 10:00 a.m.-6:20 and by appointment. Special organization of progressive repair technicians for organization of progressive repair technicians. Special organization of progressive repair specialists are able to offer quick and flexible repair services we are able to offer. US REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE, MUNICIPAL and electrical typewriter, antique and modern watch company. Visit us at www.usrepair.com US REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE, MUNICIPAL AND ELECTRICAL TYPEWRITER, ANTICUE AND MODERN WATCH COMPANY. Visit us at www.usrepair.com
Wanted to organize car pool commuting from Topeka daily. Call 272-6209 6-18
WANTED
Need one female to share University Terrence
2437-510-9248 or 642-123-8000
5:00-6:18, 9:41-241 or 842-123-8000
Need Female to share house for summer. Own
room. Near campus and downslope $50/mo.
Waiver fee $15/boat.
Wanted: Female to assemble for summer. Private room in house with four others. Rent $25 and $30 per day. Weekends only.
TYPING
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
890. Myra. Minor editing and/or proofing.
894. Myra.
Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other types, typing. Have electric type services. Accurate and prompt service. Proof reading, spelling corrected. 843-3544. Mrs. Wright. 7-26
MISCELLANEOUS
PIZZA HOT DELIVERS A hot pizza right to your door. Sunday-Tuesday-Friday. Pizza 484-795-6011, pizza 484-795-6030.
Are you interested in Robert Rimner and Harriet Rimmer? I talk about his ideas call him Dave. Are you interested in Dave? 389-209-6178
Sale—Saturday, June 16, 1973
Historical Records 807
PUBLIC SALE
Saturday, June 16th Fleetwood Homes of Kansas, Inc., 807 E. 29th,
Lavender, Katea
Starts at 10 A.M.-3 P.M. The following items will
Approx. 140 curtains $50. Approx. 500 curtains
$75. Approx. 200 curtains. Approx. 1000
understairs—hears $200. 10 bedrooms and
60 framed pictures $400. Approx. 10 coffee
and 10 dining tables. Approx. 30 office
Sinks $2,000 a year. Lunetteau $1,900 a yard; other
appliances $1,200 a year.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE BODY SHOP Figure Salon is having an open day on Friday, November 25 from 10am to 3pm at the refinement spa, and gift. Grand prize drawing for a 4-month program. Program with unlimited gifts including jewelry, fine art, gift display cells, and gift display cells. 9-4pm Fri., 9-11pm Sun.
ENTERTAINMENT
TUTOR
M.S. in Environmental Studies will tutor in Natl.
Hospital Reasonable Rate; Call Dawn
844-359-2000; 6-18
@naturalhealth.org
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
"Finishing Work a Specialty"
842.1609 after 5:30 p.m.
15
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Forest Luther Pierce
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Sake sandwiches,
Shirley C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been
There is no indication or need in good food
1. A lion North at the
2. Cafe
52
Stirling
Phone
843-1431
95%
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Thursday, June 14, 1973
University Daily Kansan
ALEXANDRIA CABRILLO
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
'Julius Caesar' Opens Saturday
Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" will be presented at the University Theatre at 8 p.m. Saturday, June 16 and Monday, July 2. The play is staged in the Elizabethan
period. The play's director, Jack Brooking, said he chose this setting to stress the universality of the theme. The theme is $1 with summer registration.
Ervin's Questioning Brings New Demands
WASHINGTON (AP)—Maurice H. Stans testified Wednesday it was "pure and innocent coincidence" that financial records of President Nixon's reelection campaign were destroyed shortly after the Watergate raid.
It also brought a demand for testimony on democratic party practices in handling landlord issues.
The sharp questioning that revolved around that testimony brought on the first open disagreement of the Senate hearings—between Sen. S. Jam, S. Ervin Jr., the committee chairman, a Democrat, and Sen. Edward J. Gurney, a Republican.
"I, FOR ONE, have not appreciated the harassment of this witness by the chairman in the questioning that is just finished," said Mr. Snyder, a committeemate ought to act in fairness."
"Well, I'm sorry that my distinguished friend from Florida does not approve of my method of questioning the witness," Ervin said. "I'm just an old country lawyer and I don't know the fine ways to do it. I just have to do it my way."
The audience in the hearing room burst into apause.
STANS, THE CHIEF fund raise of the reelection campaign, said the records of
contributions made before a disclosure law change on April 7, 1972, were destroyed to the extent of $50 million.
"Can you state upon your oath there was no connection between destruction of the records and the break-in at the Watergate?" asked Ervin.
"I will say to you there was no connection between the destruction of the summary sheets by treasurer Hugh Sloan and the Waterate affair." Stans reslied.
"IT'S A RATHER suspicious coincidence that records shows these matters were destroyed six days after the break-in at the Watergate." Ervin persisted.
"The adjectives are yours," said Stans. He testified contributions that found their way into the Miami bank account of convicted Watergate conspirator Bernard L. Scales, converted to cash so the large amounts would not subject the contributors to the gift tax.
ERVIN CALLED that evading a higher duty to the American mural.
Later, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Teen, the vice chairman, said, "If we are going into this, I suggest the committee subpoena the records of the Democratic legislature and the committee of either major party for a reasonable period up to April 7 in order to study this."
eight days of June. It will cover all prices paid by consumers. The only prices not covered will be those of unprocessed cultural products at the farm level and rents.
In announcing the price freeze, Nixon said:
... because of the old use of prices.
He promised there would be no freeze on wages as long as settlements "continue to be responsible and noninflationary."
- rms freeze will hold prices at levels higher than those charged during the first
President Orders Freeze...
From Page One
significant cause of the increase in prices."
Should Congress send him a farm bill, or any other measure, that he considered infiltration, Nixon said, "I shall veto such a bill."
local service station*) once a new Phase 4
program went into effect following the
Nixon said he also directed the Cost of Living Council to develop new measures "that will stabilize both food prices at the retail store and the price of gasoline at the
The President asked anew for congressional authority to selectively reduce tariffs, saying that help hold down prices on such scarce items as meat, dairy and poultry would require requests for power to sell more surplus commodities held in government stockpiles.
Asserting that Congress can hold down the living by helping to hold down the cost of government, Nixon said, "I shall continue to veto spending bills that we cannot afford no matter how noble sounding their names."
It's Nixon's 4th Trv in 2 Years
By BILL NEIKIRK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - In a dramatic radio and television address to the nation on Aug. 15, 1971, President Nixon declared, "Working together, we will break the back of inthe previous 3.8 per cent. Food prices accounted for most of the rise in prices, because raw agricultural products were exempt from controls.
Thus Nixon launched the 90-day freeze of wages, prices and rents that became known as Phase 1 of his economic stabilization program.
Wednesday night, with the back of inflation stronger than ever despite 22 months of Phases 1, 2 and 3. The President turned to national television to unveil a new plenum.
Since January, consumer prices have gone up at an annual rate of 9.2 per cent. Food prices have alrsen have risen at an annual clin of 25 per cent during the same time.
The price surge sent Nixon's economic advisers back to the drawing board to make changes in the largely voluntary system of wage-price restraints known as Phase 3.
NIXON CALLED IN John B. Connally, former secretary of the treasury and an architect of the Phase 1 freeze, to help advise Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, a free-market advocate, and other close economic officials on what to do.
But this time the economic situation is different from 1971. The economy now is in a new phase of recovery and growth.
When Nixon reversed his economic policy and put the freeze into effect in the middle of 1971, the nation was plagued with the twin causes of high inflation and high unemployment.
The 90-DAY FREEZE slowed the rise in prices to an annual rate of 2 per cent from
Nixon's new economic program brought praise from Congress, rallied the stock market, and brightened his chances for reelection. But organized labor, mainly AFL-CIO President George Meany, criticized it as unfair.
IN NOVEMBER, 1971, the freezes turned to a slow thaw. Nikon announced a system of wage-price controls known as Phase 2. He used this to commission and Pay Board to run the program.
The Pay board adopted a pay standard allowing raises of 5.5 per cent a year, plus 0.7 per cent in fringe. But that standard is tough enough to allow increases over the amount.
The Price Commission adopted complicated regulations that allowed prices to go up only if they could be justified by evidence. In most cases main costs permitted were wages and taxes.
PHASE 2 LASTED 14 months. Price regulations became more complicated. Business began to complain about delays. The company had to detect wasteful spending by businesses.
On Jan. 11, Nixon had shifted from the mandatorily Phase 2 program to the largely operational phase.
HE KEPT MANDATORY controls in the health and food industries. And, for those companies that might decide to flout the voluntary pay and price guidelines, Nixon said they would be clobbered with government enforcement action.
"The stick in the closet," as Shultz
Vietnam Truce...
From Page One
elementation of the previous truce provisions.
The Saigon government had objected to several of the 14 points of the new accord. But under vigorous American pressure, reported to include a threat to cut off American aid, Saigon dropped its objections and issued a statement welcoming the new
levels at the time. But by the time he acted, meat had risen to their highest levels in 22
In a news conference after the signing, Kissinger declined to discuss the disagreement between Washington and Saigon. But the presidential adviser achilles was a substantial part of his talk with The Weekly. He signed an agreement to accept Saigon.
accord.
described it, rarely came out, however.
In all of his actions, Nixon acted under the Economic Stabilization Act passed originally in 1970. Nixon opposed the Iranian attack because he warned that he did not want and need intended to use.
Associated Press Writer
TOKYO-China and North Vietnam have just wound up a summit conference that apparently commits them to the restoration of peace in Vietnam.
By JOHN RODERICK
That seems to be the meaning behind the involved language of the long communique on the June 4-11 visit of North Vietnam's Communist chief Le Duan and Premier Pham Van Dong for talks with Premium Chou En-lai.
Throughout, the wording is mild and full of affirmations that the two Communist allies and neighbors are interested solely in the peaceful solution of the problems left over from the January Paris peace agreement.
There are expressions of solidarity,but
the Chinese make no promises to support the Vietnamese struggle if it should turn on their side.
analysis
"The Chinese people will firmly support and assist the fraternate Vietnamese people in their struggle to safeguard and consolidate peace, build socialism in the North, achieve independence and democracy in the South and proceed to achieve the peaceful future of Vietnam." And bring about a peaceful, reunified, independent, democratic and strong Vietnam."
Instead, the Chinese say:
ON MARCH 29, Nixon clamped ceilings
and cut off windows. He also lumbered,
lawning, and tearing their near their current
Food prices damaged the credibility of Phase 3 drastically. The sharp increases surprised the government, which conjected that it had underestimated the problem.
Processed Foods Retain Vitamins, Proteins . . .
and cereals. Food from the basic four groups supplies all needs of a normal person except the iron requirement for all women and the calcium requirement for some people.
"If a vitamin supplement is needed it is for a specific reason only," Cross said.
A NUTRITIONALLY well-balanced daily diet consists of the basic four food groups, milk for children and two glasses for adults; two servings of meat or meat substitutes; one green leafy or yellow vegetable; one green salad or another kind of vegetable or fruit for variety.
PEOPLE WHO might need vitamins are often necessary for a well-balanced diet, she said.
It appears from this that China, embarked on a program of peaceful existence that depends on an end to the conflict. The region has stability restored in all Southeast Asia.
The fourth group is four servings of bread
The incentive held out to the North Vietnamese is a new 1974 aid agreement
vietnamese is a new 1974 aid agreement.
Summed up, the summit conference appears, at least on the surface, to clear the way for another try at making the Vietnam peace work. If it succeeds, China can claim a major share of the credit.
LADIES' DAY TODAY
Crosa said, "The ruling pleases me. Vitamins grow naturally in food, and when they are not available we must."
drugs."
From Page One
GO TO CHURCH un-sunday
THE BALL PARK
Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Open 'til Midnight
15c Draughts for the gals
of course sunday at 11 is operative also
GO TO CHURCH
un-sunday
on monday
8:30 p.m.
ULC
university luth.
chapel
15th iowa
grocery stores had the vitamin requirements needed for most people
MRSEAK
The Federal Drug Administration has ruled that the sale of food supplements be restricted to 20 per cent of the supply now available.
NEW!
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Mr. Steak
$ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $ AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat.
11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sun. - Thurs.
920 West 23rd
Health Food Store Owner . . .
From Page One
Burger, who is a vegetarian, said she had marketed meat in the past but was selling it now.
"So many lies have been made about the quality and flavor of meat. The rumor that marbling in beef enhances flavor, is a propaganda trip," she said.
producer," she said.
BURGER SAID that despite the federal ruling prohibiting the addition of DES, a chemical, she said, that was found harmful to man, into beef, it was still being used.
"The thing that turned me off from meat was my experience in driving through a feedet area. Anything coming from an animal was not said as that can be good," Burger said.
Products in health food stores were generally more expensive than products found in regular supermarkets, because of the health foods' higher quality. Burger salad
SHE SAID that the eggs she sold were much higher quality than most other incubator-hatched eggs found in supermarkets. Incubator eggs, she said, are fed with coloring to enhance the color of the yolk.
Downtown Health Foods sells to a diverse group of customers and most of its customers are regulars, according to Burger. The store sells mostly staples, such as grains, flours and oils, and food supplements and vitamins.
BURGER SAID that because her store sold much in the way of food supplements, she was concerned about the federal ruling of the Food and Drug Administration restricting the sale of food supplements to 20 per cent of what is now available.
She said there was a high percentage of disease in commercially-grown eggs and that the quality was generally lower than her local farm-grown eggs.
Burger said that the remaining 80 per cent would be available to the consumer
only by way of prescription, which must be obtained by a doctor. She said that the FDA's reason for the ruling was simple that people didn't need food supplements.
"They never say we don't need aspirin, alcohol or cigarettes," Burger said. She said that no damage had been shown concerning vitamins or food supplements that would warrant the ruling requiring a prescription.
"THERE HAVE been fewer overconsumption of vitamin A than there have been of aspirin," Burger said. "An over-consumption of alcohol affects individuals more seriously than does an over-consumption of vitamin C."
Burger said the ruling had economic implications. She said the cost of food supplements would rise five to 10 per cent, mainly because of the prescription cost.
Burger said that the FDA had no scientific basis for its ruling.
3P
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
MONDAY JUNE 18,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules / the associated press
Sunken American Destroyer Traps Research Submarine
KEY WEST, Fla. — Trapped by a scuttled destroyer 351 feet down in the Atlantic, four weakening men wait in a midget marine today while Navy divers race to rescue them before their air supply runs out. The civilian research submarine was snagged in the hulk of the World War II destroyer or in a cable extending from it. The trapped men had been thrown overboard and taken to the morder of the Key West Naval Base, said the two men in the rear section of the submarine may be in coma. He added: "I would say the situation at this time is probably critical." Several rescue devices had been rushed to the scene, including a new submarine rescue bell that was to get its first practical test. As the supply of oxygen drops, the risk of the men dying from carbon monoxide poisoning increases. LT. Christopher Hobson, a navigator who ported a rise in the carbon dioxide level, Navy officials said a rescue bell and two divers from San Diego, Calif., would descend in an effort to free the craft.
Skvlab Sets Endurance Record
HOUSTON—The Skylab 1 astronauts set the world space endurance mark early today, passing the record established two years ago in a Soviet mission that ended tragically. At 2:22 a.m. (Lawrence time), astronaut Charles Conrad JR., Dr. Joseph P. Kernin and Paul J. Weitz exceed the record of 23 days, 18 hours and 22 minutes in space set in 171 by the Soyuz I. Cosmonauts conrad. Conrad, Kernin and Weitz will have a total of 28 days, 48 minutes in space if their missions end on schedule Friday.
Two Earthquakes Hit Japan
TOKYO—A strong earthquake that churned up a small tidal wave hit northern Japan Sunday, injuring 23 persons, sinking fishing boats and flooding schools of homes. A second quake hit Hokkaido about 10 hours later, but there were no immediate reports of injuries or damage. The first quake was felt as far as south as Tokyo. The tidal wave, rising 4.9 feet, hit Hanasaki Port on Hokkaida and washed away about 250 tons of salmon in storage, and a total of 30,000 persons were evacuated to higher ground.
Protestors Ask for Emigration
WASHINGTON—Thousands of protesters gathered at the U.S. Capitol steps to urge Soviet Communist Party Leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to permit Jews to emigrate freely from the Soviet Union. The group remained peaceful throughout the two hour rally, and then marched to the ellipse near the White House. Both police and organizers estimated the crowd at 10,000 persons.
Gandhi Travels to Canada
BELGRADE—IADE's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi ended a three-day visit to Yugoslavia and left for Canada, next stop on her world tour with Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito. His other leaders, discuss issues in Algeria, and submit a schedule for September in Algeria, and other international and bilateral topics.
Magazine Says Peace Certain
BEIRUT, Lebanon—The Soviet Union and the United States have agreed on a way to achieve a Middle East settlement if Arab-Iraeli peace efforts fail, the weekly magazine Ad-Diar says. The magazine, quoting what it said were highly placed French diplomats, advised President Georges Pompidou of France of the U.S.-Soviet agreement suggested during the Iceland meeting with Pompiond that there be a four-power guarantee of the borders of the Middle East states directly involved in the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Noisy Party Draws Police
ST. PAUL, Mini...Policewoman responding to a neighbor's complaint of a hoary party, were asked by the host, "Who are you going to arrest for?"
Govern Wendell Anderson, Atty. Gen. Warren Sapnaua and St. Paul Mayor Lawrence Cohen were among the 1,000 or so persons who jarmed the St. Paul mansion of Roger Christianson. He was giving a talk on an administrative side to Rep. Joseph Karth, D.-Minn. Christianson, and he turned the turnout Thursday evening nearly doubled his guest-list. "Just use me a 7-Up," one patrolman asked Christianson before leaving.
Clouds May Hide Sun Today
CLOUDY
Nature, after its unduly harsh treatment of local residents over the weekend, appears to be unbending and forecasts say the weather's going to get better and better. Today, it's going to be pretty cloudy, and there is likelihood of thunderstorms over the week. Temperatures over clouds away. Temperatures may get as high as the low 90s and a spot of rain at night should clear the skies for tomorrow.
With no set agenda, the discussions will range over world problems and relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. The special emphasis through the
US-Soviet Summit Today
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon and Leonid I. Breznyne, the Soviet Communist party leader, morning and night at a round of summit at the White House.
week-long sessions will be on seeking ways to limit nuclear offensives weapons and to
Russians have been invited to swell the crowd greeting the 68-year-old Soviet leader upon his arrival by helicopter from Camp Chesapeake in the Catoctin Mountains of Maryland.
Before brezneh is ushered into the Oval Office he will be accorded a respentant welcome on the South Lawn as well visit to this country officially begins.
STORAGE TREE SAW
Several thousand Americans and resident
Breeznew打来 Camp David after arriving in this country Saturday afternoon. Late Sunday he was joined for a while by Henry A. Kissinger, chief U.S. planner of
Kansan Photo by BEN WEAVER
After the big wind and the destruction it spread over the Lawrence area, it's time to pick up the pieces and tidy up. A city builder wrestles with heavy pieces of a fallen tree in the 1300 block of Kentucky St. See story and additional pictures, page 7.
City Helps Clean Up
Dean to Reveal Watergate Story Behind Closed Committee Doors
By MICHAEL PUTZEL
Associated Press Writer
The panel's vice chairman, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R- Tenn, predicted Sunday that Dean "will tell a rather complete story," hopefully unabridged by claims of executive privilege or an attorney-client relationship with President Nixon.
At the committee's executive session, the senators are expected to consider national discussions with Nixon and many conversations with Nixon to determine what can be brought out publicly without exposing critical government secrets or risking his attorney without fear of disclosure.
"The usual and traditional and historic role of attorney-client would not seem to obtain." Baker said, because Dean was a lawyer, and the client was an personal attorney retained by Nixon.
BAKER, INTERVIEWED on the ABC broadcast "Issues and Answers", said he hoped the President would not invoke his relationship to block Dean's testimony.
Various accounts indicate Dean may be the one man willing to talk to who could offer him advice. He was aware of the Watagegate report. Others say he can't, either because it isn't true or because Dean wasn't close enough to the President to know whether it was true or false.
BUT DEAN'S TESTIMONY about the hydra-headed scandal is sure to be explosive. Federal prosecutors have said the case has been made "very profound kind of corruption" using his
on campus
position of trust "to foster a pervasive scheme to obstruct justice."
A GAY LIBERATION meeting is as soon as 7:30 tonight in the International Forum.
THE JEAY BOWL will be open from 10
m. until 9 m. today at Kansas Union.
"JULILUS CAESAR" will be presented at 8 tonight in the University Theatre. There will be refreshments and entertainment in the Murphy courtyard beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tickets for the play are $1 for students and $2 for non-students.
Haldeman has denied any prior knowledge of the break-in a year ago and has insisted he had no knowledge of a coverup. Informed sources, however, have said Haldeman's side, Gordon Strachan, is prepared to swear—after he gains immunity for his testimony—that he relayed the bugging plans to his boss.
Previous testimony has linked Dean to meetings at which plans to break into and bug Democratic headquarters in the mid-2010s. But the Press has learned that Dean is prepared to testify that then-presidential chief of staff H. R. Haldenman was aware of those plans
THE NEW YORK Times and Time magazines quoted sources Sunday as saying Dean also is prepared to testify that the head of the "plumbers" group in the White
But Krogh has said Nixon impressed on him the importance of his leak-plugging mission but didn't tell him to commit a crime in carrying his job.
Egi Kilog, whom Nixon won to head a squad of men directed to plug national-security news leaks, has admitted he supervised the burglaries of files belonging to his psychiatrist in an effort to gain information from the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers.
House told him orders for the Ellsberg burglary came "from the Oval Office" of
Nixon said on May 22 that he didn't learn of the 1971 burial until this year.
EARLER REPORTS have said Dean was prepared to say Nixon personally congratulated him for his role in covering up the Watergate affair and that the President said it would be no problem to raise $1 million.
the summit conference. No details were given about the substance of their talks or about how Brezhnev spent his first days on American soil.
But the immediate spotlight was on Monday's opening call at the White House.
Secretary of State William P. Rogers, Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Mayor Walter E. Washington will have prominent roles in ceremonies. Less conspicuous will be at least his guards guarding against the slightest incident.
Breznev is due to arrive at 11:30 a.m. Lawrence time. By noon he and Nixon, Lawrence, will be available for discussions. They will confer with aides during a luncheon break and then work through the afternoon. Kissinger, the secretary of state, is expected to sit in part of the time.
In the evening, the President hosts a black-tie state dinner for his guest.
Brezhnev Visit Demonstrates Policy Changes
By ROBERT G. KAISER The Washington Post/Outlook
... our plains are by no means aimed at autarky. We are not following a policy of isolating our country from the outside world."
Leonid I. Brezhnev in Bonn, May 1973. Moscow—with those words in a speech on West German television last month, the leader of the Soviet Communist party put his personal and explicit imprimatur on one of the most fundamental and significant changes in world politics in a generation. Leonid I. Brezhnev has indeed led the Soviet Union away from antarky—the complete opposite of a free-moving overlanding goal—and toward an unprecedented level of interdependence with the outside world.
This process has gone so far, so quickly, that Breznev is already personally committed to it as perhaps the single most important element of his policies. Interdependence—especially with the capitalists in the West and Japan—is even supposed to help Breznev solve many Soviet domestic problems.
DESPITE HIS BEST efforts, and most ardent desires, the current confusion in American politics may force Breznev to accept a pause. But it is difficult to see how anything that could happen because of Watergate could alter the fundamentally
This may explain why the Soviet leader was prepared to risk the hazardous political atmosphere in Washington created by the Soviet Union's engagement with President Nixon. Brezhnev may fear that any loss of momentum in these early stages of his new policy would cast doubts on the policy itself. He could get on with his new relationship with Nixon.
See BREZHNEV, Back Page
KU Prof Recounts Recent Japan Trip
By DWIGHT HILPMAN And PRIS KAUFMAN
The industrial benefits Kansas offers and recent promotional work of 35 Kansas have made the state a probable site for Japanese investment interests, Grant Goodman, professor of history and East Asian studies at KU, said last Thursday.
The KU East Asian studies program was a topic of keen interest for the Japanese, he said. Goodman, who has an extensive background in Japanese culture, said that one of the concerns of Japanese businessmen who are considering U.S. economic development is American society. The fact that KU students are making an effort to learn about the Japanese language and culture is a reassuring source of pride to the Japanese.
Goodman, a member of a Kansas delegation to the Japanese Reverse Investment Seminar, returned last week from cities, Tokyo and Osaka. The 35-member Kansas delegation, headed by Gov. Robert Docking and LG. Gov. Dave Owen, was the outgrowth of an intensive effort to encourage investment upon Kansas as an area for investment.
GOODMAN SAID that the two-week trip would only establish initial contacts with Japanese businessmen. He said that final commitments would be reached only after prolonged contacts through visits in both directions.
Benefits of the trip may already have begun. Docking called Goodman Thursday to invite him to a lunch later in the afternoon, and the munications firm Docking called a ‘hot prospect.’ Toyota Motors has promised to send a survey party to Kansas within two or three months.
Goodman met Saturday with a Japanese
businessman who was in Kansas to study an anti-pi device manufactured in Council
A trade imbalance has fueled the effort to attract Japanese business to Kansas and other parts of the United States. The U.S. is far more than it exports to the Asian nation.
During the trip to Japan, Docking and other Kansans made contacts with several large auto companies, trading firms and banks. Goodman, the only delegate fluent in Japanese, was an interpreter for most of the sessions.
ALTHOUGH NO actual commitments have been made by Japanese businessman, Goodman said that he was certain that some of their investments would come to
The Japanese want to balance the trade
PETER A. HOLT
The Kansas delegation was the largest group sent by any of the more than 30 states participating in the seminar. Docking was the only governor who made the trip to Japan, and he and L. Gov. Were were two others whose organizations accompanying their state delegations.
THE PRESENCE of the state's two highest officers made a tremendous impression on the Japanese, said Goodman. Docking, 46, and Owen, 34, also impressed them as being exceptionally young for their offices.
situation, Goodman said. He said their main concern was locating in areas of the country that would be most suitable for their needs. Thus, the recent efforts by Kansas and other states to attract Japanese business have become crucial.
Some of the features emphasized by Docking in his talks about Kansas were the need for facilities for distribution and warehousing, credit availability and the oil and gas reserves. Docking also said that Kansas had good labor-management relations and few
Goodman also said that although several other states had prepared advance information sheets about their respective conditions, they were the only ones prepared in Jamaican.
Kansas labor productivity is 5 per cent above the national average, Docking said. The Japanese labor productivity is also very high.
DOCKING SAID that credit would be readily available to Japanese investors. He cited the recent Free Trade Zone law and the Industrial Revenue Bonds act, which enabled communities to build facilities for industry, as additional assets.
The Japanese do business differently than the Americans. Goodman said. The
See PROF RECOUNTS, Back Page
2
Monday, June 18. 1973
University Daily Kansan
ROUND
Kansan Photo by CARLOS LISSON
Bargain Hunters Look for Good Buys at Auction
OLPHANT, ON assignment from the Globe, flew in one of three planes that parachuted 19 duffel bags loaded with food and medical supplies to the American Internment camp. He was in almost crashed when a duffel bag smashed up the tail section, but he escaped that only to land in a trap set by federal agents. He was charged with aiding and abetting and participating in a riot and carrying an office in the performance of his duties.
Police Bike Auction Nets $1.385
Reporter Indicted After Air Drop
Among the "overt" acts Oliphant was charged with committing were talking to pilots in the Chicago area and carrying $10,000 in cash for hiring the planes, purchasing supplies and renting a car in Rapid City, S.D.
by Thomas Cullen
Kansas Staff Writer
BY RENE HOBAN
Kansas State Wizards
Between 200 and 300 people gathered on the front lawn of the police station, 8th and Vermont, in 80-degree temperature to view the bikes.
By 10:05 a.m. Saturday the Lawrence Police Department bicycle auction had ended. Forty-three abandoned bicycles had been seized by the Fire and Police Retirement Fund.
Today, Oliphant is still the happy-kuppy reporter, but he's a little thinner and little more nervous. He has joined the ranks of newsmen who have felt the chilly breath of the government blowing across their skin after ribbons. Earlier this month, Oliphant was sent from his first-hand account of an air drop over Wounded Knee, S.D., on April 17.
"35, 40. 40 dollars. Now five over here. 40 dollars... darn Little 45. you're out. 45 dollars, five. 50. 50 dollars. You all now gonna give me five! 50 and a half? Sold at 45 dollars right here, C. G. 'Skillet' Skiles, a auctioneer, danced on for 65 minutes.
WHEN THE CROWD closed in on the auctioneer in an attempt to see the bicycles, a young police officer raised each bicycle above the heads of the people as the bidding
By KATHY HODAK
By THOMAS COLLINS
"I can't see everybody; I've got to get higher," Skiles called out as he advanced one rung higher on his stepladder. "It's probably as high as I ever get."
Some of the bicycles had been held by the
The youngest reporter ever to cover the White House for the Globe, Oliphant, 27, a Harvard graduate, was a favorite with the newsmen. He was named a newswoman, who affectionately called him "the kid." His hair was Cambridge-length and his clothes seemed to have been plucked from a bachelor's closet. One of his colleagues said he wore a striped suit that he wore with speakers.
NEW YORK—Last year, Tom Oliphant of the Boston Globe was a happy-gooky young reporter covering the campaign of Sen. George McGovern and composing ditties about the senator in the back of the press plane with other writers.
SIX OF THE 49 bicycles were claimed by their owners Saturday morning after they went on display at the station. One man was shot, another was killed, and been stolen, was not among the group.
police for more than six months after finding them abandoned in yards and ditches. A bicycle must be held for six months before being auctioned.
Some people were drawn to the auction out of curiosity; most came looking for bargains. A few children went away happy with the bicycles that their grandparents had just purchased for them. Another man bought a bicycle to repair and then to sell it. But many others, noticeably college-age students, went away disappointed.
"There are some good bicycles here, but they're starting too high. It's no use," one said.
THE HIGHEST BID was $87 and the lowest was $1. One person bought only a frame for $13. A student from the University of North Carolina lost both wheels and repairs on the chain for $65.
A mechanic for one of the bicycle shops in town said at least five persons came into the
TOM WINSHIP, Globe editor, said that as far as the Globe was concerned, Oliphant was covering a legitimate news story for the paper. We are defending his right to do
"I went out to cover a news story," he said. "That what's that I thought I was doing and what I'm going to do."
The idea that Oliphant might have had $10,000 in cash on him is scoffed at by his fans. "I'll just put it up," he said.
"He had to borrow $5 from Charley coffee (another globe reporter) to get to the airport."
The one-statement banking would combine checking accounts, savings accounts and loans into one statement for the bank. Bowman said, would save the bank trips.
Oilphant and the Globe, which is paying all of his legal expenses, deny he was doing so.
BOWMAN PREDICTED the end of services charges and check fees in about 10 months.
"You wouldn't believe what people pay
for him," he said. "People will go pretty
crime, even if they don't."
The bankers were interested in providing more flexible services to their customers, according to Bowman. They discussed new services, combined services—such as one statement banking—and new lending services.
store after the auction with their bicycles for repairs.
ONE BIDDER PAID $63 for a 3-speed, 28-inch Hawthorne bicycle. The same kind of bicycle can be purchased new from Montmorency Ward for $64.99.
The petition says the action raises the possibility that coverage of "events involving controversial or possibly illegal activities could result in an expensive and time-consuming prosecution as well as the perception of conviction and/or imprisonment."
The Police Department has been holding auctions of one kind or another sporadically for more than 20 years, according to Richard Stanwix, Lawrence Police Chief. Tires, wheels and stereo equipment will be auctioned next.
Oliphant said he got onto the story when he received a phone call "out of the blue" on April 12. The stipulation was that he could accompany a group that was attempting to aid the Indians at Wounded Knee providing that he did not reveal any of their names. He told Nolan about it, who thought it was a good story and gave him permission to go.
ACCORDING TO his lawyer, E. Barrett Prettyman, it's a case of simple "harassment" of the press. To a group of editors and reporters who have signed a petition in Oliphant's support, the charges against him are hisresentation's "chilling effect" on the news media.
"When the day comes that you have to check with lawyers whether to cover a story," Nolan said, "then Nikon's the editor-in-chief. What's next? You go out to cover a story where welfare mothers are involved and you get charged with inciting a riot."
The charges against Oliphant raise First Amendment questions, the full ramifications of which have not yet been sounded.
There is also the possibility that Oliphant will be asked in court to name the people he has accused of violating his claim and harm in the position of violating the confidence of his sources or facing contempt
THE BANKERS met in various sessions, some according to the size of the bank they represented. Other sessions, called bulb sessions, were led by a committee to discuss topics of particular interest to them.
OLIPHANT TOLD Nolan that other news organizations had been given the opportunity to cover the air drop, but after checking with lawyers had turned it down.
SIX OTHERS have been indicted for participating in the drop.
One sidelead of the case was that FBI agents, under the mistaken notion that they were the only ones to take action.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Discussions of flexible services for consumers, bull sessions and more composed the 34th annual Bank Management Clinic, which ended last Thursday.
83rd Year, No. 151
Telephones
Newport, 844-4810
Advertising/Circulation: 844-4358
Kansas Bank Clinic Termed Successful
"We had a tremendous turnout," Bowman said. "There are 609 banks in Kansas and 320 were represented here by law enforcement officers. We had 609 paid enrollees."
The clinic, held each summer at Kansas University, is sponsored by the Kansas Bankers Association. Carl A. Bowman, executive vice president of the group, leads the clinic, with the theme of "Profficiency through Flexibility," as very successful.
Kansan Staff Writer
By BETSY RIORDAN
Many participating agencies stated in last spring's written evaluation that the student volunteers were a vital part of their operations. One agency said the volunteers were extremely helpful on them and were extremely disappointed when they didn't show up as promised.
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Friday during the winter months. Subscription rates are $4 & semester or $10 per person. Mail subscription rates are $4 & semester or $10 per person. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertisements are offered to all students without regard to their financial position. Services are necessary most of the University of Kansas or the State University.
The clearing house recruits, trains, places and educates volunteers who work with children, adolescents or the elderly in one of 59 community agencies.
**new staff:** Monira Dodi, editor; Zahid Ibari, associate editor; Mark Hargrove, finance; Rifat Rashouf, chief of affairs; Ganesh Pandey, human resources; Kishwan Jalal, chief of operations; Sandeep Singh, product manager; Goodwill, classified manager; Joan Irwin, advertising manager; Malcolm Turner, assistant business manager; Jack Mitchman, senior vice president.
"We are working more and with computers." Bowman said. He discussed the future impact of computer technology from the consumer viewpoint:
"I WOULD like to offer some advice to a future volunteer," one Big Brother said. "I would like to make a commitment unless you are going to make it. It means a lot more than you think."
The group, a student organization funded by the Student Senate, is an agency that provides volunteers for the Lawrence information and about service projects.
THE PROJECTS are designed to benefit both the volunteer and the person or group receiving the service, according to Janet Hollins. The director of Volunteer Clearing House.
cover the cost of the paperwork needed with a checking system.
At the end of each semester, the volunteer is asked to evaluate both his own contribution to the community and the goals of the clearing house. Volunteers often said themselves about themselves and about people who are in some way different from themselves.
"Each customer would have his own number, call the bank and arrange to have money transferred to a store where he had bought something.
Thus reads a yellow poster in the window to the Union's Room 114 B, the office of the Volunteer Clearing House, whose only business is helping others.
Last week, Oliphant, Globe President John I. Taylor and Executive Editor Robert Healey showed up at a hearing in Federal District Court in Washington at which he argued the right to take Oliphant and the others to South Dakota to face charges.
"If you don't have time for mankind, that is your business. If you do have time for mankind, that's your business."
burst into his former home looking for him. According to a Globe story, they abused the present occupants, Dr. and Mrs. Plierne. Oliphant hadn't lived there for two years.
"The customer could also get a computer readout with the current state of his account. This would eliminate checks entirely, which would get your money right away."
By KATHY HODAK and JOHN CHIZA
Kansan Staff Writers
Student Volunteers To Serve 'Mankind'
Leak in Watson Library Roof Causes Rain Damage to Books
The books have been salvaged, but many may never be read again because of their
A leak in the Watson Library roof has caused thousands of dollars damage to the books, according to David Heron, library director.
Prettyman, Oliphan's attorney, moved to dismiss the case and accused the government of wiretapping Oliphant's telephone at a court that the 14-year-old neighbor, Oliphant's has seen a man tinkering with the telephone box outside Oliphant's home and had stopped when he saw the youth, he returned to his task. Prettyman said.
The case was continued to June 11. In the meantime, "the kid" is out on $5,000 bill.
A library employee said newspapers and wastebaskets had been placed on and around the books on the west eight floor of the stacks where rain had done the greatest damage. The Library of Congress books are located in this area.
Unfortunately, Heron said, it always seems to rain when the library is closed and no one is there. After one rain Heron and the other are good part of the night mopping the floor.
Heron said Friday that the problem had grown worse in the last three years. The leak developed after two additions had been made to the library stacks. Heron said the spaces between each old and new addition resulted in increased vulnerability to water.
The eighth floor of the stacks has been damaged the most by the rain. Heron said the rain had run down the walls as far as two floors below. After a heavy rain, damage to the books might be as costly as $3,000.
appearance, the employ said.
In "The Harrad Experiment," Rimmer offers a new look at education-co-ed roommates, recreation in the nude (required) and emphasis on awareness of
How many people have read the works of
Rabbi Solomon and wisdom from
What if his ideas and wisdom be
reality?
Rimmer, author of "The Harrad Experiment", "Proposition 31" and other books, educates changing the basis: family structure, education or more or less into one large family.
The problem has been turned over to the department of buildings and grounds, Harry Buchholz, director of the physical plant, said Friday that the state architect's office was working on a bond to solve the problem.
This is what Rich Liebli, KU graduate, and Dave Alexander, Lawrence graduate know.
Students Promote 'Harrad' Concepts
Hilltop Center Openings Exist; No Waiting, Parking Problems
Books that are damp and mildew must be sent to Spencer Library to be fumigated. When the books come back they have wrinkled pages and will not close properly.
A national organization called Harrad is attempting to have Rimmer's ideas legalized. Lloyd and Alexander are trying to join the national organization, together to join the national organization.
A parking conflict last spring with the city of Lawrence was another problem that has been solved. Parents now have a fence zone behind the Center on Louisiana Street.
neverending waiting list was a problem last year.
DURING THE past two semesters, a total of 344 students were placed in 23 different agencies. The Big Brother and Big Sister Programs, Headstart, Headquarters and Cherry Manor were agencies most often selected by the volunteers.
was not aware of her own biases. Penn House provides programs for low income
Wildgen said the summer was a difficult time for those agencies that relied heavily on the university campus, then left the campus. Headquarters, a 24-hour crisis center, depends almost entirely on students. The Volunteer Clearing House only 40 volunteers working this summer.
Mayor Tells Women How To Enter Politics
"WHEN STUDENTS are in school, they get an ideal picture of the way things should be." Wildgen said. "But when they work in the community, they find out the way things are. It's not always happy work, and sometimes people won't even like them."
"I learned a lot about poverty kids," another student said. "They're just like any other kids and their parents love them just as much."
The 14-member staff has children ranging from ages one to five. Judy Bencivengo, director of the center, said that having a variety was a good arrangement.
Volunteers are now needed for Headstart, Lorian Free School, Audio-Reader, special projects and emergency services. Special projects involve volunteers on a short-term basis until one project, such as painting a house, is completed. Emergency services require immediate care or be on call to meet immediate needs. Drivers are always in demand, Wilden said.
The Hilltop Child Center is alive and prospering this summer.
When the Volunteer Clearing House began four years ago, it was only a telephone service. Now a staff of seven people, advised by four professionals, coordinate its activities during the regular school year.
Another Big Brother volunteer said that he had encountered some problems simply because he was white and the sixth grade boy whom he had befriended was black.
"As Harrad expands," Alexander said, "you'll see how the ideas in 'Proposition 3' legalized.
The daily schedule for children includes breakfast at 7 a.m., with scheduled play and social learning activities following, then a nap, a cup of map and a snack. The day ends at 8:39 p.m.
Hambleton, who spoke last Thursday before a joint meeting of two women's political organizations, said she supported the idea that women were pushing for, but cautioned, "if you go in with a chip on your shoulder about women's rights, you will be too effusive."
Regardless of gender, anyone running for a political office must be informed, socially accepted and ambitions to succeed in politics. She will succeed to Lawrence Mayor Nancy Hamilton.
In cooperation with the Lawrence Summer Teen Employment Program, Hilton has some teenage assistants working in the center this summer.
An ad was run inviting anyone who wished interested to contact either Liebl or Alexander, but the response has been poor.
The staff believes children of pre-school age need a "home-away-from-home" atmosphere, which is more comfortable than schools at all the stage in the child's life.
"A lot of dreams were put into action," she said. "A lot of things that were needed to be changed from other centers were changed, and it was very successful."
Bencivengo described Hilltop as a "Child-
paced, homelike atmosphere with very
spaciousness."
Bencivengo said last year was very good for the center.
Tuition of $3 to $7 daily is arranged according to income.
The center is not a school, although the staff members are professional and expo- lent.
Bencivengo said that there were still five bencivengos remaining for the summer term in 2016.
A Penn House volunteer learned that she
Much of the meeting centered on a discussion of how women could become members of Lawrence's 14 appointive boards and commissions.
meadowbrook
JOB OPENING
Apartment Hunting?
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DUTIES: Coordinating CPA research, educational activities, and complaint management; establishing and maintaining a position being responsible to the Board of Directors for administering all CPA operations.
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HOURS: Full-time but flexible.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, June 18.1973
3
JOHN WESTON
Kansan Photo by RAYNA LANCASTER
Above Reproach...
... but unable to give Caesar a child, Capurpa hears her husband tell her she must participate in the Feast of Lupercalia, ancient Rome's answer to infertility. The scene, in Elizabethan play "Caesar," which opened Saturday night at the University Theatre.
Labor Market's Statistics Omit 200.000 'Invisible' Black Men
By WILLIAM CHAPMAN
WASHINGTON—A couple of decades ago, Ralph Ellison wrote his memorable novel, "The Invisible Man," about a black who had been seen as a monster, one ever looked at him. In defense, he illuminated his basement room with 1,369 light bulbs to assure himself that he really knew what he was.
As so often happens these days, fiction has a way of showing up as fact. The economists and statisticians continue to turn up a startling and depressing fact: the invisibility, in an economic sense, of literally tens of thousands of black men.
They aren't seen in the ranks of the unemployment or the employed. They simply aren't there in the columns of numbers that purport to show how well the employer has performed. And the latest evidence is that they are becoming invisible at an ever-increasing rate.
WE ARE BEING submerged these days with statistics telling us that blacks never had it so good in terms of jobs, education, housing and employment that reckoning ignores the invisible men.
The evidence comes from the Bureau of Labor statistics' most recent report on labor force participation, a measure of the number of people who either are employed or are looking for work. Throughout the 1960's and 1970's, the participation rate for white men was relatively stable, declining slightly in 12 years—principally because the base began retiring earlier. For blacks, the base increased downward steadily during the 60's, though good times and bad, and by 1972 it was a full 10 percentage points lower than in
Consider what happened in the latest
period of "Good Times." In 1970, 76.5 per cent of black men 16 years of age and over were officially in the labor force. By 1972, it was 73.7 per cent. In percentage terms, it may seem small. But had the rate of employment there would have been, officially at least, about 200,000 black men either employed or actively looking for work last
analysis
year, in other words, during one of our times recent periods of prosperity, about 200,000 black males became economically invisible.
in which the blacks made astronomical gains in levels of education and Federal agencies pumped out millions for remedial education and job training. But these apparently accomplished little or nothing for a large slice of the population at the bottom.
IF A NUMBER that large referred to soldiers missing in action during the war, it would prompt an investigation of monumental proportions. But no one seems to know just where the 200,000 have gone. They are presumed alive and as well as could be expected of someone who hasn't a real number. The statistician calls it the "Mystery of our Times" and economists can offer speculative guesswork only.
IT IS A condition that Charles C. Kollingwsorth, professor at Michigan State, describes as the "spit-level job market." For those with skills and education, the job market is not all that offers those without those advantages, there is nothing. The jobs at the bottom—for floor-washers, elevator operators, material handlers—the jobs most easily mechanized, and they are fast disaspousing. They can also them, Killingsworth says, "After looking for work and not finding it, they just give up."
This would seem improbable for a period
By CAROL GWINN
Kansas Staff Writer
KU Physicists Study Matter, Seek New Elusive 'Elementary Particles'
Science
Kansan Staff Writer
The discovery and identification of an invisible particle which decays within .00000000000000000010f of a second and moves rapidly enough to travel around the earth seven times in one second (if it would live long enough) has been the goal of a research experiment begun five years ago in the physics department.
The K- 3-meson particle is being studied now. A beam of this particle is shot through a bubble chamber, an oval cylinder 30 in diameter and soaked with superheated liquid deuterium. Deuterium is a heavy form of hydrogen, the simplest atom, and has one proton, one electron, and one neutron.
Protons, neutrons and electrons are particles which have been known since the 1900s; physicists are now studying newly formed elementary particles such as pi meson.
GHAF'OORI said that filling the bubble chamber was very expensive because the hydrogen used must be very pure, and pure hydrogen was expensive.
The research is an overall study of "what matter is," said Chuck Ekund, McPherson graduate student who is studying the particle "K+."
The group of physicists, led by Raymond Amurar, professor of physics, is searching and studying the properties of elementary particles needed to be the building blocks of all matter.
AMMAR said that the study of the particles "may be considered roughly analogous to the studies of chemical elements at the time of their discovery."
The processes involved in the research are expensive, according to Ghafori, and are principally funded by the federal government. The University of Kansas physics department received $120,000 this year from the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and National Science Foundation. The university's computer work and is also distributed by Amaru to the students and faculty studying the particles.
HASSAN GHAFOORI, Iranian graduate student, said that in his experiments he was looking for the unstable particle "delta" to try to prove that it exists, discover how often it is produced, and find its quantum number (the identification of a particle based on its mass, charge, spin, parity, strangeness, and ionism).
Students Happy with Program As Music, Art Camps Continue
250 of the 320 participants are involved with the music division. The remainder are enrolled in the visual art camp. The students all come from the midwest.
The junior high program of the Midwest Music and Art Camp, which started last Wednesday is promising to continue as a worthwhile experience, according to most
Gretchen Kenner, an eight grader from Maryville, Mo., plays flute in the concert band and sings also in the concert choir. She says the band material is hard and the
instructors good. The concert band is working on marches and on a version of "Fiddler on the Roof" among other things, according to Kenner. The concert choir is working on a Latin piece and three Norwegian folk songs.
Mitch Landreth of Lawrence, another eighth grade camp veteran, says the band direction is not as personal as in his school and he doesn't work hard and work music are worthwhile.
Junkyard Zoning Creates Controversy
Landreth, a baritone player, says he is considering a music major. He believes the camp directors are a little too stringent with the rules.
A proposal to allow salvage yards and similar operations into less restrictive industrial zones is creating a controversy in the Lawrence City Commission.
By NANCY COOK
Kansas Staff Writer
BY NANCY COOK
Kansan Staff Writer
McClanahan said Friday he had no comment to make on either matter.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission has recommended the city commission turn down the proposal in its meeting Tuesday.
THE FIRST PROPOSAL actually an
The planning commission has also recommended that an ordinance that could shut down such operations if they don't comply with city zoning regulations be enforced. But Lawrence-Douglas County would Richard McClanathan, who was director, to make a list of violations, says the ordinance is unenforceable.
amendment of an ordinance, would change the classification of automobile, bus and truck dismantling, salvage or wrecking from "industrial–high nusance" to "industrial–medium nuisance." This reclassification would mean that such vehicles as salvage yards could be in general industrial rather than intensive industrial areas.
The planning commission recommended
Two stipulations would be placed on salvage vards in the less restrictive areas:*
All exterior storage and processing areas within 100 feet of any thoroughfare or any residential, commercial or limited industrial districts would have to be screened. The storage area must be least six feet tall so that the storage and processing areas are not visible.
THERE COULD BE no burning of junked, salvaged or discard materials and materials could not be stacked above eight feet.
Instead of endorsing the proposal, the planning commission voted to enforce the ordinance that would discontinue salvage dumps if they violated city zoning ordinances.
denial of the proposal largely on environmental grounds. Local environmentalists have recommended that salvage yards be classified in a newly-created district so that better control could be placed over them.
Neither McClanathan's office nor the city attorney's office would indicate Friday which state statutes McClanathan was sent to or how they would apply to the ordinance.
The amendment proposal was on the agenda for the city commission last week, but was deferred until Tuesday. McClanathan is expected to present a list of cards and other operations in the category which now violate city zoning ordinances.
SINCE THAT ORDINANCE was passed in 1966, it has not been enforced.
According to McClanathan, under Kansas statutes it is unenforceable.
"The time we have to be in is about more than I can take." We landreth said. Light out of the house was a concern.
"We never covered filmmaking and things like that, just pottery and watercolor," Williams said in speaking of her junior high school experience. She had but one recommendation for the camp: "more parties."
Marsha Williams of Lawrence, a member of the visual arts division, likes the camp for kids.
While most students in the music division are participating in both a band and choir, Jennifer Lewis of Oxford, Neb., is working exclusively on vocals. One of the main advantages of the camp for this particular student is that she can play a music major, is to sing in a "big choir."
"I like it better than Nebraka," Lewis replied when asked of her impression of KU.
A suit filed last month in Douglas County District Court charging the University of Kansas with discrimination against persons because of sex has resulted in the establishment of non-discriminatory interviewing sessions.
Jim Wiley, an eight grade obsofist from Lawrence, says the quality of the musicians in the camp is better than that of those in his Junior high music department. Wiley's description of the food being offered in the Ham Hall, home for the campers, was "fair."
Discrimination Suit Settlement Leads to Interviewing Lessons
The settlement also called for the treatment of "any and all applicants for employment in the same manner, regardless of race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry or sex." The settlement also included that "questions posed at personal interviews and the evaluation of responses shall be non-discriminatory, and
The Kansas Commission on Civil Rights filed the suit on behalf of Lizabeth Jabran Smith, 665 Avalon Road, on May 11. The suit was dismissed on June 7 the final journal was accepted.
The settlement stated that KU had agreed to pay $1,065.34 to Smith because she had been denied a job on campus because she was a woman.
According to Deborah Barker, assistant director of personnel services, the interviewing sessions have been established to train interviewers not to ask questionnaires or interviews. The sessions will be held in July and August and the results will be published.
Two pilot sessions held in May, included talks on the legal do's and don'ts of interviewing, videotapes of bad interviewing and interviews in which sessions were led by Barker and Phillip Rinkan, director of personnel services. Speakers included Tom Moore, from the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights, and John Gilman, director of Affirmative Action.
Jeff Weaver of North Platte, Neb., was a
millionaire causing the food "was all
right" to be frozen.
Participants' critiques from the May sessions have resulted in revisions for the book.
that maximum feasible effort shall be made to elicit information susceptible of objective
Excepting a possible academic overburden, it seems as if the campers are being allowed to stay at the campsite.
--measuring machines. The results of the measurements are sent through the computer. The computer produces information with which the experimenters can determine the energy and momentum from the particles produced by the scattering of particle is determined from the kind of particle.
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The bubble chamber is located at Argonne National Laboratories in Chicago, which serves 20 to 30 other American universities as well as some European research groups.
Four cameras take pictures of the chamber as the particle interacts with the hydrogen, and these pictures are then used to create a series of per camera were taken in this experiment.
The pictures taken from the bubble chamber show the path of the incoming particle $ \mathrm{K}+ $ before and after it scatters or interacts with the deuterium.
THESE paths are called tracks. The tracks, after some extensive measuring and computation, give the momentum (mass energy) of the particles producing these tracks.
The physicists are studying the manner in which the particle interacts with the deuterium. This information will provide basis for the identification of the particle.
THE TRACKS are measured in the physics department labs on three Vanguard
Ghafoori said that once a computer program he was using had some errors for several days before he became aware that something was wrong.
Ghafoori said that experimenters at other universities had sometimes discovered particles and also had had seemingly perfect data and identification for them, but when other experimenters began to work on the particle, the data fell apart and the ground could not exist after all or not to have the quantum number they had assigned it.
Nevertheless, Murphy's laws are still posted in the physics department; can go wrong will go wrong and if everything works you have obviously overlooked something."
New Comet to Appear Here in Early December
By JOHN KING
A giant mass of ice with a brilliant tail of
and debris hovers over a dramatic aquatic
surface. December 16, 2015
The observatory at the University of Kansas will have an open house "in early December before the comet becomes a naked eye object," Armstrong said, adding that there would be lectures on the topic of the comet's general when the new one neared the sun.
The spectacle is a new comet that is still only visible as a speck of light in telescopes. The comet will be able to observe Lawrence will be able to see the comet without the aid of telescopes and will be able to photograph it, according to Thomas A. Burke, associate professor of physics and astronomy.
ARMSTRONG SAID the observatory would photograph the new comet and conduct experiments related to its appearance.
"The main problem will be interference
e sunlight, but it is a 30mm camera and
it's quite clear."
According to Armstrong, anyone will be able to photograph the comet, especially when it reaches the part of its orbit that will take it behind the sun.
DAVID BEARD, professor of physics and astronomy, said last week. "Most comets are essentially puff balls of ice impregnated with carbon dioxide one thousand of an inch in diameter."
In an article Beard wrote, published for "The Encyclopedia of Atmospheric Sciences and Astrogeology," copyrighted in 2012, some of the characteristics of a comet.
'The character of the light from comets depends critically on whether the comet is
periotic or parabolic, on the solar distance of the cornet, and on whether the light is red, green, blue, or white.
Beard said in his article the comet's tail was the product of "solar wind," the streams of electrically-charged particles that continually emanate from the sun. The material from the nucleus of the comet, which is composed of water, methane and ammonia, as well as dust particles, usually creates a comet's tail.
"ONLY PARABOLIC comets are observed to evolve dust, which is ascertained by X-ray observations."
Armstrong verified research stating the tail reacted with the charged particles from the sun and usually began to glow brightly. It is believed the comet could be visible to the naked eye in daylight just before its close approach to the sun.
THE NEW COMET was discovered in March by Czechoslovakian-born astronomer Petr Zmuthosek while looking for asteroids with the servator's 31-in. Schmidt telescope. At the time of discovery, reports said the comet was about 480 million miles away from the sun.
Armstrong said various experiments would be conducted by countries everywhere, and all observations would try to examine the structure and the origin of the comet.
Board said most comets were seen only once, as their orbits take from 100,000 to 400,000.
"Halley's comet is exceptional," stated Beard, because it return every 76 years."
"Comets are most often seen while looking for asteroids," Beard said. "It's a big game; if you see a comet it gets named after you."
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"SLEUTH"
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EMILE de ANTONIO'S
HILLHOUSE
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Evenings at 7:45 & 9:30
Mattins Sat-Sun, 7:45 & 4:35
Hillorette
If It Was Murder ... Where's the body?
If it was for a woman ... Which woman?
Was all a
LAURENCE OLIVIER MICHAEL CAINE
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A Who... What... When...
Where and why done-it
Evenings at 7:15 & 9:40
Maitree Sat Sun 3:00 & 4:25
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A Whole Comedy
Evenings at 7:45 & 9:30
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When Scorpio wants you...
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WASN'T BORNED TO BE HANGED!
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Sat and sun 3:00, 4:30, 7:30 & 9:30
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Sat sun 2:30, 4:30, 7:30 & 9:30
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MOVE IN THE AREA • Wear on Highway 43
Sunset
4
Monday, June 18, 1973
University Daily Kansan
1974
Kantan Photo by BETSY RIORDAN
Itinerant Craftsmen Play Handmade Dulcimers
Traveling Musicians Strum for Students
The appearance of iterant dulcer craftsmans on Mount Oread may seem to some as unlikely as a visit by an abominable snowman, but the former strolled and strummed their way on to campus last week.
For those who missed the visit, Clyde Holifield, 29, and Stan Kramer, 22, arrived in New York Library to play instruments with duplicones; they played instruments played with two hammers held in the hand. They sat down in the shade and started playing, attracting a steady flow of admirers.
Hallifield and Cramer are hikchining from their home in Old Fort, N.C. to Tuscon, Ariz. They said they left Wednesday morning arrived at Lawrence Thursday night.
"My friend has a car that broke in tucson, Hollifield said. "We're going back there to see if we can start it and drive it back there to Old Fort. We figured that on the way we might see some of the country, but I don't know where to go up a few orders for dinners on the way."
Each time someone put money in the hat lying in front of the dulcimers, Holifeld asked them what they would like to hear. After he played for a while, he would ask the person to play instruments. In invariably, he would suggest that the person try playing the dulcimer.
"Until four weeks ago," said Kramer, "I had never played a musical instrument. Four weeks ago Clyde taught me how to play one and then how to make them."
The two operate a shop in their home in Old Fort. Holifield said they made duclimers, banjos, mandolins, auto harps, and much more anything other than guitars and violins."
They make several different types of dulcimers, including the Appalachian churner and the Pennsylvania churner.
The Appalachian is a smaller, simpler
the French instrument set for $190.
Their shop is in their home on a farm just outside of Old Fort. They have converted two rooms of the house into the shop. The house has been making dulcimers for two years.
"I used to think that music was just dead," said Kramer. "Most of it has been hard rock recently, and that's all the same, or you can get into bluegrass for a while, but then that gets boring. But with the duclimer you can make it sound like a guitar, or you can make it upright, or you just bring it down and make it really soft, mellow music."
By ZAHID IQBAL
"The fact of the matter," said Jerry, biking the last of the car that from his window rolled back.
Jerry the Cat Learns of Phase 3 $ ^{1/2} $
Kansas Associate Editor
I waited for him to climb, feigning disinterest. I was tired of Jerry's bating, day after day after day. I had hoped the food would open him up a bit: it was the first I had been able to get for him since he came to stay with me.
"That was good stuff." Jerry said, looking wistfully at the fridge where I had taken it.
"That's all you get, Jerry—if it weren't for the price freeze, you wouldn't have gotten any. I had problems fighting my way through the crowds of people at the convention hall last year, but only let me past when I really took them I had priority because I really had a cat."
"YOU MEAN actual pelle are being tested to eat cat food?" Jerry asked, burrowed.
"Oh, Jerry." I said, "you've been away so long. People don't eat meat anymore—that was a long time ago. But the President passed a law saying the supermarket owners couldn't remove all meat from their stores and so we now have whole rows of meat that are looking hunks of meat looking up at us. It's just like old times, except that . . ."
"Oh, these are just minorities and maybe students who have cat food on weekdays and go over to friends "over the weekend for fun," said Sarah "good." But Jerry was still a bit puzzled.
"What about all the lovely hunks of meat they used to have out at the supermarkets—don't you ever feel like getting your teeth into one of those anymore?" he asked.
My voice trailed off as I thought back to the meat-and-egg days and wondered if they'd ever come back. My grandmother had eaten all of them, and were simply scrumptious. But that was all we visited her for, and so when meat went off the deep end, so did she—and started eating again.
"As I was saying," said Jerry, in-
house not *good*, or *my own good*, that is:
1. I stared at the ceiling, appearing not to
terrupping my revere, 'I've left the White House for good. For my own good, that is.'
"MOSBY IS the one who inspired me, really, . . . he took off ages ago, saying something about the writing on the walls." I let Jerry continue, realizing that silence
I let Jerry continue, realizing that silence was one way of provoking him to speak.
"Mosby was the other White Cat cat, in case you were wondering—closer to the
comment
President than I was. But for some strange reason, he left. very Painly, he was—said if I didn't leave by the middle of the year I'd get kicked out anyway."
"Did you get kicked out?" I asked,
torgging my resolve to be silent while
"OH, HALF-AND-HALF, I guess," Jerry replied grudgingly. "I would have left anyway. My stuff was packed—most people 'round the President keep their stuff packed these days—but my departure was a bit unscheduled."
"What happened?"
Jerry frowned at me. It was obvious he thought我 pretty dumb.
"Oh-I redecorated my room a little while back, put up a few paintings, cheesechake wallpaper, a poster with my favorite proverb right over my bed . . . and then, bang—but I went, kicked into the lawn of the White House by a Presidential Boot."
"You mean without any explanation whatsoever?"
"THE PRESIDENT Is Answerable to Nobody," he said loudly. "Whether he puts his boat to the rear of a former pet or his ear to the ground, it's all with a Purpose that is above the comprehension of the likes of you and me.
"But he did say something about my not ever returning until I was ready to scrap the
new look I'd given my room."
"HMM-mm . . . " I must confess I was puzzled. I had never thought Presidents concerned themselves with what went on inside rooms they never went into. I realized I was even more stupid than I'd realized myself, but I couldn't let Jerry find that out.
"I know—something in your room upset me," I said. "What was the wallpaper like?"
"OH, IT HAD yoy cheeses all over the place against a background of herring-brown . . . on the back of my door I had a Swedish mouse with a fantastic tail . . .
Jerry turned to the huge poster of the $10,000 Pantera sports car over my bed and asked if he could buy it.
"You guys really go in for funny sex-symbols." he said.
"We were talking about your room, Jerry. I pointed out. "Let's not stray from the room."
"OH-OKAY—what else did I have. . . I had this massive oil painting of Nigra Falls, I had a huge portrait of Checkers, late-lamented companion to the President;
KU Music Prof Lauds 'Otello'
"Oh yes, I also had this thing in on English type—the proverb I told you about, 'Curiosity Killed The Rat,' and that's about all."
friend, philosopher and guide to all White House Animals . . .
I racked my mind trying to figure out what it was that had caused Jerry's exile from the White House, but none of the things I knew in a room struck me as being objectable.
I was about to delve hurrier into the mystery when I heard the wind outside as it came roaring down the street, knocked a couple of trees across the road, smashed a truck, tore a piece off a nearby house and vanished as suddenly as it had come.
a forum for their own point of view.
For a minute I thought I was seeing things, and so did Jerry. But a few minutes later came the lifting wall of a siren to shout at me, hit us, and that it wasn't all imagination.
Jerry and I smiled at each other. Whatever we might have to complain about, there were still things we could be thankful for.
quoting. But one poetic product is quoted. *Quoting*: Be not a man who was said of Shakespeare, "He was not for an age, but
(To Be Continued)
comment Don Wright
Edward Williams, associate professor of music history, used a blend of 19th century opera and 20th century scholarship and technology in his lecture on "Shakespeare and the Romantic Composer" Sunday in the Kansas Union.
The lecure, the third in a series of exhibits, concerts and talks in the second annual Shakespeare Festival Festival and Gliuseppe Verd's masterpiece "Otello."
And, he might have added, for all art.
of a gifted artist like Verdi.
He said Verdi's music focused on emotions in Shakespeare's "Othello" and eliminated ambiguities, as well as providing the two Romantic composers with
About 30 persons attended the lecture.
Williams enhanced his lecture by using a piano and tape recorder to document the life of Boito's opera to life.
Williams said the opera developed Shakespeare's characters with more clearly defined, broader strokes, but he has always had a strong point; images could epitomize drama in the hands
REPENT
King Makes Confident Comeback
By ROBERT HILBURN
When Carole King walked on stage at the Inglewood, Calif., for forum last weekend for her first nonbiennial appearance here in October, she was delighted. She cheerful and, most significantly, confident.
The confidence was important because it had less to do with her music than it was a
To the Editor:
readers respond
A headline in today's Kansan disturbed me. As a summer Grad student I seldom read the student newspaper because I sometimes find the headlines and the news "slanted," When I was training for the Kansan staff many years ago, one of the cardinal rules of good journalism was that you must have no hint of personal opinion or skepticism. Surely we don't need more journalists trained in the art of "news slanting."
I enclose two headlines from mature newspapers which headed up the same story, and to serve Kansas, Dykes Says, the Kansas-Chancellor KU Beloussas to Kansans."
The headline which I refer to is the one which captions the article reporting chancellor Dykes' speech in which he called for a federal investigation of people of Kansas. . . . "Your headline went something like this, "Dykes Insists to Businessmen University to Serve State." I propose that the connotation of the word insists in the context of the headline is fascist.
KU does, indeed, belong to the people of Kansas; past, present, and future. It wants them who have loved and nurtured it and those future generations which will do the same.
B&G Builds Fan
Surely the word "Kansas" should not be obnoxious to you since one form of it is in the plural.
Joan Cook
929 Klemp, Leavenworth
Harold Bilch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said that they were building an exhaust fan to cut down heat in an underground tunnel.
Students who went by Walton Library last Thursday may have wondered what the building and grounds crew was doing with a yellow box on the lawn.
He said that they didn't want to leave the fan completely exposed, disturbing the lair.
Instead, Bilch said, they will build a
tower on the top of the fan. He added that
they also plan to install a new fan.
British Correspondence School Offers Mail-Order Doctorates
By DAGMAR PADEN
Kansan Staff Writer
For $100, the London Institute for Applied Research will mail any of 10 types of honorary Ph.D.s to anyone who can pay the price.
The Institute made this offer in a June issue of "National Review" magazine, with an advertisement headlined "British Doctorates for Sale."
According to the ad, the London Institute for Applied Research is a correspondence school which accepted its first students in the spring of 1973.
THE SCHOOL advertises "one-to-one postal relationships between students and faculty," adding that "a 'course' may consist of anything from a long series of telephone calls to several years of directed studies in a variety of fields."
The school says it is selling honorary doctores to "finance the development of our institution," and contending that 'a significant proportion of honorary doctores given each year by major American and British universities go to people who donate large sums of money
"When a predetermined number of faculty have been satisfied," the promotion continues "we award a legitimate earned bachelor's degree."
Honorary doctorates are awarded by many American universities. An honorary doctorate is usually given to a person who has achieved something without advanced formal education. These achievements allow the equivalent of formal work on a degree. Peter Casagrande, director of North College, and associate professor of English.
The University of Kansas does not give honorary Ph.D.s. For many years, it was against Kansas law for KU to do so, according to Charles Oldfather, university attorney and professor of law. The law was repealed in 1970.
EVERY CONCEIVEABLE way of paying your $100 to the school is acceptable. They will accept personal checks, money orders, or checks issued by Express and Master Credit cards.
KU HAS ITS own tradition of honoring outstanding people. Each year at commencement, the Alumni Association animate a service for each KU's Distinguished Service Citation.
KU can now give honorary degrees on the condition that the Board of Regents approves each one, but tradition is now against KU's giving honorary degrees.
honorary degree is that the person receiving a citation is not entitled to put the citation on his or her resume and is awarded only to living persons and is awarded nominees on the basis of their having led a life of humanitarian work. The Honorable Jerome Hermerole, director of the Alumni Association.
realization that she has not fallen victim to the show business pressures that threaten so many who achieve the heights of stardom to which her music has taken her.
There is no specific rule, but custom decrees that of the 7 annual recipients of the citation, 5 be alumni. 214 persons have graduated since 1914, according to Wintermate.
The difference between a citation and an
KU's first citation was awarded in 1941. Initially, only those who had attended KU were eligible for the award. Since 1969, however, non-alumni have been eligible.
High Grades Raise Society's Minimum
Besides achieving national notice through an Associated Press editorial-pictorial feature, the class of 73 also had some high scholastic marks.
Election to the KU chapter is limited to the upper 10 per cent of seniors in the College of Liberal Arts and those students in the Graduate Liberal Arts requirements for graduation.
With her "Tapestry" album in 1971, King became one of the record industry's genuine superstars. Not only did the album become one of the biggest sellers of all time (more than 10 million copies), but it helped reshape music toward a softer, more reflective sound. It also earned King four awards in the field and a yearly dominance by a singer-songwriter in the history of the record industry awards program.
Reasons advanced for the sharp rise are a greater number of superior students, the 'alternatives' in 1970 and use of the two credit option for the four-year period.
The minimum GP4 for election to Phi Beta Kappa rose to 3.65 this year. 3.60 was the previous
ALL THIS acclaim and popularity understandably led to a series of offers—
review
a barrage of press interviews; the usual activities in the frantic, calculated, superstitious world.
But she wasn't going to have any part of it. King, whose songwriting career had given her a glimpse of the disruptive influence stardom can have, wanted to retain her personal, private identity. Her concern was quite real. In "So Far Away," she noted: Traveling gets me down and the storms persist. I mind sure the road doesn't get to own me. There are so many dreams I've yet to find."
BECAUSE her feelings were widely know, it was something of a surprise when her recent 12-city tour was announced. Lou Adler, who has guided her career with the band, spent much of such a good time working with the musicians on her new album that she decided to tour when she found that the musicians were free to accompany her. The tour was a free concert May 26 in New York City, park that drew upwards of 100,000.
musicians (bass, guitar, drums, electric piano, congas and six horns) to back on her eight selections from her new "Fantasy" and her most important album since "Tapestry."
At the Forum, King opened with
staccato, one of eight songs from the
"Tasteful" album.
"Fantasys" isn't the consistent, universal work that "Tapestry" was, but it shows she is beginning to move from the shadow of her childhood to a new step for the reluctant, but gifted star.
INTERDENOMINATIONAL
CHARISMATIC TEACHING CONFERENCE
June 20 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.
Rev. RODNEY G. LENSCH, Speaker
June 21 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.
There was a welcome, informal air about
wear. Wearing a patchwork ankle and jeans,
she wore the boots she bought for her.
*
First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W 23rd
EVERYONE IS WELCOME
THOUGH some had predicted the huge Forum would be too impersonal and cold for someone with as intimate a musical message as King, the strength of her music was evident in the way she wandered the arena's vastness. But the highlight of the evening was when she brought out some
A Nursery Is Provided
80c PITCHERS TONIGHT 8 to Midnight
THE BALL PARK
Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Good Food Too
Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily.
Why not bring your books and enjoy a leisurely lunch on the floating MARINA COVE RESTAURANT, located on the dam side of Lake Perry.
Having Difficulty Studying?
Special Mon. - Thurs.
Draught 1/2 Price Beer with coupon
Offer Expires July 15
Monday, June 18, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
electric other on fantasy" since
COUPON
versal nws she low of for the
Some Storm Damage was Less Spectacular but Added to the Disruption of Campus Life
(Photo by Tommy Cannon)
Some Mobile Homes Were Badly Hit; This One at 3323 Iowa was Severely Damaged
Kansan Photos by Carlos Lisson Chris Cannella Rayna Lancaster
[Pencil sketch of a man's face]
exhibition
& sale of
original
graphics
for collectors
CHAGALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT,
DAUMIER, MATISSE, PICASSO
AND MANY OTHERS.
exhibition
& sale of
original
graphics
for collectors
CHACALL, RASKIN, ROUAULT,
DAUMIER, MATISSE, PICASSO
AND MANY OTHERS.
University of Kansas
Kansas Union
TUESDAY, JUNE 19
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
PURCHASES MAY BE CHARGED
FR
ARRANGED BY
FERDINAND ROTEN GALLIERIES
BALTIMORE, MD
Surprise Storm Lashes Lawrence
High winds and heavy rain moved
down the bluffs from the
mountain, causing damage in
several localities.
Lewis Hall, Plaza Park South apartments and Mobile Airbnb South reported extensive damage.
OFFICIALS AT Lawrence Municipal Airport clocked the wind speed at 90 mph before their instruments broke. They noted that the winds may have reached 105 to 110 mph.
The Lawrence Police Department said that what appeared to have been a tornado downed power lines and damaged trees and homes. They also reported damaged gas
"The winds were blowing so fast I knew something was wrong," said Marilyn Metz of 2513 Redbud Lane and a tenant of Park Plaza South, "The next thing knoof the roof was off of my bedroom. It sounded like a big crash that shook all my windows."
The National Weather Service said that the winds reached 108 mph around the Lake Pepin.
The few people who were home at the time of the storm said they were standing in their living rooms watching the wind blowing out windows across the street.
THE APARTMENT complex is owned by the Park Plaza corporation and managed by R. T. Rule. Rule said that the damage incurred by the company in monetary estimate until later in the week.
Part of the roof was torn from Lewis residence hall at the University of Kansas. Power was out at McColum Hall where the junior high students attending the 38th grade were on guard and Art Camp were staying. Many of them were stranded in elevators for some time.
Nine residents of the Park Plaza South apartment complex, 1912 W. 25 St., had the roofs of their apartments ripped off by high winds.
MARK RUMPLE of 2531 Redbud Lane
said that he saw big pieces of wood flying
that he was using to build what that
he was seeing, his own build.
Rule said that tenants with damaged apartments were relocated as soon as possible. Repairs should probably be finished by August, he said.
Four mobile homes were demolished and several others were damaged in Mobile
ONE MOBILE home on the lot was completely overturned and another fell on its side. Other mobile homes had fallen off their blocks and sustained serious damage.
Belote said that the only way to solve the problem of power outages for the sirens would be to have all of the power lines underground. He said that it would be impossible right now to put all of the power lines in the county underground.
The sirens are set up so that is if some of them do fail there would be others close enough to be heard by the areas with power outages.
The manager closed the park to visitors. One of the security men at the entrance to the park said Saturday that the only homes there had been damaged were those not tied down.
The weather sirens were not used Saturday until there had been two sightings reported five miles southwest of town. H. H. Belote, Douglas County civil defense director, said that the sirens were sounded only in case of a tornado warning.
THREE OF of the twelve city sirens did not work Saturday. The sirens use regular electrical power after they receive the radio signals which start them, and the power lines were out for the three that failed.
"We never sound the sirens in a wind-snow," Belle said, "because that is when we hear the siren's alarm."
"If there are any tornadoes sighted within
20 miles of Lawrence, you can bet your bottom dollar those sirens will be sounded."
Off RFD 1, A Roof Is Dumped Onto a Parked Truck
Damages and power outages were also reported in Leavenworth, Perry and
Fallen Trees Blocked Entire Streets In Some Places
1234567890
I'll be there.
Another Tree Is Downed
Girl Views Debris-Strewn Park Plaza South Apts.
THE TREE WAS CLEARLY ABSORBING THE EASTWEST WIND.
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer; $1.50
each additional word; $0.3
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $3.00
each additional word: $0.90
Deadline: 1:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Accommodations, room service and employability
training available. Apply to the HUMAN RESOURCES
ACADEMIC PROGRAM at LEAFHE BROADWAY
213-945-0886 or LEAFHE BROADWAY
213-945-0886.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDE COURT Shop-3 Bills. No. of the Kraw River Bridge on the Bridgewood, Anderson, and Miles streets. Attendance includes stove, decorations, bicycles to speed, old pot bath basin and tub, baskets & basket wooden brooket and 1, baskin baskets & wooden crates also condo price Bald Alfa烘烤, broom and wheat bread rolls, 2, baskin bread rolls, 4, condo price Bald Alfa烘烤, broom and wheat bread rolls, 9, to 8, days. 843-319-5398 Hibernauer Center.
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.
Leadership.
Either way comes to the same thing:
"New Analyst of RP's Administration."
We were here on our own bus. "Tahoe," we said, looking at the map. "The New Analyst and now available at Campus Madison, Town House, T-268."
PIZZA HUT MUSGASBORD: All the pizza you
want. 10:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. W2, only 24 wnd.
7-86
Good running condition, very clean. 60 Buck
good light, good life. Good good life.
new w/ 3 battery. Battery 85-133 (J).
For Sale 1972 TRUMPHP 1000 Excellent Condi-
tion. For Sale 843 VAHRA YAMA 2600
G900 miles. Call 843-600-8900
MOTORCYCLE: Yamaha B5 ce with helmet, ver-
good condition. Reasonable. B43-833-300.
St Bernard puppe - AXC Registed Championship
Bernard puppe - AXC Registered Championship
Young puppies and older dogs available. See details.
New puppies only.
For Sale **1993 Volkswagen Kharman Ghaa Cham**
**95,000+ books**, great book; Call Gwalt *Cindy*
*Davis*. Must be a PUBLIC ATTORNEY. (516) 254-7800
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, 3
bedrooms, dishwasher, goodware. Partially furnished.
Carpeted. A/C, Skirting. Fenced for 10x
bedroom. aled, garden. Anking. $1591-609
509
For Sale, 1965 VW, Reculant engine red. Wanted gold trim, AM Radio, $600; Rebulls 842-717-617; 6-21
76 inch brown and plaid coat, folds down to a
small two way hi-5 blouse, used just 6 months.
Made in China.
G. E. Color portable TV, excellent condition. Corman trumpet. A bargain; make off by calling 841-3653.
For Sale-1711 Toyota Glenna GT-F/A/C (radio)
sold by MKU Automotive, Inc.
black clay top, big vent, said to go Glenna
inventory.
FOR RENT
For Rect. Apt. for one person, on campus. $100/
for Rect. A/C, A/B bills paid. Call 844-892-365
www.mcgrath.edu
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
For the latest in law enforcement and rental in
the latest in law enforcement and rental in
law enforcement and rental in law enforcement
2005. 95% of LAWRENCE RENTAL EXCHANGE,
7-28
WANT TO LIVE ON A FAIRM? Space avail-
ance is limited for couple or individ-
ual. Call Paul at 1-800-335-7642.
SAVE GASOLINE. Wax to campers and clauses
with all appliances. No jets. Nets 485.
No oil. Not included in rentals.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP CLIMBING PARKING IN FAR-FLUNG LANDS AND WALKING ON THE ROADS from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking parked lot. Free: Carriage rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates rate, furniture available. Saints Apsa .182d. Ibsn .76- 831-211-69
Private room for girl-1 half kitchen and bath
Bathroom with bath tub, toilet, shower
paid. mall $4 per month. Call 843-4590 after
reservation.
Resident Apartment for two or three parapets, 30' x 12' with detached 1.5-bedroom, 1.5-bathroom, 1.5-bedroom, 1.5-bathroom, 1.5-bedroom, 1.5-bath
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, ample
air, privacy and light. Residents are required to
have 2 weeks of paid time off. No paid休
假。No paid weekdays. No paid weekends.
No paid holidays. No paid holidays. No
paid holidays. No paid holidays. No paid holidays.
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cook-
ing facilities. RU and near downtown.
No. 845-767-891.
NOTICE
**515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que in**
**$42.25. A slab to cut here more $42.80. Large rib*
*plate on wood. We can also do a large rib plate on*
*wood. See, Sam sandwich. Queso, Oven 600*
*cooked at 300°F. See, Sam sandwich. Photos, Phone*
*3-900-515. Mild St. Bar.
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH"* Small Pizza or
*ZAMBIA* for $13 at $84 lowe. 245
max. Mon.-Fri. 1-3, 7-9, 10-11am.
Five Days
15 words or less: $2.50
each additional word: $0.03
THE RIVER CITY ASSOCIATION, 7131 N. River St., River City, NY 10582. Saturdays, 10:30 to 6:30 and by appointment. Repair technicians on an annual offer process. Technical assistance is available for both special partners we are able to offer quality service. Our partners are able to use US REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE. Manual and electronic keywriters, unique and modern, watchdog computers, and many more. US REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE. Manual and electronic keywriters, unique and modern, watchdog computers, and many more.
Have a dog. eat rabbit, fish, or bird! If you do,
brownies and cookies from people like Sergentas
seed, and pellets from people like Sergentas
seed, and pellets from people like Sergentas
beaches, collars, and pet animals plus audi-
lizer.
GIANTS DRIVE IN PER CENT 843-2921
We WAXMAN CANDLES for the more fragrant
choose from: WAXMAN CANDLES, W. 14b,
WAXMAN CANDLES, W. 18b.
**'LOVE IS GENDELLESS'** GAY LIBERATION:
meetings on Monday 7.30 P.M. ONU; COUN-
UNUM at 1245-6127 FASHION; ZING-I-NG at 642-5778 for 4:00 for detail; office:- B-121 University, 864-4088 Book 224, Gairnance- 6-21
Hard crafted hangings cakes alert as low as a few feet. A waffle iron is used to cool the cake, and the people that make them, WAXMAN
Need one female to share University Territory
for 14 students. Please fill out below:
9 w/ 4th or 5th, K424, 842-1835
6-18
Want to organize car pool computing from Toupea
paka day. Call 272-6209
6-18
WANTED
Need Female to share house for summer. Own room. Near campus and downtown. $50 /mo. 40hrs/week. Call (877) 296-1301.
Wanted: Phone to assistant for summer. Private
calling. Call my phone. Rent $500 per month.
Call my phone.
Experienced thesis typist, *Close to campus*. 841-1094. Myra also minor editor and/or proofing.
PIZZA HUEL DELIVERS: A hot pizza right to
me. 825-673-1406, fax: 825-673-
1404-714-9044.
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Wanted: Photographer to take slides of jewelry.
Must have:
• Digital camera
• Nikon D4i at 811-383. *Needles: 45-125*
• Sony A6000 at 811-383*
TYPING
Experienced in typing, typesetting, term papers, paper other. mise. typing. Have electric typeeer and pica type. Accurate and prompt service. Properly printed,校错 corrected. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. 7-26
MISCELLANEOUS
You are interested in Robert Rimmer and Har-
lard Kelley to talk about his ideas on
Dave at 841-559-3890.
I would like to share commuting with someone
who can travel 2-4 hours from 5 in Mint, Fail Cairn, Garage 644-382-620
or 644-382-620.
ENTERTAINMENT
THE INSIGHT TAVERN (2025) Haskell) serves
good times, sandwiches, beer. Open 10 AM-12
PM. Live entertainment. Kickin rolls. Foosb
on Friday, June 13, 8:30 AM-P.M. $125 per
week. 8:21
(1)
TUTOR
M. S. in Environmental Studies will tithe in Nut-
tle Shell Reasonable Rate; Call Dawn 6-48
at 844-359-2100.
SERVICES OFFERED
Tennis lessons: given by two experienced teacher-
lessons—low rates, 842-366, ask for Kevyn
Jones.
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
10e DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
6
Monday, June 18, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Softball Fever Hits the Young
The softball game in South Park on Massachusetts Street now the rapt attention of several spectators Friday night. Below, two boys are intent observers of a close play at home plate in the city league game. Right, Ross Hack, 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hack of Lawrence, was as devoted a fan of the action in the game as anyone.
Kansan Photos bv CHRIS CANNELLA
PART 1
SUNSHINE
Brezhnev Visit Shows Change . . .
From Page One
new world situation that Brezhrevn's policies—with the invaluable assistance of Nixon and Chou En Lai's policies—have created.
Breznev comes to Washington with an odd mixture of strengths and weaknesses. His essential strength is the military power that the Soviet Union has developed during its leadership–military power that is legally comparable to that of the United States.
Breznev himself has said repeatedly that this strength has made possible the new direction of Soviet foreign policy and the future of Europe. It is certainly true. For the first time in history, a Russian leader can bargain with the strongest in the world on an equal footing. This opens a whole series of possibilities for Russia, both against the Soviet Union was on the defensive.
LARGELY BECAUSE OF his military strength, Breznev has the ability to unilaterally increase or diminish world tension. He can unilaterally declare a new race. He can scare the Western powers or allow them to feel relatively secure.
By all indications, Breznev's personal standing in the Soviet Communist party is so strong that he can exercise these powers with wide personal discretion. He is still a member of a collective leadership, but he does not have the dominant power. Just as Nixon's personal stature is apparently declining, Breznev's is ascending.
Exploiting these strengths and his own diplomatic skill, Breznewy has set about creating new relationships with the elite. He says he ought to learn for last decades to come. (In this
Writing in the authoritative journal "Kommunist," Arbatov said: "... relations with the United States, as with other capitalist countries, will remain, in the future, a matter how successful the process of normalization and detente. . . The question is what sort of forms the struggle will take. They can be varied: either military confrontations, the arms race, intense and open rivalries or coexistence in which the ideological struggle between the two systems and their competition in various spheres is combined with many-sided cooperation, and in which inevitable differences are settled by negotiation and an unrestrained arms race by arms limitation and disarmament."
Nixon's "generation of peace.) These relationships are to be "businesslike" regard, Breznev's rhetoric is similar to based on mutual respect and a desire for mutual benefits, and designed to prevent any dangerous military confrontation.
That second prospect is, in effect, the carrot in Brezhnev's attache case. But it is more than that; it is also the kind of international situation the Soviet Union seems to believe is absolutely necessary if they are not involved in the development of their own society. Without "sided cooperation," which means first of all large-scale exchanges of Soviet raw
UNLike HIS PREDECESSORS in the Kremlin, Brezhnev does not talk about the inevitability of a future clash between Russia and Iran. He has produced a new formulation of old ideological principles, put best several months ago by George Arbort, head of the U.S. State Department.
Miller Claims U.S. Open
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP)-Young Johnny Miller quietly, sedately forged a record, eight-under-par 63 and strode past the struggling figures of the world's most renowned shotmasters to the United States Open Golf Championship on Sunday.
"My score on the board," he said. "Now those other guys know what they have to do."
His 63—breaking the Open record of 64 set by Lee Mackey Jr. at Jerion in the 1980 U.S. national championship—brought him from the bottom to the top as one of the world's most prestigious golf title.
"Those other guys" included Arnold Palmer and Julius Boros, Tom Weiskopf and Jerry Heard, Jack Nicklaus and Lee Trevino.
The 28-year-old Miller described himself as "Joe Feast or Famine" I get everything or nothing," after he splashed his 279 total, five under par, on the scoreboard about an hour and a half before the other major contenders finished.
None of them could do it.
All were still out on the 6,921-yard Oak-Mount Country Club course when Oakmiller came home to a standing ovation for his best-in-history effort.
While Palmer, Boros, Heard and
Wiskoff all hold orash or waistband,
their armour remained for lanky
longshot John Schiele to emerge from the multiple-man scramble and claim second
Schlef finished with a hard-worn 70-he opened the day's play with a double-bogey
Then it was Weiskop. He was one of the ast off the tee and had a chance to at least force a tie until he missed a birdie put on the 17th.
Weiskopf finished with a 70 and 281.
A trio of millionaires followed; the bitterly disappointed Palmer, attempting a comeback at the age of 43 in his home country of Western Pennsylvania; Nicklaus, the game's premier player trying to win a fourth American national title; and the jaundy Trevino, who loves this title more than any other.
Palmer had a shot at it all—on the site of his 1962 playoff loss to Nicklasuun—all he bovedeque in a row starting at the 12th hole. He birdied the last hole for a 72.
All were at 282.
Nicklaus never really got it going. He was just off the pace despite erratic play on his feet, but he didn't jerk his game together until the final round. And his 68 just wasn't good enough.
The 1973-74 University of Kansas basketball schedule was announced Friday by KU basketball coach Ted Owens. The 28-game schedule will be highlighted by the 5th Annual Jayhawk Classic to be held December 14 and 15 in Allen Field House.
No one-including Miller--had any hint of his impending charge at the game's greatest names. "I was actually a little down this morning," he said.
Basketball Schedule Announced
Participating in the Classic will be Oregon, Princeton and Washington State. The first round competition will have Oregon against Princeton and Washington at the College of St. Thomas. The consolation and championship games will be played on the following night.
materials for Western technology, those ambitions will remain out of reach.
Trevino closed with a 70.
IN BONN LAST month Breznyek reportedly astounded West German businessmen and officials with the scale and duration of the possible Soviet-West German alliance. The deal is a deal for a 2 billion dollar steel mill. According to Sources sources here, the Germans told Breznyek that this proposed mill was many times bigger than anything they had ever considered themselves, and that they knew how to build such a monster.
The Jayhaws open their season
Dunbar against Murray Stars at Allen
Field Heights.
The complete Jayhawk schedule:
Dec. 1-Murray State, here.
Dec. 3-Kentucky, here.
Dec. 5-Indiana, at Bloomington.
analysis
Dec. 8-Northern Iowa, here.
Breznev will be talking the same way in Washington. He may concentrate on computer technology, an area in which President Nikon can help him, because big oil companies want to the Soviet Union if the U.S., government will allow them to. Until now, strategic
controls have made important sales impossible.
Dec. 8- Northern Iowa, here.
Dec. 14- 15- Jayhawk classic, here.
Dec. 17-器blerd, at Nashville.
Dec. 26- 23- Hight Eight Tournament at Kansas City, Mo.
Jan. 2- Iowa, at Iowa City.
Jan. 1- Nebraska, here.
Jan. 1- Iowa State, at Ames.
Jan. 19- Oklahoma State, here.
Jan. 22- Notre Dame, here.
Jan. 28- Oklahoma, at Norman.
Jan. 29- Mississippi, at Columbia.
Feb. 4- Colorado, here.
Feb. 9- Oklahoma State, Stillwater.
Feb. 13- Kansas State, at Manhattan.
Feb. 16- Iowa State, here.
Feb. 18- Oklahoma, here.
Feb. 28- Nebraska, at Lincoln.
March 8- Colorado, at Boulder.
March 8- Kansas State, here.
March 9- Missouri.
So what Breznev offers in the way of a happier and safer world order is also something he badly needs—so badly that he is prepared to make important sacrifices to prevent further material weakness. Its manifestations so far have been scattered, but unmistakable.
THE MOST REVEALING came in May of last year, when President Nixon thumped his nose at the Kremlin and mined the harbor of North Vietnam (trapping several Soviet ships in the process and even killing 30 Americans). And President's scheduled trip to Moscow. Many Kremininologists trained in the old ways and old values of past Soviet regimes predicted that the Soviet Union would not forgive Nikon for this provocation. Instead Breznevich and his colleagues turned the Soviet leader into a captive and the Soviet leaders saved the May 1972 summit and insured an important forward step for their foreign policy. But they also
W. L. Pct. G.B.
Chicago 58 39
Montreal 29 77
New York 29 77
St. Louis 29 49
Philadelphia 29 43
Philadelphia 29 43
St. Louis 29 32
Philadelphia 29 32
revealed the real extent of their own desire to improve relations with the West.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
baseball standings
Los Angeles 39 | 25 | 609 |
San Francisco 40 | 27 | 657 |
Houston 40 | 27 | 657 |
Cincinnati 34 | 29 | 540 |
Alamogordo 34 | 29 | 540 |
San Diego 20 | 45 | 185
Results
Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2, Florida 1
Detroit 1, Oklahoma 1, Indiana 9
Chicago 9, Atlanta 8, Ohio 7
Philadelphia 10, San Francisco 7
Louisville 6, Chicago 5, Los Angeles 3, Montreal 2, 12 injuries
The second significant indication of how far the Kremlin is prepared to go to achieve its new goals has been its handling of the issue of the unrecognized Contriary to all the lessons of Soviet history, about 72,000 Jews have been allowed to leave the country in the last few years—the only significant exodus of Soviet citizens that has happened. The sudden sought to leave has been allowed to, and some have been cruelly treated. But the fact is that because of pressure from abroad, the Soviet Union has for the first time allowed a population of its population to leave the country.
The most dramatic incident so far was the Soviet letter to President Nikon, revealed in April, informing the President that a tax imposed on prospective Jewish emigrants with higher education would no longer be collected. This tax, imposed last August, jeopardized the chances for Congressional jepanardism. In a subsequent agreement. A combination of emmissaries obviously persuaded Brezhnev that it had to be dropped.
Monday Games
New York at Pittsburgh N
Chicago at Pittsburgh N
Montreal at St. Louis N
Atlanta at Los Angeles N
Allenweiss W 12 L Pct. GSB. 58
Baltimore m 33 27 12 6.8
New York m 33 29 12 6.8
Detroit m 33 30 32 14
Boston m 28 30 32 14
Cleveland m 28 30 32 12
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago 32 | 25 | 541 | —|
Minnesota 32 | 26 | 564 | —|
Rinker City 32 | 26 | 564 | —|
Oakland 33 | 30 | 524 | 2|
California 31 | 29 | 547 | 2|
Texas 31 | 29 | 547 | 2|
Results
Kansas City City & Cleveland 2, 10 Detroit Detroit 1, 2nd Detroit & Minnesota 4, 8
Ballantine & Texas 6, 16 innings New York City & New York State 1, 3rd New York State 1, 2nd
Brezneh and his colleagues may have as much trouble convincing sketcings in their own party as they will persuading sketcings in the West that this Soviet regime has decided to join the rest of the world—not for a year or two, but for the forseable future.
Monday's Games
Texas at Minnesota
Detroit at Cleveland N
Boston at St. Louis
California at Kansas City N
California at Chicago N
Viet Cong Hit Helicopter Carrying Peace Officials
SAIGON (AP)-Small-arms ground fire hit a helicopter carrying peacekeeping officials Sunday over Viet Cong-held territory in South Vietnam.
Another peacekeeping helicopter flying nearby also was fired on but both craft landed safely and no casualties were reported.
Two crewmen were killed in a U.S. Air Force helicopter crash Thursday, about 100 miles northwest of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, after a plane reported Sunday. A third crewman was listed as missing and two other parachutized people were dead when the crash was not known, the commissary said.
A THIRD peacekeeping helicopter was fired at with small arms Monday while on a supply mission to Pleiku in the central highland. Canadian officials reported.
They said they did not believe the chopper was hit. The helicopter landed safely at the pit.
Two other peacekeepers helicopters were fired at and forced down Sunday over Community-titled territory near An Loc 60 of Saigon. No casualties were reported.
A CANADIAN MEMBER of the International Commission of Control and Supervision said a single bullet hit a rotor of the aircraft and two helicopters as they flear near An Loch.
The shooting occurred as the Saigon command claimed 219 Viet Cong or North Vietnamese violations of Vietnam's ceasefire, which was supposed to have been
LT. COL. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon command said 136 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops had been killed since the Paris provisions to strengthen the ceasefire began at noon Friday.
"We have subsequently protested vigorously to the Provisional Revolutionary Government and attempted to obtain in writing reaffirmation for the safety of these aircraft to fly back to Bien Hoa," Loomis said.
Aboard the hit helicopter along with its U.S. civil pilot, were three Canadians, two members each from the Polish and Hungarian delegations to the four-nation mission. The mission was broadcasting System correspondent Foster Davis and his camaman, Pham Roi Phan.
LOOMS SAID the Vet Cong, who contri
cues the area around An Loc, has given a safety
aid to many children.
Col. Dan Loomis, deputy commander of the peacekeeping commission's Canadian military delegation, said the two helicopters were on a scheduled flight to An Loc when they came under small arms fire six miles south of the city.
From Page One
North Vietnam accused the Saigon government of lying about cease-fire violations blamed on the Viet Cong "was" pretexts for rejecting urgent demands of the United Nations and a agreement." The charge was broadcast by Hanoi's official News Agency.
Prof Recounts Trip . . .
Japanese place great importance upon the character of the person with whom they are dealing, unlike most American business contacts on a purely business level.
What this means is that a personal relationship between the buyer and seller is
The clinic is part of the 36th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The speech and debate section of the camp will focus on the theme Hazen, instructor in speech and drama.
High School Clinic To Run 5 Weeks
Students will receive instruction from the coaches of the 1970 national college champions and will be involved in a leadership National Foresac tournament.
The speech and debate clinic for high school students began Sunday and will continue through November.
Speculation, wonderment and bewilderment about when the University of Kansas will get a new athletic director will have to continue for awhile, according to Henry Shenk, chairman of the Athletic Director Search Committee.
Athletic Director to Be Named
Shenk, in an interview last Thursday, said the announcement of the new athletic director would certainly be made by the end of this month, likely within the next three to four weeks.
"I think we're getting to the place in a few weeks we can make some recommen-
tations," she said.
The committee will make recommendations to the Chancellor, who will appoint the man with the approval of the Board of Regents.
Shenk said both Chancellor Raymond Nichols and Chancellor-designate Archie Dykes were being continually informed and urged to review the search committee and its recommendations.
Geneen, professor of physical education,
said the reason the search committee was
moving so methodically was that the
school is not a place where students are
as crucial as most people thought. He
He added that the search committee's main function was to find the best possible solution.
commended A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg, the interim athletic director, and Lonborg's two assistants, John Novotny and Gale Sayers, for doing an excellent job.
Shenk also praised the committee, composed of two alumni, two faculty and one student representative, for doing a very hard job of screening a great many people.
reinforced by last week's new Paris accords.
"We have intensely screened and interviewed 15 to 16 individuals and looked at the credentials of many more," he said. "We have interviewed four or five people in the last three weeks and might entertain one more, but I doubt it."
Shenk said he was impressed by a number of the persons interviewed but declined to give out any names. He said the person selected had to have experience and he must be highly acceptable to students, faculty and alumni.
The search committee has been interviewing interested people since the resignation of Wade Stinson last November 15.
KU Students Lose Tennis Tournament
Arlington, Va., junior, 6-3, 6-0 for the Women's Singles title.
Bill Terry defeated John Donaldson, Wichita senior, 8-3, 6-1 in the Men's Singles division for the first Lawrence City Tournament held Saturday and Sunday. Ginny Thorgren defeated Carey Groom,
In the Mixed Doubles tournament the team of Noah Allen and Holly Butler defeated the team of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Reed 6-2, 6-0.
KU SUMMER CROWD
The STABLES summer hours are from 2:00- 12:00 p.m.Monday thru Saturday Happy Hours are 8:00-9:00 on Mondays and 3:00-4:00 Fridays—the speciality is 60 $^{\circ}$ pitchers (Regular $ \mathbf{1. 0 0} $).
Thursdays there are 80' pitchers ALL DAY
Also offered are many of your favorite games such as foosball, pool, and Brunswick Air Hockev.
THE STABLES
"ORIGINATOR OF BARGAIN PRICES"
1401 W 7th VI3-9644
essential, said Goodman. The merely contractual business transaction is much less significant in Japan. The Japanese businessman may spend hours relaxing and taking a break in an informal situation before he decides whether to do business with him.
Goodman said that Docking projected the relaxed, comfortable image the Japanese considered important. He was warm and friendly, but also knowledgeable about the often technical questions asked by the Japanese. A banker by profession, Docking described in detail the Kansas banking system to a Japanese client, expressing concerns concerning any prospective investors.
AN ARTICLE was published about Docking's comments on tax, on Kansas in general and on KU's East Asian studies program in a newspaper with a circulation of almost three million in Tokyo. In Osaka, the local newspaper published an article about Owen and his visit to the Jayawkah university. He is also a professor of foreign studies at Oakland University, to teach the English language to Japanese children.
Goodman said that his greatest experience of the trip was the opportunity to represent the University and the East Asian ones, who came from their native Chinese hosts and to the delegation members.
Goodman said the trip had been an educational experience for all involved.
"It gave everyone an in-depth look at the "it culture and the Japanese way of doing business. We need to accommodate our customers' methods to be successful." Goodman said.
LAWRENCE ICE CO
Redy-Pak Ice
Taste Free
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OPEN DAILY
7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
843-9250
616 Vermont 843-0350
2nd
kansas
Shakespeare
Festival & Institute
1973 Present
"JULIUS CAESAR"
June 18, 19, 21, 22, 23
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
Curtain: 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices: $2.00 - Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 844-3982
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
TUESDAY JUNE 19,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
Watergate Hearings Postponed Until Brezhnev Leaves U.S.
WASHINGTON — The Senate Watergate committee has postponed its hearings because of the state visit of the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. The postponement was made to prevent John W. Dean III, from testifying during the visit about possible links between President Nixon and Russian officials. Now, both leaders begin today were to be covered simultaneously by all three TV networks. Dean, who has already received limited immunity for any testimony he gives, has reportedly told investigators, behind closed doors, that Nixon was aware of efforts to cover the Watergate breakthrough. In the months ahead there will be increasing public interest in such a possibility; 67 per cent of the groups involved to some degree.
Astronauts to Spacewalk Todav
HOUSTON—The Skylar astronauts are to take another space walk today to recover film that may include the first solar flare ever photographed by a manned telescope from orbit. The three-hour spacewalk, set to start at 6:40 a.m. Lawrence time, is their fourth and final mission of the year on Friday. The photographs of the solar flare are expected to provide invaluable information about nuclear fusion processes on the sun.
Fired KU Aide to Get Hearing
DENVER—The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ordered a lower court to give Gary D. Jackson a new hearing in his attempt to bring his dismissal as a University of Kansas assistant dean of men before the Kansas Board of Regents. Jackson was fired in July 1970 after it was alleged that he brought ammunition into Lawrence the day before a judge ordered him to appear at the District Court in Kansas City had ruled that Jackson had no right to a hearing before the Regents. The Denver decision Saturday requires the Kansas City court to reconsider its decision.
Pearson to Eat with Brezhnev
WASHINGTON—Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., will attend a luncheon Tuesday with Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev at the request of the Soviet ambassador. Pearson, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, will be one of about 20 senators at the luncheon. Pearson traveled to the U.S.S.R. in April for discussion of East-West trade and met with Brezhnev and other Soviet leaders.
K.O. Ends Heavyweight Fight
It should be cooler today than usual, with day temperatures rising only to the low 80s. Plenty of sun is forecast, but partly cloudy conditions also allow a day from getting to be a really warm one. Lows tonight may touch down to the 50s, and we should be getting increasingly playful winds as the day progresses. Sun will may even take the clouds away and turn it into a clear, sunny day.
NEW YORK—Ernie Shaver floored Jimmy Ellis last night with a thundering right uppercut in the first round of a scheduled 12-round fight at Madison Square Garden. Shaver's sensational victory came moments after he was on the verge of being knocked out himself. This wins place Shaver in the race for a shot at heavyweight champion George Foreman.
Soldiers Hunt Irish Extremists
BELFAST—British security forces have mounted a massive hunt for members of a splinter group of Protestant extremists who claimed responsibility for reprisal murders of two Roman Catholics. "They are obviously a determined and, from what we can gather, a well drilled bunch of men," a British army spokesman said. "They could create havoc if they are not stopped soon."
The men had telephoned Belfast newspapers over the weekend to say they were members of the Ulster Freedom Fighters. The slayings brought to 826 the number of persons reported killed in four years of strife.
Kansas Wheat Cutting Begins
GREAT BEND — The 1973 Kansas wheat harvest is gathering steam as cutting began Monday at Caldwell, Coldwater, Kiowa, Pratt and Wellington and test cutting began at Ashland. The harvest will be in full sawing by Wednesday with cutting at Anthony, Ashland, Kingman, Minneapolis and Milwaukee the harvest would then begin to move north with cutting expected by the weekend around Great Bend, Minnesota, Ellsworth and Salina.
Officer's Attackers Plead Guilty
LEAENVORTH—Four men pleaded guilty Monday to charges or battery on a police officer in connection with a racial disturbance earlier this month. The disturbance started as a Leavenworth policeman tried to arrest a black man for reckless driving and led to a Kansas Bureau of Investigation inquiry into Leavenworth police methods.
Cooler Temperatures Expected
AAAAAAHHH
Brezhnev-Nixon Talks Begin
WASHINGTON—President Nixon and Soviet Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev began their summit conference Monday with mutual pledges to build world peace. They ended the day extolling the United States and the Soviet Union.
Peace on Earth Pledged
"We have laid the groundwork for a significant improvement in our relations"
with Brezney at a black-tie dinner at the White House.
The Soviet guest, on his first visit to the United States and his second trip to the summit with Nixon, responded: "The peoples are expecting a great deal from our new meeting. And I believe it is our desire to live up to those expectations."
NIXON and Brezhnev began the week of
summit talks by discussing world problems for nearly four hours.
PIONEER
Working through the lunch hour, the two leaders talked on "a philosophical plane" about maintaining the momentum established when the President visited Washington for the first summit meeting and reached an agreement to limit defensive nuclear weapons.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Brehhnev, in his toast, reassured other
CHEMISTRY AND MEDICINE
GABRIELLE GUIZAN
Kansas Staff Photos by DRIC BRANNEVEN
(1)
KU Alumni, Faculty and Fans Enjoyed the Royals' Game on 'Jayhawk Night'
nations, apparently including China, that they would not suffer in the growing detente between the United States and the Soviet Union.
"It is absolutely clear to anyone who is at least slightly familiar with the course of events and with the nature of development with Soviet-American relations, that their improvement in no way prejudices the interest of any third country," he said.
Big KU Turnout Sees K.C. Lose
BREZHNEV also said the development of
By GERALD EWING
See BREZHNEV, Page Two
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Over, 1,800 University of Kansas alumni, faculty and students present for Monday's "Kansas Jayhawk Night" at the new Royals Stadium watched the Oakland Athletics defeat the Kansas City Rovals 9-5.
The A's firepower was supplied by left-fielder Joe Rudi, who driwed in four runs with a pair of doubles. The highlight of the evening for the Royals was first-baseman John Maybury's towering 245-foot home, which scored three of the Royals five times in the second half blast in the new stadium, gave him the league lead in home runs with 17.
of the KU Alumni Association, the original plan called for only 300 to 300 people to attend.
The Royals were plagued all evening by poor pitching, giving up eight walks, six of
"I'm extremely pleased with the response we got," Blitta said. "We had a fantastic response, particularly from KU faculty and staff."
Two of the people who enjoyed the evening the most were Chancellor and Mrs. Raymond Nichols. Nichols said that except for the fact they played everything associated with the game.
joyable, low-key key that provided a good evening for the family."
"This is the first game I've been to in the new stadium," Nichols said. "It certainly is a beautiful stadium and I'm impressed by the number of faculty who came to the game."
The response to "Kansas Jayhawk Night," which was sponsored by the City College of New York and the Alumni Association, was incredible. According to Vince Bilotta, associate director
AN EXHIBITION and sale of original graphics by artists including Chagall, Baskin, Ronault, Daumier, Mautselse and Lichtenberg. The exhibition is in the south lounger of the Kansas Union.
Bilotta complimented The Kansas City Royals Organization for helping make "Kansas Jayhawk Night" a memorable occasion.
"We sold almost 1,700 tickets through our office and over 100 tickets here at the hotel."
Regardless of the outcome of the game, the fans from KU enjoyed themselves. They were entertained by the playing of the KU Fight Song and the National Anthem as recorded by the Jayhawk Marching Band. Also featured were the Jayhawk mascot to Royals players to Royals catcher Fran Healy and a post-game party at the Royalts Stadium Club.
"The Royals have been good to us. They're very cooperative and helped a great deal in setting the whole thing up," Bilbita said.
"THE MAN WHO Had His Hair Cut Short" will be shown at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union. Admission is 75 cents.
SAU IS SPONSORING a volleyball game at 7 am in South Park, 12th and 13st.
on campus
THE POLITICAL ACTION committee of the KU Commission on the Status of Women will meet at 7 tonight in Parlor A of the Union. Plans for the study of possible sexism in the Lawrence School District will be open. The meeting is open to the public.
Two Vietnams Talk of Peace; Killing Goes On
SAIGON (AP)- South Vietnamese and Viet Cong representatives remained deadlocked in a cease-fire meeting Monday while the shooting and bloodied continued
A helicopter of the International Commission of Control and Supervision was fired at near Pleuka over territory occupied by both the Viet Cong and Saigon forces. The craft was not hit and there were no casualties.
Two other peacekeepers helicopters were fired on Sunday near An Loc over Viet Cong-controlled areas. A bullet pierced a rotor of an aircraft but out there were no injuries to those aboard.
Scattered ground skirmishes went on for the 138th day of the original cease-fire and the fourth day of the renewed truce that the opposing sledges piled in Paris to honor.
The Joint Military Commission, composed of representatives of the Saigon Army, conducted a report on reported progress in implementing the 14 point communique signed last week by Henry A. Kisinger and Le Duc Tho of North Vietnam to reinforce the cease-fire and halt conflict.
In Washington, a proposal to cut off funds for U.S. bombing in Cambodia and Laos was sent to the House floor Monday for a vote. The vote could become final congressional action.
Two Men Still in Sub Appear Lifeless
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)—Recusers slowly decompressing a chamber of a midget submarine that had been trapped underwater, the officers said. "We see no signs of life from the two men inside."
"There's no indication of any change this morning," Navy Cmdr. Joseph Neville said at an early morning briefing, conducted after 13 hours of chamber decompression.
"Presumably, they are still ventilating the chamber. It's a medical decision as to when they open it, and they have not done so.
"They can only see a small portion of what appears to be one man's back."
Neville added that rescuers had no other way of determining the condition of the two divers.
Two other men in a forward chamber were pulled safely from the civilian research minisub Sea Link as soon as it surfaced Monday.
when divers breathe air under high pressure, they must be decompressed slowly to prevent nitrogen bubbles from forming in the bloodstream.
Nevile said a tug was sent to help the submarine rescue ship USS Tringa disgasse from her four-point mooring at Port-au-Prince and dived, 15 miles southeast of Key West.
He said the Tringa was expected at the Navy base here by 11 a.m. Lawrence time, 'and if the Tringa moves, I expect they'll open it' in 'about opening the minibus's chamber.'
The Tringa has been providing support systems for the decompression effort aboard the minisub's mother ship, the Sea Diver.
Sprawled on the deck of the six-foot chamber were Clayton Link, 31, the son of the research sub's designer, millionaire John McClure, who Storver Slover, a veteran Navy submariner.
Listed in excellent condition aboard the submarine rescue ship USS Tringa were marine biologist Robert Meek, 27, of Santa Barbara, Calif., and Archibald "Jock" Menzies, 30, of Vero Beach, Fla., pilot and commander of the sub.
The 21-foot submarine was being decompressed aboard its mother ship, the Sea Diver. Link's father, who revolutionized aviation with a simulated flight trainer that bears his name, and wife, Maurie, waited for only inches away from the young explorer.
The Sea Link was smared Sunday morning in cables on a scuttled World War II destroyer, the Fred T. Berry, at a depth of 351 feet.
After five unsuccessful attempts to free
While Link's father and wife waited, Link's sister and her nieces arrived from California and Montana.
the Sea Link, rescues on the Tringa ripped away the cables that trapped the Sea Link. A giant grappling hook was guided into position by an underwater television camera controlled from the commercial research ship A. B. Wood.
flew by helicopter to the Tringa for a reunion with their husbands.
Mrs. Stover was secluded in a Key West motel.
KYLE, S.D. — A leader of the American Indian Movement (AIM) says the United States will have "an unhappy birthday" with its new law requiring improvements in national Indian affairs.
Russell Means, testifying Sunday before a Senate subcommittee on Indian affairs, said the United States has decided Dakota, but the leadership of AIM in the state has decided to give the United States and the white man another chance to walk the way Indian affairs are handled.
Obervers aboard the Sea Diver in the senior link, who built the minibus in his boyard, paced the deck and relayed industrial equipment during the efforts to raise the Sea Link.
"He's a tough old man," an observer said.
The subcommittee, chaired by Sen. James Aborezek, D-S.D., is holding a reception in Restoration town. Nearby is Woundene Kree, a town taken over by AIM-Indians and held during a confrontation with federal law enforcement personnel that lasted 70 years.
Leader Predicts Trouble Unless Indians Appeased
"The United States has failed in trying to show us how to govern ourselves," he said.
"We want to return to treaty government because Indians then made their choice of government. We certainly can't do as bad as the United States has done for us.
"On July 4, 1976, white America is planning to celebrate its 200th birthday." Means said. "If nothing has changed for the past five years, we will make sure it is an unhappy birthday."
"We feel the government can put into Indian affairs the same effort it put into Vietnam, the United Nations and other countries," he said in aspects that have been denied Indians."
He added, "indians all over the country are waking up. The bureaucratic government, with the Bureau of Indian Affairs as its puppet tribal government, is a failure.
It is a vicious failure because it is a police state. Free the American Indian from this system is our responsibility.
Means said the situation at the Pine Ridge Reservation "is as bad as before the takeover of Wounded Knee, and it only takes a small investment more reason to put their life on the line.
AIM members and supporters took over the village to dramatize demands for an investigation of the reservation's tribal government. They also demanded the tribe an 1863 treaty which they claim, gave the Sioux half of South Dakota t. the Sioux.
Aboutzk said the hearings were an attempt to gather ideas from Indians on what changes Congress should consider to improve conditions.
Slaying, Bombs Rip Okla. City
OKLAHAMA CITY (AP) — Firearms and firebombs left one person dead and a department store destroyed Monday in the night of violence that appeared to be racial.
Police said they could not establish any connection, however, between the violence and a confrontation Sunday afternoon between police and Black Muslims.
Officers said they had no suspect and indicated little hope of identifying the at-
Five persons were shot and firebombs hit a C. R., Anthony store, the National Cowboy Hall of Fame, Northeast High School and a small grocery store.
See FIREBOMBS, Page Two
07
2
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Art Museum Dark, Smoky After Blaze
The fire occurred in the southwest corner of the basement. The transformer was enclosed in a cement vault, according to Harry Busthulch, director of the buildings and grounds department physical plant, filled with smoke and the lights went out.
"This could happen anytime and anywhere, especially in this type of weather. It could have been an overload," Buchholz said.
Darry Curry, assistant to the art director at Spooner, said he assumed the wiring was sound; "or we wouldn't be allowed to be there," Curry said. The wiring regularly and checks the building.
From Page One
Firebombs Rip Oklahoma City
The Anthony store was destroyed, and company officials estimated damage at
Fire damage at the other places was much less—about $1,100 at Northeast High, less than $100 at the grocery store and another store, but minor amount at the Cowboy Hall.
Police said all of those shot were white, and owners of the department store and the grocery store were white. Witnesses said some of the shooters were black. One man and wounded three other persons.
Police Chief Sam Watson met monday with Black Muslim Minister theore DGX, who disavowed the violence, saying Muslims are "men of peace."
Two Muslims were charged Monday with assaulting police officers who arrested them Sunday afternoon after stopping them from entering a school in Northeast High School stadium, where
Muslims had shut down a mobile unit's broadcast of a black heritage celebration.
The first incident of violence occurred about 10:30 p.m., when three black men shot and killed Robert Wayne Norton, 24, and James Ward, 29. The second incident was at Norton, 50, in the living room of their home.
The elder Norton and another witness said the men fired after his son refused to take them.
About midnight, Ryan Caldwell was shot
by himself by unseen men he said as
trump's vice president.
Patricia Jean Hall, 15, was critically wounded shortly after a l.m. Police said she suffered an upper thorax injury and Terry Wackley, 21, when three black men pulled along inside in an auto and fired a shotgun. Hall was struck in the face and Wackley received minor wounds in the
The FBI and agents of the Alcohol-
Tobacco-Firearms Unit of the Treasury
and National Fire Agency.
A Soviet spokesman, in brief newsmen, tried to dispel what he called the "erroneous view" that only the Soviet Union stands to gain from a stepup in trade.
Today, the summit talks will move to the specifics with a discussion of improved practices.
"In building through joint effort a new structure of peaceful relations, we have no intention of turning it into a secluded cellar and beingenced off from the outside world," he said.
good relations between Moscow and Washington promoted the strengthening of peace, security and international cooperation.
"This is a wrong attitude," said Leonid Zamatyai, director-general of Tass. "It is not that by trading with us somebody is doing us a favor or service. We want trade
The owner of KFJL-FM, Tom Lynch, said that investigators for the Federal Communications Commission would investigate a man of his station's mobile unit broadcast.
to city police and fire inspectors.
Brezhnev-Nixon Begin Summit Talks . . .
AS THE talks began, Nixon assured Breznev ambiably that "by the end of the week you'll be speaking English and I'll be speaking Russian." They chatted through an interpreter as they posed for photos under a portrait of George Washington in the President's Oval Office.
to be based on mutual advantage..."
From Page One
A report of their discussions was given later to newsmen by Zamayatin and Ronald McGraw, the White House press Secretary, who said they were conducted in "general terms."
tions on the emigration of Jews and other minorities. Zamyatin told a reporter that even asking about Soviet emigration policies was "tantamount to interfering in the domestic affairs of another country". Ziegler, for his part, reiterated the Nixon administration policy against public discussion of the emigration problem.
One item not raised was Soviet restric-
Nixon and Brehzwelt spent an hour alone, except for a translator, and then were joined by others, including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, security adviser Henry A. Kissinger, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador Anatoliy Dobrynin.
baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pct. G.B.
12 24 573
Milwaukee 14 26 573
Baltimore 30 26 573
Delhi 30 26 573
New York 33 30 524 2
Boston 33 30 524 2
Houston 38 21 573 5
Cleveland 38 21 573
WEST
Chicago 32 26 542 |-|
Minnesota 32 27 542 |-|
Kansas City 32 27 542 |-|
Oakland 34 30 531 |-|
California 34 30 531 |-|
Texas 30 30 531 |-|
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Texas 7, Minnesota 4
Detroit 5, Cleveland 1
Milwaukee 8, Boston 3
Oakland 9, Kansas City 5
W. L. Pct. G.B.
Chicago 38 27 591
Montréal 29 28 591
Toronto 28 28 591
New York 28 30 483
Pittsburgh 28 32 483
Philadelphia 26 22 448
WEST
Los Angeles 39 25 609 —
San Francisco 40 27 597 —
Houston 36 24 564 —
Cincinnati 34 29 540 —
Atlanta 34 29 540 —
San Diego 34 29 488 —
Results
Philadelphia 9, New York
Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 1
St. Louis 1, Monroe 0, 6 iminims
Los Angeles 13, Atlanta 3
KC
Coca-Cola
Joys of the Old Ballpark
A young baseball fan demonstrates dual loyalty with a KU T-shirt and a Kansas City Royals cap on the Royals "Kansas Jayhawk Night."
Like most youngsters, he found eating as much a part of the fun as cheering.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
1973 Summer Session Directory
38rd Year. No. 152
Telephones
Newsroom 864-8410
Advertising-Circulation 864-8418
**new staff!** Morrow Dealer, editor Zainid乌兹关联 associate Michael Haleh, associate chief HR manager campion等.Hale Haugh, chief HR officer campion等.Hale Haugh, assistant business manager Check Goodell, classified manager Check Goodell, classified manager Check Goodell, classified manager Check Goodell, assistant business manager, Jack Mitchell Mulligan, assistant business manager, Jack Mitchell Mulligan, assistant business manager
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the summer. Mail subscription rates are $ 6 per semester for $1 a month, $8 per semester for $4 a month, and $644.00 commissions, goods, services and employment advertised are offered to all students without regard to their background, location or the necessary home of the University of Kansas or the State University.
Abdou, Josephine, E, 1401 Louisiana 5,
825-5076
* Abbott, William J. HG, 1000 Wvk, Owr Vk
825-5076
* Abbittner, JJ, 1000 Wvk, Anatolia
539-1612
* Abdikahter, All A., GG 28 Souffre 8
777-3238
* Abbey, Mary Nell GG, RR Lacage
825-5076
* Abdelhakim, Abdelhakim, B, 1012 Emery Rd. A
825-5076
* Abdesir, Demetri, B, 1012 Emery Rd. A
825-5076
* Abbereby, Dr. JH, 1000 Wvk, KMc
825-5076
* Abrahamson, Carol GG, 944 Lawrence
825-3273
* Abrahamson, James H, 311 MArry Ave. KMc
825-3273
* Abugatea, Juan A, 921 Olio BQ
825-3273
* Abugatea, Daniel R, 921 Olio BQ
825-3273
* Abuja, Daniel R, 921 Olio BQ
825-3273
* Acosta, Haul GG, 23 Stoffer 9
825-3273
* Abdomen, Brenda N, S 129 Wvk 8A
825-3273
* Abdomen, Ernesthee GG, 2000 Gavre 9-2C, Topca
825-3273
* Abdomen, Ernesthee GG, 2000 Gavre 9-2C, Topca
825-3273
* Abdomen, Geraldine GG, 2000 Gavre 9-2C, Topca
825-3273
* Abdomen, Geraldine GG, 2000 Gavre 9-2C, Topca
825-3273
*Adams, John S, 381, 3714 Madison, KC09 831-7133*
*Adams, John S, 381, 3714 Madison, KC09 831-7133*
*Adams, Randall D, 31J, 101 MIchigan Ld 7 834-8461*
*Adams, Randall D, 31J, 101 Michigan Ld 7 834-8461*
*Adams, Scott D, 1341 Vermont 4, 834-8132*
*Adams, Scott D, 1341 Vermont 4, 834-8132*
*Adams, Terry L, 3D, 1603 W 13 5076 834-8142*
*Adams, Terry L, 3D, 1603 W 13 5076 834-8142*
*Adam, William T, 4A, 9500 Valmil Ai 3 834-7482*
*Adam, Bergman H, IG, 1300 EJ 132 834-7251*
*Adam, Bergman H, IG, 1300 EJ 132 834-7251*
*Adam, Dickey J, DG, 2651 Dunham Lr 10M 834-6931*
*Adam, Dickey J, DG, 2651 Dunham Lr 10M 834-6931*
*Adam, Gregory L, GD, 1430 GLD 41 834-6931*
*Adam, Gregory L, GD, 1430 GLD 41 834-6931*
*Adam, Gregory L, GD, 1430 GLD 41 834-6931*
*Alberg, Thomas G, JA, 2990 N9, KC 2990-4139*
*Alberg, Thomas G, JA, 2990 N9, KC 2990-4139*
*Alberg, Thomas G, JA, 2990 N9, KC 2990-4139*
*Alberg, Thomas G, JA, 2990 N9, KC 2990-4139*
*Alberg, Thomas G, JA, 2990 N9, KC 2990-4139*
*Anthus, Stephen K, MJ, Mor Forest 834-7592
Akona, Dreamwa, L. 11, 1323 Tenn, Apt 8
Aladinam, Hujah A. J., 10, 1297 Muhls, Nilh, 83-537
Aladdinam, Hujah A. J., 10, 1297 Muhls, Nilh, 83-537
Aladinam, Hujah A. J., 10, 1297 Muhls, Nilh, 83-537
Alad
Alten, Christine A., 49, I.D. Jabr, A85-3113
Alten, Christopher A., 64, Rm. 312, Nimuthib
Alten, David M. A., 49, Rm. 312, Nimuthib
Alten, David M. A., 49, Rm. 312, Nimuthib
Alten, James E. M., 350 W 7rd St, Fratere VIII
Alten, James E. M., 350 W 7rd St, Fratere VIII
Alten, Mary H. E., 712 W 7th St
Alten, Mary H. E., 712 W 7th St
Alten, Hilbert A., 32, J.S. Johnson
Alten, Hilbert A., 32, J.S. Johnson
Alten, Greiner G., L. B., 38W, Wkpt. A1
Alten, Greiner G., L. B., 38W, Wkpt. A1
Jamens, J. M., 4B, 350 N St, SK
Jamens, J. M., 4B, 350 N St, SK
Alter, Gary M., 4A, 1080 Oblo
Alter, Gary M., 4A, 1080 Oblo
Avrdchen, F. G., 6, 2921 Nd St, SK
Avrdchen, F. G., 6, 2921 Nd St, SK
Avrdchen, M. N., 10M, Wkpt. A10C
Avrdchen, M. N., 10M, Wkpt. A10C
Pem, Pem
Amend, Douglas J. I.M.
Amend, Douglas J. I.M.
Amend, Virginia, S., 32, Wlenea
Amend, Virginia, S., 32, Wlenea
Amend, William, X., 49, Arkansas
Amend, William, X., 49, Arkansas
Anderson, Marshall, G., 29, Bar
Anderson, Marshall, G., 29, Bar
Anderson, Marshall, G., 29, Bar
KFMs
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
845-3113
Anderson, Arthur A., 42, 809 Avon
843-547-607
Anderson, Richard W., 42, 809 Widow
843-547-607
Anderson, D.W., 42, 809 Dowick
843-547-607
Anderson, Donald Lee, G., 1701 Indiana
843-547-607
Anderson, Edward L., 62, 1119 Cpk
843-547-607
Anderson, Edward G., 62, 1119 Cpk
843-547-607
Anderson, John W., G., 800 Gdrd, O-VP
843-547-607
Anderson, Margaret J., 96, 1125 Kansas
843-547-607
Anderson, Marlow E., G., 1833 Vermont
843-547-607
Anderson, William, G., 42, 1728 Miller Dr.
843-547-607
Anderson, Douglas W., 2E, 1917 Wsh
843-547-607
Anderson, Randall S., AJ, 1111 W1
843-547-607
Anderson, Jessie, James, 32, 2008 Genesee, KCMo
853-725-607
Anderson, Allison E., 4D, 2006 Rhode Island
843-547-607
Anderson, Diana J., A4, 1000 Craig Court
843-547-607
Anderson, Robert G., A4, 1232 Indiana
Look Up THE TOWN CRIER
930 Massachusetts 842-2147
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RELIGION BRIDGE TALLIES NEWSPAPERS PIPES PIPE ACCESSORIES
UNIVERSITY INVITATIONS FROTIC CANDLES
Tuesday, June 19. 1973
3
Appeel, Elha L., 22, 1348 Murphy
Hempstead, M.H., 46, 1349 Murphy
Maryland City, A.U., 46, 1349 Nuremberg
Amarillo, C.M., 46, 1350 Aberdeen, S.B.M.
Amarillo, C.M., 46, 1351 Aberdeen, S.B.M.
Akringberg, Habeeson, G. E., 1360 Trem
Akringberg, Habeeson, G. E., 1360 Trem
Astrongn, Harold, G.M., 1411 Edgerton
Astrongn, Harold, G.M., 1411 Edgerton
Astrongn, Maryw, P. M., 1319 S.C. 37 K
Astrongn, Maryw, P. M., 1319 S.C. 37 K
Arenniel, Kenneth W., 20, 1743 Alsthom
Arenniel, Kenneth W., 20, 1743 Alsthom
Arenniel, John C., 20, 1000 Ohlob
Arenniel, John C., 20, 1000 Ohlob
Ardon, James D., 160, 1000 Tter
Ardon, James D., 160, 1000 Tter
Artner, Damien C., M.I., 1003 Fennopa
Artner, Damien C., M.I., 1003 Fennopa
Annamia, Machin, P., Spellings Hall
Annamia, Machin, P., Spellings Hall
Affray, Mark H., G. J., 1320 N.B.
Affray, Mark H., G. J., 1320 N.B.
Abdon, Donald B., AJR 3, J.R.
Abdon, Donald B., AJR 3, J.R.
Aster, Terry G., 113 Piscineau
Aster, Terry G., 113 Piscineau
Admon, Johnson, G., 2000 Harper
Admon, Johnson, G., 2000 Harper
Battery, G., G.J., 1000 W. II
Battery, G., G.J., 1000 W. II
Bonnie, Bonnie L., 4D, 1240 Greeson
Bonnie, Bonnie L., 4D, 1240 Greeson
Awajor, J.E., 113 Natshimana
Awajor, J.E., 113 Natshimana
Aweyun, Cymbal, A., 1000 Nathalman
Aweyun, Cymbal, A., 1000 Nathalman
Awetta, Brenda J., 3P, 1000 W. II
Awetta, Brenda J., 3P, 1000 W. II
Akutin, Kathleen, G.N. H.S. Paula
Akutin, Kathleen, G.N. H.S. Paula
Averil, Hed R., 1011 Indus
Averil, Hed R., 1011 Indus
Averil, Martha, A., 16, 1320 Trem
Averil, Martha, A., 16, 1320 Trem
Avala, Welborn, M.G., 2015 M.S. Hill KC
Avala, Welborn, M.G., 2015 M.S. Hill KC
Bockel, Claudia K, 32, Apt 11A, Jawahir Twu EE
Bacqued, James K., A 18, Kennettusk河
Bacqued, James F., G 1807, Wb 6th, Apt 1
Bacqued, James F., G 1807, Wb 6th, Apt 1
Bacqued, Barbara A, N 1804, I Mm 1804 Eryd
Bacqued, Louisa Yafie, G 19, Sousa 12
Bam, Amel M, G 31, Okhoma River
Bakker, Kathy B, D 2008, Wb 26, Apt 27
Bakker, Alice N, G 983, Nibergland River
Bakker, Alice N, G 983, Nibergland River
Bakker, John M, 28, Tempel河
Bakker, Paul J, G 406, Albemarle河
Bakker, Richard L, A 18, Mt WO河
Bakker, Martha D, M 904, Avonla河
Bakker, Kevin D, D 327, Redhead河
Bakker, Kevin D, D 327, Redhead河
Bakker, Martine H, A 419, Cambridge river
Bakker, Darvel J, LM mtn, Winich河
Bakker, Jane E, D 499, Nyr河
Bakker, Kettle A, G 2008, Baker河
Bakker, Kettle A, G 2008, Baker河
Bakker, Wikoff G4, 2008, Redhead河
Bakker, Wikoff G4, 2008, Redhead河
Bakker, Delwyn D, 1802, Wk St河
Bakker, Gregover J, G 1502, Wk St河
Bakker, Richard G, 4018, Wm T河
Bakker, Richard G, 4018, Wm T河
Bakker, Sharon, 26, Abiloo河
Banker, Nairn, JH 125, Abiloo河
Banker, Nairn, JH 125, Abiloo河
Banker, Nairn, JH 125, Abiloo河
Banker, Vekton, H, A 479, Skylight Dr, Sh Mt河
Banker, David, H, A 456, Camp Road RI
Banker, David, H, A 456, Camp Road RI
Banker, David, H, A 456, Camp Road RI
Barawaki, Thomas A, G 25, Swoucher, 3
- Boehner, James M. G, 651 Brisbane
* Benson, Matthew H. G, 1034 Wilmot Hill
* Benson, Glen W., 9013 Wilmot Hill
* Benson, Elizabeth B., 9013 Wilmot Hill
* Benson, Elizabeth B., 9013 Wilmot Hill
* Benson, Gwenworth J., 1210 W. Clyde
Browns, Marlene J., 116, Minneapolis
Browns, Carly L., 201, Ohio II
Browns, Brennan C., 4D, College Hill W 19
Browns, Brennan D., 4D, College Hill W 19
Browns, Lebanon L, 720, W 58 W
Browns, Lebanon L, 720, W 58 W
Browns, Lebanon L, 3P, 119 Ibm KC
Browns, Lebanon L, 3P, 119 Ibm KC
Browns, Lebanon L, 3P, 119 Ibm KC
Browns, Lebanon L, 116, W 138 Terr W, Shreee
Browns, Leslie B, 4B, Hor E, Edwards
Browns, Michael D, 4D, 204 Sunset CTkpa
Browns, Michael D, 4D, 204 Sunset CTkpa
Browns, Patricia L, 9P, 109 Terr, Op KC
Browns, Patricia L, 9P, 109 Terr, Op KC
Browns, Hogland L, G, 2024 Bridgman PLtka
Browns, Hogland L, G, 2024 Bridgman PLtka
Browns, Sara L, 3F, 3Smuffer
Browns, Sara L, 3F, 3Smuffer
Browns, Sirah K, 9F, 2014 Kaw Dr
Browns, Thelma D, PN, 608 Greedley, KC
Browns, Thelma D, PN, 608 Greedley, KC
Browns, Thelma D, PN, 608 Greedley, KC
Browns, Gail Y, G, 185 Indian
Browns, Gail Y, G, 185 Indian
Browns, Stevenen M, 1790 Sherk, Tkpa
Browns, Stevenen M, 1790 Sherk, Tkpa
Bruksher, Deborah A, 16, 83 East 1J
Bruksher, Deborah A, 16, 83 East 1J
Bruksher, Jana H, 18, 200 Bridecake CR, KC
Bruksher, Jana H, 18, 200 Bridecake CR, KC
Bruksher, Terrance M, 64, 200 Elm, Levnhw
Bruksher, Terrance M, 64, 200 Elm, Levnhw
Bruksher, Sarar M, 167, Vernont Hivk, RC
Bruksher, Sarar M, 167, Vernont Hivk, RC
Bruksher, Raton F, G, 2024 Walters, KC
Bruksher, Raton F, G, 2024 Walters, KC
Bruksher, John L, 4A, Imitative
Bruksher, John L, 4A, Imitative
Bruksher, James F, A, 103 Walters, KC
Bruksher, James F, A, 103 Walters, KC
Bruksher, Steven A, 126, Tennk
Bruksher, Steven A, 126, Tennk
Bruksher, Steven A, 126, Tennk
Bruksher, Ulih L, 4B, 198 Emmy
Bruksher, Ulih L, 4B, 198 Emmy
Buther, Emberle A, 102, Emberly
Buther, Emberle A, 102, Emberly
Buther, Metelle A, 210, Harvard
Buther, Metelle A, 210, Harvard
Buther, Metelle A, 210, Harvard
Buther, Hairn A, 118, Maser
Buther, Hairn A, 118, Maser
Buther, Katehyr, G, C200 Bridal Terv
Buther, Katehyr, G, C200 Bridal Terv
Buerger, Joan J, 3D, Fries Drive
Buerger, Joan J, 3D, Fries Drive
Burken, Robert F, 16, 794 W
Burken, Robert F, 16, 794 W
Burdoll, Renal D, 4B, 87 W 207
Burdoll, Renal D, 4B, 87 W 207
Burdell, Kearen K, 145, Tennk
Burdell, Kearen K, 145, Tennk
Burdell, Kearen K, 145, Tennk
Burdell, Kenita P, Nin, Union Dorn KC
Burdell, Kenita P, Nin, Union Dorn KC
Burdell, Jatype A, 16, 38 Millstone Dr
Burdell, Jatype A, 16, 38 Millstone Dr
Burdell, Timothy B, 144, Flood Dr, mba
Burdell, Timothy B, 144, Flood Dr, mba
Brunds, Anneta M, G, 201, Arrwwed Dr, Olthe
Brunds, Anneta M, G, 201, Arrwwed Dr, Olthe
Brunds, Burrow A, 34, BRX 24, RKZ 21
Brunds, Burrow A, 34, BRX 24, RKZ 21
Brunds, Burrow A, 34, BRX 24, RKZ 21
Brunds, Pirce D, 102, Jan Dr
Brunds, Pirce D, 102, Jan Dr
Brunds, Bruce E, 46, 600 Otto
Brunds, Bruce E, 46, 600 Otto
Brunds, Nathan M, 35, Wint 2014, Tier KC
Brunds, Nathan M, 35, Wint 2014, Tier KC
Brunds, Karine K, 4V avalon
Brunds, Karine K, 4V avalon
Brunds, Davidville D, Department of Anthropology
Brunds, Davidville D, Department of Anthropology
Buns, Bosch W, 211 Klasold
Buns, Bosch W, 211 Klasold
Buns, Richard, 34, 142 Tennk
Buns, Richard, 34, 142 Tennk
Buns, Richard, 34, 142 Tennk
Buns, Butler, 2M, 2 Souffleur
Buns, Butler, 2M, 2 Souffleur
Buns, Phillestein, 103, Nashmith
Burs, Byrd, G, 18, 196 Indiana
Burs, Byrd, G, 18, 196 Indiana
Burs, Chang Ju G, 18, 196 Indiana
Burs, Chang Ju G, 18, 196 Indiana
C
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Cadwell, Nancy J, 2417 LS, 125 LS
Caliwell, Charles P, 62, 1229 Nail, SB, Ma
Caliwell, JP, G. McGee, Nail Hst
Caliwell, JP, G. McGee, Nail Hst
Caliwell, M. Ake, A. 133, W8h
Caliwell, Donna, A. 174, Stink, KC
Caliwell, Donna, A. 174, Stink, KC
Caliwell, Roy, A. 144, Tlem
Caliwell, C. JE, 63, 1408 Hoban, Merriam
Caliwell, Emery, L. 32, 980 N Hamburgville
Caliwell, M. G. 04, 1600 Heed Dr, Mission
Caliwell, M. G. 04, 1600 Heed Dr, Mission
Campbell, Roy L. 158, Tlem
Campbell, Roy L. 158, Tlem
Belford, B.J. A. 14, 1809 Kentucky
Campbell, B.J. A. 14, 1809 Kentucky
Campbell, Christina, A. 401, W25
Campbell, Michael, J. 381, KUC, KC
Campbell, Michael, J. 381, KUC, KC
Campbell, Barbara, J. 107, Belgien, Coll, Mo
Campbell, Richard, A. 429, H9h
Campbell, Richard, A. 429, H9h
Karp, Karl L. 16, 1073 Gradel, Topeka
Karp, Karl L. 16, 1073 Gradel, Topeka
Greenwell, M. A. 118, Kyring, Chem
Greenwell, M. A. 118, Kyring, Chem
Kauff, Jet, J. 152, Deaw, Lewood
Kauff, Jet, J. 152, Deaw, Lewood
J. R. I. M. 307, Freeman, Topeca
J. R. I. M. 307, Freeman, Topeca
R.C. R. I. M. 158, La, Na
R.C. R. I. M. 158, La, Na
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Cypresser, Bertha, A. 322, Ilex
Cypresser, Bertha, A. 322, Ilex
Cypresser, U.S. C. 12, 1809 Ridge, Rd
Cypresser, U.S. C. 12, 1809 Ridge, Rd
Cypresser, U.S. C. 12, 1809 Ridge, Rd
Cypresser, U.S. C. 12, 1809 Ridge, Rd
Cypresser, U.S. C. 12, 1809 Ridge, Rd
R. K. Mathieu, G. 307, E.R.
R. K. Mathieu, G. 307, E.R.
R. K. Mathieu, G. 307, E.R.
Carrader, Sandra, G. 154, La, Na
Carrader, Sandra, G. 154, La, Na
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Carmichael, S. G. 169, Horn
Robert, H. A. 150, Kennett, Mo
Robert, H. A. 150, Kennett, Mo
Gerrry, H. W. 308, Wis. Ws. Ft.
Gerrry, H. W. 308, Wis. Ws. Ft.
Jim, G. J. Church, St. Endore
Jim, G. J. Church, St. Endore
Judy, G. J. Church, St. Endore
R.P. F. M. 106, Ballentine, Shannon
R.P. F. M. 106, Ballentine, Shannon
Tourey, I.M. 721, Canterbury, Prv
Tourey, I.M. 721, Canterbury, Prv
Liver, A. L. M. 408, W. 97, Trelie, Vrig
Liver, A. L. M. 408, W. 97, Trelie, Vrig
Jill, J. L. Illum, 143, Cornon
Jill, J. L. Illum, 143, Cornon
L.D. L. M. 322, M. Bessy, W. Vr, Ov
L.D. L. M. 322, M. Bessy, W. Vr, Ov
Casher, Charles, A. 41, Hue, McLough
Casher, Charles, A. 41, Hue, McLough
Dwelling, W. M. 050, Mio
Dwelling, W. M. 050, Mio
Casted, John J., 321, Glacier Dr
Casted, John J., 321, Glacier Dr
Castle, Sandra, 4F, 154, Vermont
Castle, Sandra, 4F, 154, Vermont
Michel, M. Ake, A. 41, W17
Michel, M. Ake, A. 41, W17
Catlett, Nancy, Z. 205, Jasm Ft
Catlett, Nancy, Z. 205, Jasm Ft
cavillin, Barbax, G. 700, Creed, Topeca
cavillin, Barbax, G. 700, Creed, Topeca
Angel, A. G. 077, Ostrah
Angel, A. G. 077, Ostrah
Chaffee, Theodore, L. 110, Lawrence
Chaffee, Theodore, L. 110, Lawrence
Kohm, Mohamed N. 106, National
Chamber, Mary, G. 203, Missouri
Chamber, Mary, G. 203, Missouri
Prime, A. M. 144, Missison
Prime, A. M. 144, Missison
Chance, Jarry, S. G. 169, Horn
Chance, Jarry, S. G. 169, Horn
Cymbal, Cynah, 313, L4a Misc
Cymbal, Cynah, 313, L4a Misc
Douglas, D. H. 178, Baoding, BC
Douglas, D. H. 178, Baoding, BC
Swang, H. M. 190, Adrian, UK
Swang, H. M. 190, Adrian, UK
Carver, Carver, G. 151, W. I. W. K
Carver, Carver, G. 151, W. I. W. K
Former, Former, M. E. 144
Former, Former, M. E. 144
Chapman, Jeremy, J. Oliver Hall
Caddel Charles, 22E, A117 E-1 Lest 39
Caddel Charles, 20E, A117 E-1 Lest 39
Caddel Charles, 20E, A117 E-1 Lest 39
Bruce Conner, 85B, 87InD Lest 41
Bruce Conner, 85B, 87InD Lest 41
Cain Sharoya, 1500 W BBS Tse T2
Cain Sharoya, 1500 W BBS Tse T2
Caddel Clarke, Prevlite KC
Caddel Clarke, Cambridge, KC
Caddel Clarke, Cambridge, KC
stereo components
MISSISSippi State
ABC/DUNNELL RECORDING
Reg. $9.98 Now
Offer expires June 30
$6.98
We consistently have the CHEAPEST records in Lawrence KIEF'S Sign your name here
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University Daily Kansan
If It Was Murder ...
Where's the body?
If it was for a woman . . .
Which woman?
And if it was all a game . . .
Why the blood?
"SLEUTH"
Matinee Sat 7:15 & 9:45
Matinee Sat-Sun 2:00 & 4:25
Hillcrest
LAURENCE MICHAEI
OLIVIER CAINE
A Who. . . What. . . When.
Where and why done it
EMILE DE ANTONIO S
HILLHOUSE
When Scorpio wants you...
weekdays 2:30, 7:30 & 9:30
at & Sun 3:00, 4:50, 7:30 & 9:30
RED BLUE"
WASN'T BORNED
TO BE HANGED!
PG
IN PG
Hillcrest
A White Comedy
Evenings at 7:45 & 9:30
Matinees Sat-Sun, 2:45 & 4:35
When scorpios warn you...
There is no place to hide
SCORPIO
Eve.
AT 7:30 & 9:30
Mamiee Sat-Sun 2:30 & 4:30
(7:30 & 9:30)
HANGED!
PC
Varsity
INCARRIE ... Telephone 93-1065
Hillcrest
"THEATRE OF BLOOD"
KID BLUE"
WASN'T BORNED TO BE HANGED!
PG
"THEATRE OF BLOOD"
R
"THEATRE OF BLOOD" R
Weekdays 2:30, 7:30 & 9:30
Sat-Sun 2:30, 4:30, 7:30, 9:30
Granada
HALIFAX • Montreal VY S-5293
Corky
Corky
STEELARENA
Box Opens 8:00, Show starts 9:40
Sunset
Move in Dell Equip. West on Highway 12
Cheng, Jilien Chen, 734, 398th Rainbow, KC 236-2523 *'Clark, Joshua, @901, La Niña' 842-1453
Cheng, Juan Chen, 729, 393rd Rainbow, KC 242-2786 *'Clark, Kenneth, @901, Louisiana' 842-1453
Cheerlin, Sasun, 705, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Cheveron, Susan, 695, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Cherwin, Suan, 695, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Cherwin, Susan, 695, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Cherwin, Susan, 695, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Cherwin, Susan, 695, 203rd Rainbow, KC 843-2833 *'Clark, Marvin, @901, Carolina' 842-1881
Roy, Steven, 695, 190th Onoa, KC 843-2807 *'Clark, Richard, @901, Washington' 842-1851
Roy, Steven, 695, 190th Onoa, KC 843-2807 *'Clark, Richard, @901, Washington' 842-1851
Roy, Steven, 695, 190th Onoa, KC 843-2807 *'Clark, Richard, @901, Washington' 842-1851
Cheng, Wendel, 1219, Onoa, KC 843-2808 *'Clark, Richard, @901, Washington' 842-1851
Cheng, Wendel, 1219, Onoa, KC 843-2808 *'Clark, Richard, @901, Washington' 842-1851
Children, Joshua, 1130, Vermont KC 843-4820 *'Clark, Phillip, @114, Willett' 842-7044
Children, Joshua, 1130, Vermont KC 843-4820 *'Clark, Phillip, @114, Willett' 842-7044
Anthony, Anne, 1400, Namibia KC 843-1235 *'Clark, Cynthia, @152, Lillemom' 842-7044
Anthony, Anne, 1400, Namibia KC 843-1235 *'Clark, Cynthia, @152, Lillemom' 842-7044
Daniel, Daniel, 1414, Botswana, KC 843-2627 *'Clark, Joseph, @901, Swaziland' 842-7044
Daniel, Daniel, 1414, Botswana, KC 843-2627 *'Clark, Joseph, @901, Swaziland' 842-7044
Moo, Jung, 1129, Wetland, WI 843-1077 *'Clark, Sherie, @29, Henkov' 842-7044
Moon, Mark, 1021, Wetland, WI 843-1077 *'Clark, Sherie, @29, Henkov' 842-7044
Chissin, Mark, 1021, Wetland, WI 843-1077 *'Clark, Sherie, @29, Henkov' 842-7044
Christensen, Karla, 1413, Emery KC 843-2732 *'Clark, Deborah, J. @102, Nile' 842-7046
Christensen, Karla, 1413, Emery KC 843-2732 *'Clark, Deborah, J. @102, Nile' 842-7046
Christensen, Karla, 1413, Emery KC 843-2732 *'Clark, Deborah, J. @102, Nile' 842-7046
Thomas, Charles, 1430, Rowsley, LKC 842-9826 *'Clark, Patricia, L. @123, Nile' 842-9826
Thomas, Charles, 1430, Rowsley, LKC 842-9826 *'Clark, Patricia, L. @123, Nile' 842-9826
Shannon, 1430, Vermont Waterfront KC 842-1413 *'Clark, David, C. @123, Willett' 842-1471
Shanghai, Myja, 1129, Nain漠江 KC 843-8734 *'Clark, Nancy, @18, Adkins' 829-7858
Shanghai, Myja, 1129, Nain漠江 KC 843-8734 *'Clark, Nancy, @18, Adkins' 829-7858
Patricia, Patricia, 1344, Drake, DV KC 842-9826 *'Clark, Leonard, L. @123, Nile' 842-9826
Patricia, Patricia, 1344, Drake, DV KC 842-9826 *'Clark, Leonard, L. @123, Nile' 842-9826
Drichr, Frank, 1015, Lake Forest, Birch St KC 842-1190 *'Clark, Leonard, L. @123, Nile' 842-1145
Drichr, Frank, 1015, Lake Forest, Birch St KC 842-1190 *'Clark, Leonard, L. @123, Nile' 842-1145
Craig, John, JG, IDL, Balsam KC 842-4124 *'Clark, Thomas
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day 15 words $11.00
15 words of paper $32.00
each additional word, $6.01
Three Days 15 words of paper $32.00
each additional word, $6.01
Three Days
14 words on pages 23-28
each abdominal wound. 1.07
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Associate/Admin. Good service and employability
with a strong inclination to learn & apply knowledge.
AOL ACM, IBM, Google, MCI, SAMSUNG,
Alibaba Group, SAP, HP, Oracle, VMware &
MARING BRIEFING
Dedicated position in the U.S. to provide
good service and employability with a
strong inclination to learn & apply knowledge.
FOR SALE
NORTH SIZE Country Shore Bikes> No. 16. No. of the bikes that fit your needs include the furniture, collectibles, gas heating and cooking appliances, gas heaters, gourmet pots and mugs and monkey bread. 28 g speed pot old pot bake oven, stoneware crock pot, wood and wooden烤架. Fireplace wood large logs 15, firewood also价钱. Haled alba, brine, wheat and bacon meat packer. Hardwood 9 to 9, days 7, 843-8128. North Alberghen Bikes.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways to buy this book.
WORKSTOP CIVILIZATION HOME: Now on sale!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—new Analysis of Western Civilization."
: if you don't,
You're at a disadvantage
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier,
7-26
PIZZA HUF SCMGASBAND. The all pizza you
get at Pizza Hut is SCMGASBAND.
11:30-13:00, W 100 cm², F24-P68
For Sale 1972 TRIUMPH 500 Excellent Conti-
fessional 1972 YAMAHA 3600 1978
4300 miles. Call 843-700-8968.
For Sale ... 1709 Volkwegman Ghana Claim
P.O. Box 3464, Ghanammal Village,
Ghana, great looks, great gravel, Call Wayys or Cindy
Hornsley at Volkwegman Ghana Claim.
Phone: (850) 261-5050.
MOTORCYCLE. Yamaha $5 with helmet, very
motorcycle. Response. Call 843-3833. 6-10
Saint Bernard puppeh - AKC Registered Champion Saint Bernard puppeh. AKC Registered Champion Vampire puppeh and older dogs. Available Moontown, NY.
76 inch brown and plaid coat, folds down to
30-inch size. Holds two day twin-hispanic speaker just 6 months
away.
For Saleim 1965 WV, WBt. Enginereg, Red with
Foal Salm 1965 WV, Buitre engine, G2-6117
6-212
G.E. Color portable TV, excellent condition. Cann
branded trumpet a bargain. make offer
841-268-9633
Wine and beer making supplies at the Mercreme
Grocery Store 7051 Mass. 843-604-626
For sale—1971 Toyota Citroen GT-A, C radio,
black vinyl top, manual gear shift,
for black vinyl top, manual gear shift,
getting it back from new.
Apt. for rent for summer. Excellent location.
215 West 67th St. (902) 423-8900, #1250; will. Wollman. Call 1825-6800, 6-26
FOR RENT
For Rent. Apt. for one, on campus, $100/-
night, A/C, A/B; All bills paid. Call 843-952-
or 842-2500.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
For the latest up to the minute renting in retail locations, Inc. offers Rental Exchange, 7-26
2500. 91 Kentucky
SAVE CASOLINE: Walt to school and classes.
Hold with all appliances. No pets. 843-2511
www.casoline.com
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRSED OF SHEETS! KNITTING FAR-FLUNG LOTS? 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, parking pad parked. Free: Cabinets, bedding, rugs, tablecloths, rateable rates, furniture available. Ideal roommates. Savings Apts, 123 Ind. Avt. 9 or phone 843-211-6111.
Private room for girl+1 share kitchen and bath;
Private room for boy+1 share kitchen and bath;
paid visit费 $45 per month. Call 814-3209 after
arrival.
Bassement Apartment for two or three people—up to 800 square feet and downtown; $110 per month including GIMS, condo fees, taxes, and utilities.
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air conditioned and not heated. Amenities: Bathroom, Jacuzzi, No. 464-1858, Mobile Suit A-26
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cook-
ing. Rooms for kings RU and near downtown.
pets. f43-573.
NOTICE
*PIZZA FOR LUNCH* ~*small Pizza* or
*PIZZA FOR LUNCH* price of 1.15f at T-48
towns 7-26, 7-28, 7-30
***
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open 9am 12 & 8pm — Phone Order
843 7465 — We Deliver — 9th & 11th
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
GIRLS' NIGHT
10^c DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: 5.03
...egan SL, Bar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que.
...egan SL, Bar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que.
...egan SL, Bar-B-Que. We Bar-B-Que.
$25.00 Large rb plate
$25.00 Large rb plate
$25.00 Large rb plate
sandwich See. Mac and sandwich. See. Mac 11.50
sandwich See. Mac and sandwich. See. Mac 11.50
sandwich See. Mac and sandwich. See. Tuzos. $25.
V 21.50, Mist St. B.
V 21.50, Mist St. B.
have a dog, cat, rabbit, fish, or bird? If you do, they can be trained to feed you. We also need, and pallets from people like Sergeant Jenkins, and pallets from people like Aquaman, leashes, and all other items we may use. GRANTS DRIVE IN PERCENTER 845-2921.
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION. TIME:
Saturday city 10:30-6:20 and by appointment
sunday,idays 10:30-6:20 and by appointment
repair technicians sharing the knowledge
of progressive repair
specialists sharing the knowledge
of progressive repair
specialists we are able to offer quality servic
repair specialists we are able to offer quality servic
REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE Manual and slee
REPAIR is a life style manual and slee
and clocks; small appliances
BREE WAXMAN CANDLES for the more fragrant
breeze from WAXMAN CANDLES. W, 16th.
E, 20th.
Soybeans now in stock at the Mercantile Grocery
仓库 7408 Mass. 943-9764 6-26
**'LOVE IS GENDERLESS'** GAY LIBERATION:
meetings on Mondays 7:30 P.M. COUNY, UNION-
STATE, 124 W. 6th St.; 8:00-10:00,
IZING—8:00, 10:00 for details; office—
B-121 University, 864-4089; box 234, G渡-21
B-112 University, 864-4089; box 234, G渡-21
STRANGER IN TOWN* As an Avon representative, we are the finest house and make good money by selling our goods.
RAY AUDIO=have you heard the new H-270
RAYS! Have you watched you too had a stereo in a home situation instead of a store room?
Have you seen the new 378 Rhode Island St. B92-2047.
www.rhodeislandst.com
WANTED
Wanted: Photographer to phototeach of jewelry
Need needles. Call Latrein at 841-3833.
Call Latrein at 841-3833.
**Wanted:** Female to submit for summer **Private**: Formal entrance. Rent $250
**Utilize**: Call amy@kids-623.com
Need Female to house for summer. Own
the new campus and downsow $50/mo.
utilize 811-247-3900.
TYPING
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 4980. Myra. Also minor editing and/or proofreading.
Experienced in typing theses, dissertations, term-papers, other mixed typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typing. Works well when spelled corrected. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. 7-26
Typing-my home. IBM SelectR-PCia type.
Experienced experienced.
Call: Kali. 841-256-7248
www.ibmselectr.com
MISCELLANEOUS
PIZZA HUEL DELIVERS: A hot pizza right to
dinner on Saturday and Saturday
at 10:30 a.m. p84-734. 7-28
I would like to share commuting with someone
who is 50 and works on a Friday or Saturday at
3 Mon.-Fri. Call Garry. Garry: 684-232-8921
or 684-232-8920.
ENTERTAINMENT
THE INSIGHT TAVERN 1200 (Mossell) gwvr
Live theater, dining and entertainment
Live entertainment, live theater,
music, dances, mullets, rollers
1200
Tennis lessons: given by two experienced teachers,
ten-hour training—one rate 845-316, one for Kevin
Davis—two rates 845-316, one for Kevin
Davis
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
"Finishing Work a Specialty"
842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
CH
sirloin
甲
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our motive is and always been
There is no substitute for quality in good food
11: Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Kaw River Bridge
Stadium
Phone
(843) 7211
Open 4:30
Friday through Saturday
%
4
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
University Dally Kansan
Cohen, Richard J., 349 Foyer铺
Coleman, Jerry M., 610 Townline KCC
Coleman, Jerry M., 1010 Townline KCC
Coleman, Jerry M., 1413 N.E. KCC
Coleman, Linda J., 4148 Bottle Park KCC
Coleman, Linda J., 4148 Bottle Park KCC
Coleman, Larry J., 2035 Topka Topka
Coleman, Larry J., 2035 Topka Topka
Coleman, Lucas J., 2075 Locust Park
Coleman, Jane J., 418 A.W. Vickey Owk Pk
Coleman, Jane J., 418 A.W. Vickery Owk Pk
Coleman, Nancy J., 3257 Meadow C
Coleman, Seacot J., 3257 Meadow C
Coleman, Ronald J., 1511 Skidmore Rd
Coleman, Michael J., 4140 McNambe
Collage, William M., 3115 Lakeview Topka
Collage, William M., 3115 Lakeview Topka
Collage, Jack M., 3518 Serling Rd, KCO
Collage, Jack M., 3518 Serling Rd, KCO
Collage, Mary M., 4159 Skidmore Rd
Collage, Mary M., 4159 Skidmore Rd
Collage, Robert G., 3158 Snuffer B
Collage, Robert G., 3158 Snuffer B
Collage, Joseph M., 11 Maa
Collage, Joseph M., 11 Maa
Collage, Donald I., 1400 Wine Rd
Collage, Donald I., 1400 Wine Rd
Collage, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Collage, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Michael J., 3113 Alhamea
Commense, Michael J., 3113 Alhamea
Commense, Donald I., 1400 Wine Rd
Commense, Donald I., 1400 Wine Rd
Commense, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commense, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commenser, Barbara K., 1900 Guava, KCC
Commenser, Barbara K., 1900 Guava, KCC
Commenser, Janet J., 1160 Greensville
Commenser, Janet J., 1160 Greensville
Commenser, Elizabeth J., 5290 Leahworth
Commenser, Elizabeth J., 5290 Leahworth
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Jonan J., 1000 Browny
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Nancy J., 3190 Turtle Place
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Daniel M., 1000 Wine Rd
Commensor, Susan S., 1301 Laurel
Commensor, Jacqueline D., 4320 Colorado St, KCC
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, Gary J., 1340 Alma
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, George E., 4314 Orlando
Commense, Carlos T. II, 818 Avon
EXTRA DELICIOUS! 1/4 lb. Deluxe Sandee
1/4 pound chopped beefsteak
Sandwich layers start here
Sesame bun
Melted cheese
Shredded lettuce
Tomato onion puff cake
Secret sauce
Not just meat but chopped beef stock
Apply one to your appetite.
Sandy's
Across from Hillcrest
Cummins, Eliotbush, NG, 1011 Emery
Cummins, Roger, NJ, 1340 New Hampshire
Cummins, Roger, ND, 1340 New Hampshire
Cummins, Vallage, GA, 2049 Owashul
Cummins, Katherine, MD, 8729
Cummins, Kathleen, 3812 State Line, RC
Cummins, Kathleen, 3812 State Line, RC
Cummins, Carrie, 6527 W 23 W
Cummins, David, GQ, 627 W 23 W
Cummins, Joan, GQ, 627 W 33 W
Cummins, Jarry, GQ, 627 W 33 W
Cummins, Jarry, GQ, 627 W 33 W
Cummins, Jay W, 4720 North KC
Cummins, Jay W, 4720 North KC
Cummins, Jason, GQ, 3215 Springfield, DC
Cymer, Carson, 3215 Springfield, DC
Cymer, Carson, 3215 Springfield, DC
Cymer, Carson, IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cymer, Carson, IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cymer, Carson, IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cymer, Carson, IG, 1920 Winchester
Cimarron, C. IG, 1920 Winchester
Cymer, Carson,
Darcy, Roberta, PMI, 381 N Jarbour Dr, KC450-9452
Davie, Gary G, 6 UWF泵房
Dangesch, John G, 122 IU宿舍, KC450-8643
Dagson, John G, 122 IU宿舍, KC450-8643
Dabling, Shells, GG II 819 Rgs Dr, RVpKC450-7863
Dabling, Shells, GG II 819 Rgs Dr, RVpKC450-7863
Dahstrum, Jennifer, 26, 1000 Engel
* Day, David B., 48, 2022 Remi 843-9534
* Day, Aaron B., 84, 7281 Remi 843-9534
* Day, Aaron B., 84, 7281 Remi 843-9534
* Day, Jeremy Berlars, 42, 3013 and HBO, Kobe, MI 843-9534
* Day, Tyler Pineau, 42, 3013 and HBO, Kobe, MI 843-9534
* Day, Barbara Harbark, 42, 3013 and HBO, Kobe, MI 843-9534
* Day, Barbara Harbark, 42, 3013 and HBO, Kobe, MI 843-9534
* Day, Jeremy Berlars
Dinford, Holland, JG, 190 Nahant
Dinnerton, John, GJ, 414 Nahant
Dinnerton, John, GJ, 414 Nahant
Dinnerton, John, GJ, 414 Nahant
Dittesman, Diane, GJ, 300 Wine St Lt 023 PVI
Dittesman, Diane, GJ, 300 Wine St Lt 023 PVI
Dinky, Jo, 28, 1013 Emery Rd
Dinky, Jo, 28, 1013 Emery Rd
Dainny, Danny, GJ, 40 Box, HK, HI
Dittesman, Dianne, GJ, 95 Avalon
Dittesman, Dianne, GJ, 95 Avalon
Dixon, Collette, GJ, 176 N/18 T/K CK
Dixon, Collette, GJ, 176 N/18 T/K CK
Dixon, Mark, 21, 14 Kestenbury
Dixon, Mark, 21, 14 Kestenbury
Edgeward, Edward, 21, 240 Qaudah
Edgeward, Edward, 21, 240 Qaudah
Darol, Daniel, GJ, 265 Arkansas
Darol, Daniel, GJ, 265 Arkansas
Damon, Monroe, GJ, 143 Ohio
Damon, Monroe, GJ, 143 Ohio
Dodson, Leamer, SJM, 620 Cambridge, KC
Dodson, Leamer, SJM, 620 Cambridge, KC
Dodek, James, GJ, 24 Droffer Deer
Dodek, James, GJ, 24 Droffer Deer
Deer, Thomas, PJ, 397 Centennial
Deer, Thomas, PJ, 397 Centennial
Deryn, Darryn, GJ, 588 Frentan
Deryn, Darryn, GJ, 588 Frentan
David, Samantha, GJ, 150 Tremon
David, Samantha, GJ, 150 Tremon
David, Samantha, GJ, 150 Tremon
Dwik, David, 588 Irody, CK
Dwik, David, 588 Irody, CK
Downey, Marie, FJ, 151 Great Vermont
Downey, Marie, FJ, 151 Great Vermont
Duffin, Terry, AJ, 1147 Illinois
Duffin, Terry, AJ, 1147 Illinois
Detters, Terry, AJ, 1147 Illinois
Detters, Terry, AJ, 1147 Illinois
Detters, Terry, AJ, 1147 Illinois
Douglas, William, FJ, 1603 Tennessee
一
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Lucas McGee's
24th E LOWA
Faces
and
Trees
Use Kansan classified
Maupintour
travel service
Bank location
Downtown
Malls location
South
Union location
Campus
Hillcrest location
West
NOW WITH 4 CONVENIENT
OFFICES THAT'LL SEND YOU
KANSAS UNION WELCOMES SUMMER STUDENTS
Our Summer Session Hours Are:
Monday through Friday:
CAFETERIA:
7:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Breakfast
8:30 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Coffee Bar
11:00 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Lunch
DELI:
11:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
HAWK'S NEST
Saturday
10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
HAWK'S NEST
8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Other food areas closed.
PRAIRIE ROOM:
11:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Sunday
4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.
The Kansas Union . . .
A place to eat, cool off or meet friends during the long hot summer.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
5
* Edison, Edward G., 1029 Holiday
* Katherine, Katherine G., 1029 Windster
* Hilbert, A. J., 600 Forest, KC
* Hilbert, A. J., 600 Forest, KC
* Jasper, J. A., 4RR, 2 Endora
* Jasper, J. A., 4RR, 2 Endora
* Linden, B. J., 4D, 2788 TN, Tec KC
Ford, Susan, M, 610 W, 91 W
Ford, Peter, T, 412 W, 81 W
Ford, Terrace, M, 1019 W, M10 W
Ford, Charles, M, 2019 W, M10 W
Ford, James, M, 2019 W, M10 W
Ford, Palmer, M, 2019 W, M10 W
Ford, Palmer, M, 2019 W, M10 W
Ford, Joseph, M, 1000 W, 1000 W
Ford, Linda, PN, 714 Hillway, PVIII
Ford, Linda, PN, 714 Hillway, PVIII
Ford, Luna, A, 412 Arkansas, RD, OvP
Ford, Luna, A, 412 Arkansas, RD, OvP
Ford, Luna, A, 412 Arkansas, RD, OvP
Ford, Samuel, M, 311 Mim
Ford, Samuel, M, 311 Mim
Ford, Samuel, M, 311 Mim
Foege, George, J, 2011 W, W1
YOU NEED.
FOODS FOR HEALTH
Vitamin & Mineral & Protein Supplements
Barbara and Anna can help you plan your nutritional program.
9th & New Hampshire
Phone 842-2771
stereo components
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LAWRENCE SURPLUS The Home of Levi's
JIM WESTON
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We consistently have the CHEAPEST records in Lawrence KIEF'S Significant savings on all name brand stereo equipment
Lawrence, Kansas
Museum of the City of Chicago
Probably free know the legend of the enchanting Castle Tea Room that reigns compulsively on Mossypynthe Street
A CASTLE IN LAWRENCE?
The Castle was built in 1894 as a home for J. N. Roberts, retired Cult War general. His man of great wealth with an income from patients on wooden canvins carried in the Castle his family's goods.
Each of the fifteen rooms of the Castle is finished in a different type of wood. The dining rooms currently in use are elegantly furnished in birch, oak, walnut, wormwood and pine. The wooden warding was all done by hand by Sidney Enderle of England, a brother of Frank Kendall and a master of the noted sculptor and artist, and some of his work is in the drawing room of the Lord Hastings House.
There are nine beautiful fireplaces in the room, each a unique design with various colored motile and brick. The original dining room is very ample with an unusual built-in backboard and of close fit. A recess chain of mirrors and stained glass window above the fireplace gives the effect of an onetar in a chapel.
The hour, which gave the old glass appearance has a sturdy leadings to the thorn floor.
It is also used as the door handle and for locking doors during the current month. The balloon with spiny windows on the short side
is often seen in restaurants.
If you have never been inside the Castle Tea Room, come and dine in the only restaurant in Lowrance with such a beautiful historical and cultural background. The only way to really enjoy it is from the staircase.
The Castle Tea Room
The Most Unique Restaurant in Lawrence 1307 Moss
Reservations Suggested 843.1151
2nd
kansas
Shakespeare
Festival & Institute
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JUNE
19 TUESDAY
JULIUS CAESAR—University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
JULIUS CAESAR—University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
21 THURSDAY
HILLIE CAESAR
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
JULIUS CAESAR—University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
23 SECONDS
JULIAN CAESAR—University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
32 p.m.
23 SATURDAY
24 SUNDAY
JULIUS CAESAR—University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
Opening of the Boydell Collection of Shakespeare Prints Exhibit, Commentary by Chex J. Heahl and William Evons. Union Gallery, 2:00-3:00 p.m.
Lecture: "Shakespeare and the Romantic Painters," by Randy Yule. Forum Room, Kansas Union. 3:00 p.m.
JOE MACBETH. Columbia Pictures, 1956. Directed by Ken Hughes. SUA Film Series. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union. 7:00 p.m.
26 TUESDAY
28 THURSDAY
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
27 WEDNESDAY
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
28 HOURS
SHAKEPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
29 TUNNEL
SHAKEPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
20
50 SATURDAY
SHAKEPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
JULY
2 MONDAY
3 TUESDAY
1 SUNDAY
Lecture: "Women in Renaissance Literature," by Margaret Arnold. Forum Room, Kansas Union. 3:00 p.m.
ROMEO AND JULIET. Verona Productions, 1954. Directed by Renato Castellani. SUI Film Series, Woodcuttus Audition, Kansas Union. 7:00 p.m.
5 THURSDAY
SHAKEPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
6 FRIDAY
SHAKEPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
Friday
7 SATURDAY
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN—Experimental Theatre—8:00 p.m.
8 SUNDAY
C concert: "Music of the Renaissance" by Lawrence Chamber Players. Main Gallery, KU Museum of Art. 3:00 p.m.
HAMLET, Great Britain, 1969. Directed by Tony Richardson. SUA Film Series. MOWDRA Auditorium, Kansas Union. 7:00 p.m.
13 FRIDAY
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre— 8:00 p.m.
14 SATURDAY
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre—
8:00 p.m.
15 SUNDAY
Lecture: "Taming the Shrew," by Jerome Kilty, Forum Room, Kansas Union. 3:00 p.m.
STAFFAIT ("Chimus at Midnight"), International Films Espagnol/Alpine, 1965. Dressed by Orsen Wallas, SUA Film Series, Woodfair Auditorium, Kansas Union.
16 MONDAY
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW, Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
18 WEDNESDAY
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre 8:00 p.m.
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kitty. University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
30 min.
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty, University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
21 SATURDAY
THE TAMING OF THE SHREW. Directed by Jerome Kilty. University Theatre—8:00 p.m.
22 SUNDAY
Cancert: "A Program of 19th Century Music Inspired by Scenes from Shakespeare's Plays," by faculty and student solists, The School of Fine Arts. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. 3:00 p.m. OCTOBER 2015. Oakland University. 10:00 a.m. OCTOBER 2015. Olivier, SU Film Series, Woodruff Audiodrummon, Kansas University. 3:00 p.m. NOVEMBER 2015.
All theatre performances at 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and entertainment in the new Murphy Courtyard at 7:30
Ticket prices: $2.00 = Students; $1.00 = Summer Season Coupons; $6.00
Tickets for film series available at SUA Box Office, Kapsa University at door, Price 75e
1.
6
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Ride into Summer in Style
Try Our Double-Cheese Special → 49¢
Reg. 55¢
Planning A Party?
The Stables has their patio available for private parties.
This includes a cooking grill and enough space to make your party perfect. Make reservations today.
THE STABLES
'Where you get more for your money'
1407 W 7th
VI3-9144
University State Bank
at $300 a month you'll call it a very good deal...
We call it COMPLETE CUSTOMER CHECKING
A new concept in bank services.
C.C.C. Membership available to all Ages and Occupations.
For a monthly membership charge of $300 each member receives:
All the personalized checks and deposit tickets needed your name and address or every one.
No additional service charge regardless of checking activity or balance. Now, you will know in advance your receipt, checking account cost every month.
110,000 Accidental Death Insurance (age 70 and over redeemed amount by Life Insurance Company of North America). Coverage divided equally among members.
Bank Money Orders & Cashier's Checks without issue charge.
A membership card making these services readily available.
COMPLETE CUSTOMER CHECKING
The best reason for opening a NEW checking account. The way to add value to your PRESENT checking account.
Join now - Exclusive at... University State Bank
898 IOWA STREET Phone 852-4700 LAWRENCE, KANSAS
I
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Griff's
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1618 W. 23rd
featuring
QUALITY FOOD
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
7
Henderson, Lawrence, GD, 1000 Ind
Henderson, Lawrence, GD, 1000 Ind
Henderson, Vick, KA, 1030 Ind
Henderson, Vick, KA, 1030 Ind
Henderson, Nuney, 2440 Entrance, Pr VI
Henderson, Nuney, 2440 Entrance, Pr VI
Henderson, Nuney, 2440 Entrance, Pr VI
Henderson, Darius, KM, 1895 Entrance, KC
Henderson, Darius, KM, 1895 Entrance, KC
Henderson, Laura, TM, 2857 W, K4
Henderson, Laura, TM, 2857 W, K4
Henderson, Davis, GD, 816 KC
Henderson, Davis, GD, 816 KC
Henderson, Jade, ID, 1030 Avail
Henderson, Jade, ID, 1030 Avail
Henderson, Joseph, GD, 818 KC
Henderson, Joseph, GD, 818 KC
Henderson, Kei, 2814 Naismith
Henderson, Kei, 2814 Naismith
Henderson, Kyla, DK, 2000 Highway
Henderson, Kyla, DK, 2000 Highway
Henderson, Marta, GM, 1000 Campus Manor
Henderson, Marta, GM, 1000 Campus Manor
Hermanson, A. Mell, I171 Ry
Hermanson, A. Mell, I171 Ry
Henry, Henry, 2820 Idle
Henry, Henry, 2820 Idle
Hertington, Boston, JA, 1030 Watermark Dr
Hertington, Boston, JA, 1030 Watermark Dr
Henry, Jan, JA, 1030 Watermark Dr
Henry, Jan, JA, 1030 Watermark Dr
Henry, Ivy, JP, Typer Topeka
Henry, Ivy, JP, Tymer Topeka
Henry, Jason, JP, Tymer Topeka
Henry, Jason, JP, Tymer Topeka
Henry, Frederick, GM, 371 State Line, KC
Henry, Frederick, GM, 371 State Line, KC
Henry, Frederick, GM, 371 State Line, KC
Hertington, Boston, KCMo
CHARISMATIC TEACHING CONFERENCE
INTERDENOMINATIONAL
Rev. RODNEY G. LENSCH, Speaker
June 20 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.
June 21 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.
First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W 23rd
EVERYONE IS WELCOME A Nursery Is Provided
**Hixon, Charles**, 1218 Comm. **Bk** 841-2654
Hixon, Charles, 1219 Comm. **Bk** 841-2654
Hanna, Daniel, 1018 Long Islanda 843-804
No, M. M, G, 1534 W, 17 Tiponea 843-810
No, M. M, G, 1534 W, 17 Tiponea 843-810
Hogland, Jason, 1004 Kentucky 843-1180
Hogland, Jason, 1004 Kentucky 843-1180
Hocking, Irma, G, 1070 Lexington 843-1081
Hocking, Irma, G, 1070 Lexington 843-1081
Hodges, H.C. M, 1934 W, Tet W, Opk 843-1175
Hodges, Jeremia, G, 1070 Lexington 843-1175
Hodges, Jeremia, G, 1070 Lexington 843-1175
Hodges, Robert, A, 1314 Massa 843-1715
Hodges, Robert, A, 1314 Massa 843-1715
Hoyer, Rodney, A, 2001 Burke 843-3808
Hoyer, Rodney, A, 2001 Burke 843-3808
Hoffer, S., P. IA, 1048 KC 843-1747
Hoffman, S., P. IA, 1048 KC 843-1747
Hoffman, John, A, 1032 Emery 843-3700
Hoffman, John, A, 1032 Emery 843-3700
Hoffman, Marvel, B, 2014 Wallon 843-2104
Huffman, Linda, B, 1214 Wallon 843-2104
Hughan, G., A, 1462 Oudhald 843-6128
Hughan, G., A, 1462 Oudhald 843-6128
Hugan, Michael, 171 V, II 843-3084
Hugan, Janet, G, 121 Snowfer 843-3084
Hugan, J.D., M, 1500 Moohee, Shawnee 843-3084
Hogger, D.G., M, 1500 Moohee, Shawnee 843-3084
Hobart, S. T. GG, 819 N.Y. KC
Holbert, M. R., 819 N.Y. KC
Holbert, Gerny, GP, 719 L.P. Teanee
Holbert, Gerny, GP, 813 Wilderrock
Holbert, C. W., 820 N.Y. KC
Holbert, C. W., 923 Wereberry, KC
Holbert, Jensen, PN, 923 Wereberry, KC
Holbert, M. J, NZT 712 WT. Ov. PK
Holbert, Judith, JUV. 106 JUNA
Holbert, Judith, JUV. 108 JUNA
Holbert, Ellen, IL, 100 Countryside
Holbert, Roberta, IL, 100 Louisiana
Holbert, Roberta, IL, 100 Louisiana
Holbert, Thomas, 20, 1250 Ohio
Holbert, Thomas, 20, 1250 Ohio
Holt, R. GG, 405 Springfield, KC
Holt, R. GG, 405 Springfield, KC
Jau-jaeng, GG, 600 BKC, KMо
Ehson, Edison, LB, 117 UHF
Alter, Aileen, 44, 118 Manitoba Topeka
Alter, Aileen, 44, 118 Manitoba Topeka
D. G. G., 405 Locus, KCAMo
D. G. G., 405 Locus, KCAMo
Barbara, Barbara, D, 101 Tempel
Barbara, Barbara, D, 101 Tempel
Ehson, Elinel, ID, 100 W.J F
Ehson, Elinel, ID, 100 W.J F
ATTENTION: ALL STUDENT SENATE FUNDED ORGANIZATIONS
June 22 is the deadline for encumbering funds allocated for the 1973 fiscal year. This measure is in compliance with the University's closing procedures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1973.
Be sure to turn in all travel vouchers, service order vouchers, A-form orders, and outstanding bills to the Student Senate treasurer's office by June 22.
Your cooperation will be appreciated.
- Hore, Richard, 61, 154 Pearce * 82-43-649
* Horsen, Katie, 61, 154 Pearce * 82-43-649
* Horsen, Foster, B. J., 61, 441 Patterson, RCMo * 82-43-649
* Howell, Carl, 21, 154 Cuma * 81-42-650
* Howell, Carl, 21, 154 Cuma * 81-42-650
* Howell, Carl, 21, 154 Cuma * 81-42-650
* Howell, Carl, 21, 154 Cuma * 81-42-650
* Howell, Carl, 21, 154 Cuma * 81-42-650
* Howell, Michael, S.J., 304 University, Ov PK * 82-43-641
* Howell, Michael, S.J., 304 University, Ov PK * 82-43-641
* Howell, Michael, S.J., 304 University, Ov PK * 82-43-641
* Howell, Gregory, S.J., 100 Missouri * 82-43-641
* Howell, Gregory, S.J., 100 Missouri * 82-43-641
* Howell, Yli, 61, 81 King, Badwin * 82-43-641
* Howell, Yli, 61, 81 King, Badwin * 82-43-641
* Howell, Stanley, 61, 40 North * 82-43-620
* Howell, Stanley, 61, 40 North * 82-43-620
* Howell, T.M., 79, 40 Arlington, Haytown Mo * 82-43-678
* Howell, T.M., 79, 40 Arlington, Haytown Mo * 82-43-678
* Howell, Carolyn, 1, 122 Treen * 82-43-678
* Howell, Carolyn, 1, 122 Treen * 82-43-678
*Howell, Paul G., BB, Gov Q, Desoto*
851-1443
*Howard, Paul G., BB, M6, 187, KC*
851-1100
*Howell, Paul G., BB, M6, 187, KC*
851-1100
*Hopt, William G., BB, 134, Kentucky*
851-6497
*Hopt, William G., BB, 134, Kentucky*
851-6497
*Hopt, William G., BB, 134, Kentucky*
851-6497
*Hopt, William G., BB, 134, Kentucky*
851-6497
*Hopt, William G., BB, 134, Kentucky*
851-6497
*Hubbard, Martin G., BB, Arkansas*
851-6497
*Hubbard, Martin G., BB, Arkansas*
851-6497
*Hubbard, Martin G., BB, Arkansas*
851-6497
*Hubbard, Becky, SA, 1609 Kentucky*
851-4802
*Hubbard, Becky, SA, 1609 Kentucky*
851-4802
*Hubbard, Ekvany-BA, 1817 Indiana*
851-4802
*Hubbard, Blake, ML, 1612**
851-2016
*Hubbard, Blake, ML, 1612**
851-2016
*Hubbard, Joseph, GG, 1322 Vulcan Ln*
851-2714
*Hubbard, Joseph, GG, 1322 Vulcan Ln*
851-2714
stereo components
PIONEER TEAC Digi disc preorders
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Now
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Malls Shopping Center
stereo components
MOREEN TEAC JUL Dul disc preemers
Reg. $9.98
Now
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Offer expires June 30
We consistently have the CHEESEST records in Lawrence
KIEF'S
Significant savings on all name brand stereo equipment
Malls Shopping Center
Lawrence, Kansas
McQueen
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Quality Jewelry Since 1950
843-5432
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Watch the want ads In the Kansan.
Keepsake
TRADITIONAL WEDDING RINGS
Lawrence, Kansas
stereo components
HOMEEEN TEAC Ugal disc preemers
Columbia
Reg.
$5.98
Now
$2.99
Offer expires June 30
We consistently have the CHEAPEST records in Lawrence
KIEF'S
Significant savings on all name brand stereo equipment
Malls Shopping Center
Lawrence, Kansas
Columbia
Reg.
$5.98
Now
UNIQUE EXPRESSIONS In Young Fashions
Snappy Summer Pastels to help you brighten your on-the-go life!
the VILLAGE SET 922 Mass.
Other stores:
On the Country Plaza/Prairie
Village/Metcalf South/
Blue Ridge Mall
NS
While You're at KU
You Can Rely Upon Raney's Professional Pharmacists To Accurately Fill Your Home Town Prescriptions
CONVENIENCE
Three locations: Downtown, Dillon's Plaza, and Hillcrest—quick and good meals and snacks at our Plaza store—modern stores make shopping at Raney's easy and pleasurable—plenty of free parking at all three Raney stores.
SELECTION
For Her, Chanel, Caron,
Fabereg, Revlon, Max Factor,
Helena Rubenstein, Coty, Dana,
Eyvon, Lawin-For Him, English
Leather, Old Spice, British Sterling,
Brut, and Braravu.
SERVICE
Prompt 7-day-a-week prescription service—free prescription delivery—Raney charge accounts give convenience in purchasing and clear records for easier budgeting—friendly personel—photo developing.
VISIT ALL THREE RANEY HALLMARK CARD AND PARTY SHOPS CHOOSE RUSSELL STOVER FINE CANDY
DOWNTOWN 843-3521
921 Mass.
RANEY
DRUGS
HILLCREST
RANEY
PLAZA CENTER
DRUG STORES
FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY
DOWNTOWN
Raney Drugs
HILLCREST 843-9102 Iowa at 9th St.
OPEN EVENINGS FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY FROM ALL 3 STORES
PLAZA 843-0684
1800 Mass.
Penny Dungie
HILLCREST
RANEY
PLAZA CENTER
DRUG STORES
FREE PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY
DOWNTOWN
t
8
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Hustett, Marta, GM, 1907's Delaware
Huskey, N.A., GM, 1907's New York
Huffman, L. A., GM, 1131 Valentine, KCMo
Huffmaster, Sue, GM, 3014 Bell, KCMo
Huffmaster, Sue, GM, 3014 Bell, KCMo
Hughley, Cindy, GM, 2001 Stewart
Hughes, B.J., GM, 2001 Stewart
Hughes, T.W, FZ, Box 482, Endora
Hughes, T.W, FZ, Box 482, Endora
Hughes, H.W, FZ, Box 500, Wereva
Hulsen, Neil, VM, 25 W Ter
Hulsen, Neil, VM, 25 W Ter
Huxton, Jan, DM, 9 Westwood
Huxton, Jan, DM, 9 Westwood
Humphrey, Philip, GM, 343 Illinois
Humphrey, Philip, GM, 343 Illinois
Kuncker, J.D, GM, 501 Fairway, Sk, Ks
Kuncker, J.D, GM, 501 Fairway, Sk, Ks
Rummel, Ronald, GM, 10 N, M) Serenade
Rummel, Ronald, GM, 10 N, M) Serenade
Hunt, Frances, GM, 25 N Mite
Hunt, Frances, GM, 25 N Mite
Hunt, Lawrence, FZ, 174 W
Hunt, Lawrence, FZ, 174 W
Hunt, T., PM, 324 N Mite
Hunt, T., PM, 324 N Mite
Hunter, Lilliano, GM, 189 N, MKC
Hunter, Lilliano, GM, 189 N, MKC
Hunter,andra, J., McMurray
Hunter,andra, J., McMurray
Hunter, J.W, GM, 371 Cedar, GM, 360
Hunter, David, GM, 360
Hunter, David, GM, 360
Hunter, Ford, CM, 100 Mission
Hunter, Ford, CM, 100 Mission
Hunter, Michael, GM, 109 Arenew
Hunter, Michael, GM, 109 Arenew
Leynth, Lynda, II, 2200 W Ter
Leynth, Lynda, II, 2200 W Ter
Hartford, Christian, I., McMurray
Hartford, Christian, I., McMurray
Harris, Patella, DG, Arkansas
Harris, Patella, DG, Arkansas
Harris, S.B., GM, 910 W Ter, Pr Vig
Harris, S.B., GM, 910 W Ter, Pr Vig
Harry, Larry, GM, 503 Box, SJ
Harry, Larry, GM, 503 Box, SJ
Hutchison, H.K, GG, 16 Stouffer
Hutchison, H.K, GG, 16 Stouffer
Hustett, James, GM, 1907's Delaware
Hustetter, Robert, GM, 121 W Ter
Hustetter, Robert, GM, 121 W Ter
Hewlett, Kenard, GM, 262 W Ter
Hewlett, Kenard, GM, 262 W Ter
Hydeman, Gretenb, GM, 902 Laser, OVK
Hydeman, Gretenb, GM, 902 Laser, OVK
Hydeman, Larry, TM, 1200 Mismith
Hydeman, Larry, TM, 1200 Mismith
Darra, Deborah, PN, 1988 Rainbow, KC 831-5086
Dearborn, John, PN, 1988 Rush, IL 832-5086
David Ramsey, JR, 113 Neilson, Edwardville, IL 822-5738
David Smith, JR, 113 Neilson, Edwardville, IL 802-5738
David Smith, JR, 113 Neilson, Edwardville, IL 802-5738
Lierre, Lorenzo, FP, 188 Sillian, KC 841-5824
Lierre, Lorenzo, FP, 188 Sillian, KC 841-5824
Immanuele, Maria, M, 198 W. B4th
482-9248
Jackson, J M, 360, Booth, KC
482-9156
Jackson, D, 146, Udike, KC
483-1156
Jackson, I, 146, Udike, KC
483-1043
Jackson, Mary D, 39, 600 Ohu
484-6303
Jackson, B, 254, Ehmerson, KC
484-3166
Jackson, Robert, L, 117, Ohu
484-4254
Jackson, Thomas, G, 271, Ghadia
484-3273
Jackson, Thomas, G, 271, Ghadia
484-1879
Jackson, Thomas, G, 271, Ghadia
484-3178
Jackson, Thomas, G, 271, Ghadia
484-1892
Jackson, Crab, G, Box 109, Endora
484-4880
Jackson, Joy, Jay, A, 1000 Nathmith
484-7064
Jackson, N, 360, WJ, 41, KC
484-2029
Jackson, D, A, 100, Tiger, Topika
484-8020
Jackson, D, A, 100, Tiger, Topika
484-1878
Jequon, Vandell, 1b, 56ldafy
484-1352
Johns, Frank, 22, 1013 Nathmith
484-3287
James, David, B, 711 Rockview, KC
484-7190
James, Hazel, J, 020, PO Box 3, KC
484-7190
James, Mary, G, 2006 redbud
484-2574
James, Yann, H, 961, Webster
484-2970
James, G, K, 318, Booth, KC
482-0877
Jarabel, Ajul, E, 253 Nathmith
484-3207
Jarrah, Jeffrey, J, 1800 Nathmith
484-3220
Jarah, Kyester, J, 1700 Leavand, KC
484-3231
Jerffley, Lynn, G, 28, Stouthey
484-3238
Johnson, Moses GJ, 1500 W Terr
Johnson, Nigel JG, Shawnee Mistle
Nancy, Sage GJ, 1097 W Terr
Nancy, Sage GJ, 1097 W Terr
Oscar Jr, GJ, 1097 W KC
Patriarch, John JG, 1135 Nalmith
Patriarch, John JG, 1135 Nalmith
Rhonda, GJ, 1919 Pine Cone
Rhonda, GJ, 1919 Pine Cone
Robert JJ, 1803 KC
Robert JJ, 1803 KC
Rhonda, GJ, 1803 KC
Rhonda, GJ, 1803 KC
Sherry, GJ, 710 Aia
Sherry, GJ, 710 Aia
Windsor, WD Jr, 283 Hedge
Windsor, WD Jr, 283 Hedge
Charlie, JJ, 119 Mistle
Charlie, JJ, 119 Mistle
Janice, JAN Jr, 1098 Oma
Janice, JAN Jr, 1098 Oma
Patriarch, John JG, 2191 W Terr, Ovid Park
Patriarch, John JG, 2191 W Terr, Ovid Park
Cameron, IJM, 1800 Engel
Cameron, IJM, 1800 Engel
Cherie, JJ, 163 IJR, 125 Liberty, Mo
Cherie, JJ, 163 IJR, 125 Liberty, Mo
Daryl, JF, 163 W 13
Daryl, JF, 163 W 13
Debora, IJM, 1800 Ow, Vpk
Debora, IJM, 1800 Ow, Vpk
Francese, GJ, 1095 W
Francese, GJ, 1095 W
Herman, IJM, POD Jr, 200, Stanford, Ca
Herman, IJM, POD Jr, 200, Stanford, Ca
James, JAN Jr, 1135 Nalmith
James, JAN Jr, 1135 Nalmith
Lowell, GJ, 807 Summerwind, CA
Lowell, GJ, 807 Summerwind, CA
Mark, IJM, 405 Springfield, AK
Mark, IJM, 405 Springfield, AK
Nancy, GJ, 4328 W 1097 W Terr, Tpka
Nancy, GJ, 4328 W 1097 W Terr, Tpka
Particia, JJ, 283 W Terr, Tpka
Particia, JJ, 283 W Terr, Tpka
Robert, JF, 700 Missouri
Robert, JF, 700 Missouri
Roy, IJM, 1135 Nalmith, KC
Roy, IJM, 1135 Nalmith, KC
Sarah, AD Jr, 1098 Tem
Sarah, AD Jr, 1098 Tem
William, JAM Jr, 1100 City Line Rd
William, JAM Jr, 1100 City Line Rd
Jordan, Mahal, GJ, 1095 Wellington, Rd
Jordan, Mahal, GJ, 1095 Wellington, Rd
Jeanne, JAN Jr, 1135 Nalmith, KC
Jeanne, JAN Jr, 1135 Nalmith, KC
Jake, JEN Jr, 1095 W
Jake, JEN Jr, 1095 W
Jake, JEN Jr, 1095 W
Stevens, GJ, 411 Pine Crit, LT
Stevens, GJ, 411 Pine Crit, LT
Stevens, GJ, 411 Pine Crit, LT
Inadie, EJR Jr, EJR N Misc
Inadie, EJR Jr, EJR N Misc
Jagrmann, KIN Jr, 1251 Nalmith
Jagrmann, KIN Jr, 1251 Nalmith
Jutth, Greewer Jr, 1108 Tem
K
Johnson, GJ, 1500 W Terr
OILS GRAINS FLOURS SEERS GRANOLA NUTS HERBS OILS SPICES PAPYRUS CHEESE Sausages 730 MASS. COME VISIT SOON
Kamitz, Martha JP, 4117 Adams, KC
Konitz, Kristin, 3908 Kincardine, KM
Klennan, Vinnam DL, 8344 WG
Klennan, Vinnam DL, 8344 WG
Kapel, David MJ, 7208 Cantarey, PrVII
Kapel, David MJ, 7208 Cantarey, PrVII
Karpasianov, Yevgeny O, Olive Hill, WA
Karpasianov, Yevgeny O, Olive Hill, WA
Charles, James JM, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Charles, James JM, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Karen, Ellen DJ, 1413 Alumni, MI
Karen, Ellen DJ, 1413 Alumni, MI
Kainer, Walker AJ, 4118 Booth PI
Kainer, Walker AJ, 4118 Booth PI
Karen, Ellen DJ, 1413 Alumni, MI
Karen, Ellen DJ, 1413 Alumni, MI
Kern, Ernest GJ, 301 N Hittier, Belton, MO
Kern, Ernest GJ, 301 N Hittier, Belton, MO
Kath, Mary MJ, 5138 Calif, KC
Kath, Mary MJ, 5138 Calif, KC
Barbara, Barbara BN, 8139 Rando, KC
Kaufman, Catherine BN, 8139 Rando, KC
Kaufman, Catherine BN, 8139 Rando, KC
Prattelli, Q2490 Ousdah
Krucz, Lucia JI, 1122 Ousdah
Krucz, Lucia JI, 1122 Ousdah
Danny, Jimmy JM, 801 Washington, Goodland
Danny, Jimmy JM, 801 Washington, Goodland
Patain, Patain JP, 1151 Pine Coe
Patain, Patain JP, 1151 Pine Coe
Enderling, Enderling JM, 1120 Lamar OvPk
Enderling, Enderling JM, 1120 Lamar OvPk
Kenn, Catharine AN, An XB 2100 NLC-MO
Kenn, Catharine AN, An XB 2100 NLC-MO
Kuffer, Karen JE, 1020 W
Kuffer, Karen JE, 1020 W
Cellar, Cellar JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Cellar, Cellar JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Hugh, Hugh JP, 1708 Book, KC
Hugh, Hugh JP, 1708 Book, KC
Katherine, Katherine JP, 1708 Book, KC
Katherine, Katherine JP, 1708 Book, KC
Robert, Robert JN, 8139 Rando, KC
Robert, Robert JN, 8139 Rando, KC
Reller, Reller JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Reller, Reller JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Johnson, John C, 1030 Iowa
Johnson, John C, 1030 Iowa
Kelling, Kelling JM, 238 W, OvPk
Kelling, Kelling JM, 238 W, OvPk
James, James G, Grog, Lindley, KU
James, James G, Grog, Lindley, KU
Robey, Robey JN, 1708 Book, KC
Robey, Robey JN, 1708 Book, KC
Steven, Steven AJ, 1120 Ohio
Steven, Steven AJ, 1120 Ohio
Kent, James JP, 925 KU
Kent, James JP, 925 KU
Kent, James JP, 925 KU
Nancy, Nancy JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Nancy, Nancy JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Neremy, Nemoy JM, 1120 W
Neremy, Nemoy JM, 1120 W
Nemoy, Nemoy JM, 1120 W
Kenn, Kennly JM, 1120 W
Kenn, Kennly JM, 1120 W
Keshner, Katherine JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Keshner, Katherine JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Kristen, Kristen JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Kristen, Kristen JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Karl, Karl JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Karl, Karl JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Lippe, Lippe JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Lippe, Lippe JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Melissa, Melissa JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Melissa, Melissa JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Milena, Milena JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Milena, Milena JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Michaelle, Michaelle JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Michaelle, Michaelle JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Mike, Mike JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Mike, Mike JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Mitch, Mitch JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Mitch, Mitch JP, 1109 Cary Ln, KC
Nancy, Nancy
The New Murray Burns Camping and Philosophical Society (also known as the S.U.A. Canoe Club)
Presents This June
Tues. 19—VOLLEYBALL, 7 p.m., South Park, 12th & Massachusetts
Wed. 20—BREAKFAST IN THE PARK,7 a.m., South Park
Bunny Blacks Royal Downtown — 837 Massachusetts College Shop
Thurs. 21—FOLK-SING-ALONG, 8-11 p.m., South Park Band-
stand
Sat. 23-22 MILE OVERNIGHT BIKE TOUR TO LAKE PERRY,
"fine all leather sandals that wear & wear"
Sponsored by Mt. Oread Bike Club
Sat. 23—CAMPOUT AT DOUGLAS COUNTY LAKE
Sun. 24-FREE CONCERT at Potter's Lake, 2-8 p.m.
Tues. 26—VOLLEYBALL, 7 p.m., South Park
Wed.27—BREAKFAST IN THE PARK, 7 a.m., South Park
hurs. 28-PAIRING by Bach and Deutsch (of Intimate Enemy fame)
10285839447686
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO GET ON THE MAILING LIST,
call S.U. U. 844-377
See a complete collection of summertime footwear. Keep cool and comfortable at the Royal College Shop.
Baretraps . . .
公
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
2023年国家税务总局监制
国家税务局监制
国家税务局监制
CAMPING
BACKPACKING
Excellent Selection of
PACKS - SLEEPING BAGS
TENTS — COOKING EQUIP.
PLASTIC CONTAINERS — RAINWEAR
FREEZE DRIED FOODS
QUALITY AND PRICE AT
804 Massachusetts
Kilimantar, Karen G, 1240 Third, Lewenthwa
Kimbo, Ho Soon JG, 1160 Towr
Belts
Sandals
Handbags
Watch Bands
Wallets
Leather
Accessories
Also: Moccasins
Frye Boots
Hiking Boots
PRIMARILY
LEATHER
craftsmen of time
812 Mass.
Also:
PRIMARILY LEATHER
RAY AUDIO House of Stereo
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
738 Rhode Island Street
Phone (913) 842-2047
WELCOME TO OUR HOUSE OF STERED
Ray Audio is the "home" of leading companies making the best components in the world. We also have some very fine accessory products. Below are the main lines we can supply, but if you don't see what you are looking for, please about it. Our constanty looking for good quality at a price that is comparable to that quality.
WOLLENSAK
HARMAN KARDON
ACOUSTIC RESEARCH
REVOX
HILL
RECTILINEAR
AKAI
INFINITY
JENSEN
BOSE
RADFORD
KENWOOD
BSR
SCOTCH
KOSS
CRAIG
SHURE
LENCO
SANSUI
DISCWASHER
DUAL
SHERWOOD
PANASONIC
DYNACO
MIRACORD
S. A.E.
ELECTRO-VOICE
MAXELL
SONY SUPERSCOPE
PHASE LINEAR
GARRARD
SOUNDCRAFTSMAN
P. E. or IMPRO
THORENS
PHILIPS
We carry no "house brand" / junk to make to deal's / with, or do we push you to buy anything. You encourage us to shop around and compare. We also encourage you to explore our website and get information about books we browse through the stereo magazines or leaf through the book of test reports. We enjoy learning about anything and everything we do and enjoy just rappelling around the store. We also, and we can, you with every line they have, we earnly believe that we have something as good or better, and more important - our main thought is to save you money when you buy it.
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
buy
to
you
are
sth
as
you
Kubu, Deborah, 22, Box 211, Winchester
Kubu, Diana, 44, K149 Wayley Hoy ShMn
Kubu, Danica, 44, K149 Wayley Hoy ShMn
Kubu, Charlotte, 20, 100 Mea
Kubu, Charlotte, 20, 100 Mea
Kubu, Nancy, 44, 128 Pem
Kubu, Nancy, 44, 128 Pem
Kubu, Sophie, 36, 128 Pem
Kubu, Sophie, 36, 128 Pem
Kupinger, Jerald, 35, 1400 Ile BKCm
Kupinger, Jerald, 35, 1400 Ile BKCm
Kupinger, Jerald, 35, 1400 Ile BKCm
Kubu, Robin, 16, 1013 Nakshmi
Kubu, Robin, 16, 1013 Nakshmi
Naz, Rustenberg, 10, 103 Western, Topeka
Naz, Rustenberg, 10, 103 Western, Topeka
774-3191
774-3191
Lawser, William,GK, 1060 Nautilus
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lalain, Nathan,N.J., 21, 25 Ww Dr Bur Spr
Lalain, Nathan,N.J., 21, 25 Ww Dr Bur Spr
Date, Lalain, MD, 1323 Vermont
Date, Lalain, MD, 1323 Vermont
Jelia, JE1, 140 Mitso
Morton, Martin, JR., 18
Morton, Martin, JR., 18
Joyce, Amy,AIM, 186 Kaven La, Laming
Joyce, Amy,AIM, 186 Kaven La, Laming
Lawrence, Terry, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawrence, Terry, 781.5101.Western.McK
Raymon, Raymon,BG, 337.KC
Candies, Syl., 110 Mitso
Candies, Syl., 110 Mitso
Karli, Karli, KB, 90 W, Tika
Vicki, Vicki, 130 Mitso
Vicki, Vicki, 130 Mitso
Dorothy, AG, 100 Emery
Dorothy, AG, 100 Emery
Randy, Mandy, ZR, 2430 Parallel, KC
Randy, Mandy, ZR, 2430 Parallel, KC
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Jelia, JE1, 140 Mitso
Morton, Martin, JR., 18
Morton, Martin, JR., 18
Joyce, Amy,AIM, 186 Kaven La, Laming
Joyce, Amy,AIM, 186 Kaven La, Laming
Lawrence, Terry, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawrence, Terry, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Jamee, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Jamie, Jamie, GK, 105 Ochoa
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Lakey, Lakey, 710 Woods, Lnn
Laboratory, Doubleday, PW, 8131 Emmett,PVilly
Laboratory, George, KG, 352 Mo
Laboratory, Gregory, HP, 492 Mo
Lakemee, Kate, 1323 Vermont
Lakemee, David, KG, 1323 Vermont
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Lawson, Matthew, 781.5101.Western.McK
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Sarah, Sarah, 160 W, W9
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Larab, Sarah, 941 Lla
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
Langer, AnaF, 456 W, St Terr
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, RH, 200 RidgeCl
David, David, 1320 W Browdley,Lawnth
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Larkin, Mary, 622 Ochoa
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1006 Forest,KC
Dornbach, Dornbach,KG, 1015 Misman
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
Jamie, Jamie,HI, 72
JAMEE, James, GK, 105 Mitso
JAMEE, James, GK, 105 Mitso
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
Lolie, Lolie, 723 Verve,KC
JAMIE, JamIE, GK, 105 Ochoa
JAMIE, JamIE
- Lapeer, Gorge, GW, HRD Bx 300
* Linden, Mark, AM, A18 MK 360
* Lauger, Abner, M18, SK C
* Leesburg, Lawrence, MD 129 New Jersey
* Leesburg, Hubert, DG 129 New Jersey
* Leesburg, Mark, M46 Woodford, LA, Ca
* Leesburg, Timothy, GW 160 Nathanim
* Lewis, Elizabeth, HLB N17 Airborne
* Lewine, James, GW 84 Highland
* Lewine, James, GW 84 Highland
* Lewine, Johnny, M18 UWC
* Lewine, James, JA 171 WB
* Leeja, Kameron, JJ 171 WB
* Leeja, Martha, NJC Vine Lake, RC
* Leeja, Feltia, JL 115 Ohio
* Leeja, Kathryn, DJ 107 Indiana
* Leeja, Kathryn, DJ 107 Indiana
* Leeja, Mini Chuk, JUWG 103 Adams, CA
* Leeja, Sharon, JJUWG 103 Ohio
* Leeja, Sharon, JJUWG 103 Ohio
* Leeja, Jean, JJUWG 103 Ohio
* Leeja, Jean, JJUWG 103 Ohio
* Leeja, Janet, JJUWG 103 Ohio
* Leeja, Ann, JACG 104 Unified
* Leeja, Chi-Hahn, JLUWG 110 Ohio
* Lisleh, Cherry, YLLQ 70 La
* Lisleh, Cherry, YLLQ 70 La
* Lightly, Richard, M60 STE JY
* Lightly, Richard, M60 STE JY
* Likely, Joseph, M208 STE T9er CO
* Likely, Joseph, M208 STE T9er CO
* Liarse, Walter, EJ 104 Oak Hill
* Liarse, Walter, EJ 104 Oak Hill
* Lemann, William, N90 Ewery
* Lemann, Lincoln, RG 78 Cal. Dr. PvIII
* Lemann, Lincoln, RG 78 Cal. Dr. PvIII
* Lenan, David, WD 10 35 WD
* Lenan, David, WD 10 35 WD
* Leathman, Mary, AA X210 Wenton Sq
* Leathman, Mary, AA X210 Wenton Sq
* Leuchter, Recherch, YLLQ 777
* Leuchter, Recherch, YLLQ 777
* Leonard, Peggy, TM60 Berry, CK
* Leonard, Peggy, TM60 Berry, CK
* Lim, Margaret, LG 300 Pipe Oil, Phoer
* Lim, Margaret, LG 300 Pipe Oil, Phoer
* Leunberg, Leuner, BER 301 Randogt, KWI
* Leunberg, Leuner, BER 301 Randogt, KWI
* James, GW 410 FRANC, KCI
* James, GW 410 FRANC, KCI
* Leuty, Constance, MEWHD KWIkP
* Leuty, Constance, MEWHD KWIkP
* Leaves, Robert, IM 250 ITT WT
* Leaves, Robert, IM 250 ITT WT
* Leaves, Juvenia, JMJ 190 Village
* Leaves, Juvenia, JMJ 190 Village
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
* Levinson, Maverick, GW, IRR Bx 300
BETTLETON RODDY
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THE PROOF
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Hillcrost Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
J.E. WALSH
THE SMOKER YOU WANT
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TACO TICO
University Daily Kansan
2340 IOWA
TACOS . . . . . . . 29 ea.
TACOBURGERS . . . . . 39 ea.
BURRITOS . . . . . . 44 ea.
SANCHO . . . . . . 54 ea.
ENCHILADAS . . . . . 34 ea.
MONDAY-SATURDAY
SOFT DRINKS . . . . . 15 20-30
11 A.M.-MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY
11 A.M.-10 P.M.
CARRY OUT OR DINE IN
Always: in season and seasoned to please!
Lewis, Peter J., 120 Sigma Nu
843-7922
Lewis, Robert T., 116 Sigma Nu
843-7922
Lewis, Steven J., 127 Ohio
843-4770
Lewis, Warrant J., 126 Eguel
843-8344
Lewis, William J., 124 Eguel
Li, Ursyn M., 423 Bohne, KC
829-9181
Liong Ching, 101 La
843-2036
Liang Cheng, 83 Rs 45
844-4986
Lichiang,李金英, 83 Rs 45
Liang Cheng,
---
843
8500
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843
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Lawrence Rental Exchange
VIVA MC
Rev. M. C. Allen, Pastor
Rev. V. L. Palten, Minister of Christian Worship
Worship Service 10 a.m. & 7 p.m.
Church School 9:45 a.m.
Nursery Provided During Sunday School and
Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
"Expect a miracle"
13th & Mass.
Rev. Steve Allen
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
842-2500
Make Church A Part of Your Summer Worship at One of These Area Churches:
ST. LAWRENCE STUDENT PARISH
1631 Crescent Rd.
Rev. Matthew Habiger, O.S.B.
Sunday—9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. in Chapel
Confession—11 to noon & 3-5 p.m. in Chapel
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
1011 Vermont
Rev. Robert Matthews
Bernie Zingraff, Campus Minister
Sunday Worship 7:30, 10:00
Morning Prayers 7:30
10
Tuesday, June 19, 1973
University Daily Kansan
M. Alexander, Suzanne, 42, d35 Mirach
M. Bridges, I.M., 102 AM, Oatley
M. Bride, J.M., 102 AM, Oatley
M. Bride, Nancy, IM
M. Chelba, Eichler, H.G., 1012 Edge
M. Chelba, Eichler, H.G., 1012 Edge
M. Chelba, Lyman, GM, 738 Marver KC Mo
M. Chelba, Lyman, GM, 738 Marver KC Mo
M. Chelba, James, 4, 102 AM
M. Chelba, James, 4, 102 AM
M. Chelba, James, 4, 102 AM
M. Chelba, Kuil, NG, 618 Mochum Ln
M. Chelba, Kuil, NG, 618 Mochum Ln
M. Chelba, Juery, PG, 1353 Maybury
Mesleyph, Jane, JN, 1809 Natishthi
Motu, Matsan, G. E, 14350 Nitordron
Motu, Masan, G. E, 14350 Nitordron
Motu, Sasan, G. E, 14350 Nitordron
Motu, Tashi, G. E, 14350 Nitordron
Metger, Jane, GE, 2137 W 13 Toppea
Metger, F. E, 1310 Woodschmidt, Ma
Metger, F. E, 1310 Woodschmidt, Ma
Metger, Kultehen, G. E, 1430 Ohko
Metger, Wilfred, F. E, 1320 Ohko
Metger, Wilfred, F. E, 1320 Ohko
Metger, Michael, C. F, 1601 England, Ov Pa
GAROUSEL
... the Store with the Pink Door
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
711 West 23rd
842-7409
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY TILL 8:30
SATURDAY TILL 6:00
Come feel the hills and valleys of your feet.
exercise sandals
Tie the bottom of the shoe to the ankle.
Scholl
Come rest your feet in the hollows and the rises. Experience the coolness of pinned beechwood against the width of bare skin. Feel the little mound we turn to that helps you turn more steps into a beautiful toning and awakening for your legs. Scholl, the original Exercise Sandals.
Red, blue, or bone cushioned leather strap.
Flat or raised heel. $12.95.
N
Morton, Ronald, 4M, 1900 U S 32, KC 862 b,
Morford, Renée, 4M, 1900 U S 32, KC 862 b,
Morford, Daniel, 3A, 1411 Harvard 354 aa, 244
Morford, Daniel, 3A, 1411 Harvard 843 bc, 860
Morford, Method, 1A, 1016 Marine 842 bc, 861
Morford, Method, 1A, 1016 Marine 842 bc, 861
Morford, William, n/M 1244 Horser, OpKP 842 bc, 860
Morford, William, n/M 1244 Horser, OpKP 842 bc, 860
Morford, Donald, 1500 N JT 78 299 ea, 634
Morford, Donald, 1500 N JT 78 299 ea, 634
Morford, Catherine, 16, 1615 Nasimath 864 bc, 861
Morford, Carlo, Zeyndar 842 bc, 861
Morford, James, 3A, 2521 Friendle 842 bc, 861
Morford, John, 1G, 200 Kent 843 bc, 861
Morford, Patella, 16, 1411 WZ 842 bc, 861
Morford, Patella, 16, 1411 WZ 842 bc, 861
Morford, Robert, IE, Iowa KC 842 bc, 861
Morford, Robert, IE, Iowa KC 842 bc, 861
Morford, Glenda, GJ, 2331 Ala 842 bc, 861
Morford, Margarete, GJ, 2331 Ala 842 bc, 861
Morford, William, GJ, 2331 Ala 842 bc, 861
Morford, William, GJ, 2331 Ala 842 bc, 861
Newton, Steven, 3M, 1615 Ave, KC 725 bt, 818
Newton, Steven, 3M, 1615 Ave, KC 725 bt, 818
Newton, Kirchner, AU, 2050 WK 842 bc, 861
Newton, Leonard, M7, 1800 Wyoming KC 842 bc, 861
Newton, Leonard, M7, 1800 Wyoming KC 842 bc, 861
Newton, Gary, GJ, 715 Taylor, Toewka 234 bt, 857
Newton, Gary, GJ, 715 Taylor, Toewka 234 bt, 857
Newton, Ford, LJ, 1528 Powers 842 bc, 861
Newton, Susan, PJ, PO Box 303 842 bc, 861
Newton, Romander, M7, 1828 High Law 842 bc, 861
Newton, Romander, M7, 1828 High Law 842 bc, 861
Newton, Carol, IE, NJ York 841 bc, 861
Newton, Carl, IE, NJ York 841 bc, 861
Newton, Vernor, IE, NJ Yerk 841 bc, 861
Newton, Johnson, IE, NJ Yerk 841 bc, 861
Newton, Johnson, IE, NJ Yerk 841 bc, 861
Newton, Emmee, IE, NJ Yerk 841 bc, 861
Newton, Harry, GJ, 211 Randolph 843 bc, 861
Newton, Harry, GJ, 211 Randolph 843 bc, 861
Newton, Judah, Lee, 200 KIP Hil TU 843 bc, 861
Newton, Judah, Lee, 200 KIP Hil TU 843 bc, 861
Newton, Phyllis, GJ, 2255 W KC 831 bc, 861
Newton, Phyllis, GJ, 2255 W KC 831 bc, 861
Newton, Joe, IE, NJ York 841 bc, 861
Newton, Joe, IE, NJ Yerk 841 bc, 861
Newton, Molvay, Roder, IA, 128 Gaslight PL, Lanning 771 bt, 814
Newton, Molvay, Roder, IA, 128 Gaslight PL, Lanning 771 bt, 814
Newton, Mary, DJ, 1020 Lowem 842 bc, 861
Newton, Mary, DJ, 1020 Lowem 842 bc, 861
Newton, Nicolas, AD, 1611 Mass 844 bc, 861
Newton, Nicolas, AD, 1611 Mass 844 bc, 861
Newton, Elizabeth, AU, 4141 Lake, Onne 844 bc, 861
Newton, Elizabeth, AU, 4141 Lake, Onne 844 bc, 861
Newton, Paul, WJ, 909 W KC 842 bc, 861
Newton, Murrayro, Carla, GJ, 345 Maine 842 bc, 861
Newton, Murrayro, Carla, GJ, 345 Maine 842 bc, 861
Newton, Barry, GJ, 1528 Golf LN, KC 725 bt, 814
Newton, Barry, GJ, 1528 Golf LN, KC 725 bt, 814
Newton, Barry, GJ, 1528 Golf LN, KC 725 bt, 814
Newton, David, IE, 4141 Place 842 bc, 861
Newton, David, IE, 4141 Place 842 bc, 861
Newton, Srikrita, GJ, 1410 Lahur 842 bc, 861
Newton, Srikrita, GJ, 1410 Lahur 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Reginald, 4D, 2304 Oswald, GJ, Mo 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Reginald, 4D, 2304 Oswald, GJ, Mo 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Ernestine, GJ, 628 Meringing, Tk, MO 72
Moelf, Ernestine, GJ, 628 Meringing, Tk, MO 72
Moelf, Barbara, BJ, 2105 D Harvard 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Barbara, BJ, 2105 D Harvard 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Larry, IE, 809 Bellegant, KO, MO 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Larry, IE, 809 Bellegant, KO, MO 842 bc, 861
Moelf, Lyna, IE, 1212 Emergency 842 bc, 861
carward.KM,471,172 Ohio
Packard. James M., 1317 West Tenn.
Parker. James M., 1303 West Tenn.
Parker. Barbara M., 1303 West Tenn.
Parker. Barbara M., 1303 West Tenn.
Page. Debra R., 26, 832 Venus
Parker. Marry A., 1301 La
Packard. William M., 1209 Oakland
mck shoes
Naburu, James A60, 1728 W Terr Yerr
Naburu, James A50, 1728 W Terr Lac Kneel
Naburu, James A40, 1728 W Terr Yerr
Neblush, Eblyah O2, 1618 W Terr Yerr TC
Neblush, Eblyah O2, 1618 W Terr Lac Kneel
Neblush, Paulia S3, 1717 State Line Kneel
Neblush, Paulia S3, 1717 State Line Kneel
Neumuth, Jeffrey J2E, 1815 Naimath II
Neumuth, Jeffrey J2E, 1815 Naimath II
Needley, George A6, 902 W Terr
Needley, George A6, 902 W Terr
Needley, David A5F, 1000 La
Needley, David A5F, 1000 La
Nett, Sasha G, Power Pt I
Nett, Sasha G, Power Pt I
Wellington, Karen D, 1500 W Huffman SLMs
Wellington, Karen D, 1500 W Huffman SLMs
Lewis, Lal IG, 1618 Huda F64a
Lewis, Lal IG, 1618 Huda F64a
813 Mass. St.
843-2091
Obera, Joseph GJ, 1013 Emery
Obera, Kurtena GJ, 8202 B7, KC
Obera, Kurtena GJ, 8202 B7, KC
Orenstein, Kathleen AJ, 1208 Otto
Orenstein, Catharine AJ, 1208 Otto
Orenstein, Kathleen AJ, 1208 Otto
Orenstein, Kathleen AJ, 1208 Otto
Orenstein, Kathleen AJ, 1208 Otto
Ongers, Rodney MJ, 3806 Boehk, KC
Ongers, Rodney MJ, 3806 Boehk, KC
Obera, Joseph GJ, 1013 Emery
Obera, Kurtena GJ, 8202 B7, KC
Obera, Kurtena GJ, 8202 B7, KC
0
41-9211 Neilson, Mary AA, 180 E-21 843-1742
41-9221 Neilson, Mary AA, 180 E-21 843-1742
334-3566 Neilson, Harry JG, 112 Harvard 843-2156
334-3566 Neilson, Harry JG, 112 Harvard 843-2156
362-3749 Neilson, Edward GJ, 2020 Iowa a.J 843-3192
362-3749 Neilson, Edward GJ, 2020 Iowa a.J 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
391-3444 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749 Northland, Donald GJ, 160 Mau 843-3192
362-3749
41-2127 Petrick, Briah, 18, 1600 W 19 Ter
41-2128 Petrick, Briah, 18, 1600 W 19 Ter
42-9176 Petrick, K. D., KUR, Dem. CK
42-9177 Petrick, K. D., KUR, Dem. CK
42-8177 Petrick, Carol, GG, 518 Kentucky
42-8178 Petrick, Carol, GG, 518 Kentucky
44-1536 Petrick, Carl, 48, 2307 Madison
44-1537 Petrick, Carl, 48, 2307 Madison
41-1827 Patton, Davi K. A, 1200 Tenn.
41-1828 Patton, Davi K. A, 1200 Tenn.
44-1096 Patton, Marcum, GG, 1 B, Stillwell
44-1097 Patton, Marcum, GG, 1 B, Stillwell
42-9173 Patton, Jackson, GN, 3500 Booth, KC
42-9174 Patton, Jackson, GN, 3500 Booth, KC
42-9175 Patton, Becky, GN, 3500 Booth, KC
42-9176 Patton, Becky, GN, 3500 Booth, KC
42-9177 Patton, Richard, WA, 13 W 11
42-9178 Patton, Richard, WA, 13 W 11
42-9179 Pattyne, Martha, PN, 4900 Skylin, ShmMn
42-9180 Pattyne, Martha, PN, 4900 Skylin, ShmMn
44-9406 Patron, Margaret, DG, 2000 Wd
44-9407 Patron, Margaret, DG, 2000 Wd
44-9072 Patron, Joanne M, GG, 518 Floyd, ShmMn
44-9073 Patron, Joanne M, GG, 518 Floyd, ShmMn
42-9074 Patron, Sara Ruth, AU, 1300 Tenn.
42-9075 Patron, Sara Ruth, AU, 1300 Tenn.
43-0820 Peckham, Sween, AU, 14, 118 Misalpiqn
43-0820 Peckham, Sween, AU, 14, 118 Misalpiqn
44-1940 Pearcaro, Anthony, MG, 518 Owpey, OVpK
44-1941 Pearcaro, Anthony, MG, 518 Owpey, OVpK
44-1942 Pearcaro, Anthony, MG, 518 Owpey, OVpK
44-1943 Peckham, Joune F, GG, 4, 1408 Buffer 8
44-1944 Peckham, Joune F, GG, 4, 1408 Buffer 8
44-1177 Pelkman, Kelly, GN, 621 Geneese, KCm
44-1898 Pelkman, Kelly, GN, 621 Geneese, KCm
44-1899 Pelkman, Kelly, GN, 621 Geneese, KCm
44-1934 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1935 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1936 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1937 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1938 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1939 Wayne, Marmel, MZ, 1621 Evans, PrvI
44-1940 Penny, Werner DG, GN, 1690
44-1229
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oberlin, Mary H., 19, 3878 Oakland, WI * 843-7070
* Oxford, Mark Y., 18, 3878 Oakland, WI * 843-7070
* Ormond, David G., 19, 3878 Indiana * 843-7070
* Ormond, David G., 173, Indiana * 843-7070
* Osborne, David D., 18, 3878 Eureka, CA * 843-7070
* Osborne, David D., 1, 3878 Eureka, CA * 843-7070
* Osborne, James A., PQ Bx 2944 * 843-1877
* Osborne, James A., PQ Bx 2944 * 843-1877
* Osborne, Judith J., 160, W 27 * 843-2773
* Osborne, Elizabeth N., Boston Square * 843-2773
* Osborne, Elizabeth N., Bed Springs * 843-2773
* Osmal, Michael L., 250, W 294 * 843-3733
* Osmal, Michael L., 250, W 294 * 843-3733
* Doyle, Douglas J., BXM, Detroit * 843-3784
* Doyle, Douglas J., BXM, Detroit * 843-3784
* Opperman, William J., 917, Ohio * 843-9086
* Opperman, William J., 917, Ohio * 843-9086
* Opreniew, Marcia F., 102, New Jersey * 843-0773
* Opreniew, Marcia F., 102, New Jersey * 843-0773
* Opreniew, William J., 917, Ohio * 843-9086
* Opreniew, William J., 917, Ohio * 843-9086
* Orrenheim, William J., 171, W 36, JCKo * 753-8080
* Orrenheim, William J., 171, W 36, JCKo * 753-8080
* Orrenheim, William J., 171, W 36, JCKo * 753-8080
* Orrenheim, William J., 171, W 36, JCKo * 753-8080
* Orrenheim, William J., 171, W 36, JCKo * 753-8080
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
* Oliver, William J., 21, 4607 Wilmont, KC * 334-1738
stereo components
JE WALSH
THE SMOKER YOU DRINK
THE PLAYER YOU GET
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ABC/TURNHILL RECORDS
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KIEF'S
S
Malls Shopping Center
Lawrence, Kansas
Con
Seamless smooth
Pencil-adopt to
bra the wardrobe
spandex
Inspiration by Wendy
Inspiration
Convertible Halter
Seamless, minimal cups provide the smoothest, most natural look ever. Pencil-thin back, and straps that adopt to hailer placement make this bra the most versatile in anyone's wardrobe. (Antron nylon, Lycra spandex).
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Sizes $400
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Inspiration by Warner's
SHOPFE
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PROJECT 800
835 MASS. • 843-4833 • LAWRENCE KANS. 66044
Tay
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stereo components
showers TEAC disc presents
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
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PIONEER
SX-727
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BOKONON RECYCLED CLOTHES
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819 Vermont 843-9708
Refried Jeans, Hawaiian Silkies and Western Shirts, and so much more!
* Rai
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00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Tuesday, June 19.1973 11
University Daily Kansan
Piritoa, T.P. 328, 432 Pearl, Kc
Piritoa, T.P. 328, 432 Polish, Kc
Pierce, J.B. 125, 126 Polish, Kc
Plazanmia, John G., 125 Indian Mission, Mkz
Q
Guarres, Delmas, TIRA 313, Campbell KCNo 842-4067
Guglielmi, G. 193, Larsen M 842-4067
Guglielmi, G. 160, Les 842-4067
Gutineson, G. 153, Stouffer J 842-2779
Gutineson, J. AE, Stouffer J 842-2779
Glumberger, J. AE, 129, E. S. Tonganuele
Glumberger, J. AE, 129, E. S. Tonganuele
842-3718
Rabb, Ceclilla, D, 130, LtA
Racq, A. D., 125, MCS
Razdin, A. D., 123, Sankey, KC
Radhiffe, W, WG, J, 308, E T, Topeka
* Rhody Joan G2, 211 Kandat
* Donna Denali, JG, 191 WC
* Derek Dorfman, JG, 193 WC
* Derek Lovett, JG, 165 Main,黛莱尔
* Katherine Gerber, JG, 109 Forest KC
Sahalee, Roland, IM; 130, W Campus
843-777-790
Sacken, Steven, 205, MUH
841-747-797
Sacken, Steven, 125, MUH
841-747-797
stereo components
promoted TEAC 850 425 prsrfm
CLASSICAL RECORD
SALE
Entire Seraphim Catalog
Reg. $298
Now $189
Offer expires
June 30
SERAPHIM
Angels of the highest order
KIEF'S
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Malls Shopping Center
Lawrence, Kansas
Safadena, Arang, A4, 1815 Nathalmit
Sahailer, Goble, M3, 1722 Eburn
Salmett, Saitoh, M3, 1729 W, KC
Salmett, Saitoh, DV, 4410 Chelsea, KC
Salmett, DV, 4410 Chelsea, KC
Salmett, EJ, 21, 1151 W, KC
Salayen, Jade E., 21, 1151 W, KC
Salayen, Laden J., 61, 1590 W, Oathea
Salayen, Laden J., 61, 1590 W, Oathea
Salayen, Cherry J., 385, 1794 Harker
Salayen, Michael D., 3427 KC, KC
Salayen, Michael D., 3427 KC, KC
Salayen, Gryar R., 3429 Crestell
Salayen, Juan, JG, 1415 Firefidle Dr
Salayen, Don, JG, 6158 W, 17
Salayen, Comme, GG, 1931 Skirville, Mo
Salayen, Comme, GG, 1931 Skirville, Mo
Salayen, Gladys, GW, 809 W, 29
Salayen, Janet, GW, 809 W, 29
Salayen, Lim, 3D, 4300 Ohlu
Salayen, Lim, 3D, 4300 Ohlu
Salayen, Bjoss, ZB, 4110 Bhdin
Salayen, Bjoss, ZB, 4110 Bhdin
Salayen, King, BM, 823 N Malta, Oltau
Salayen, King, BM, 823 N Malta, Oltau
Salayen, John, 1815 Elpaz, Tl, Pima
Salayen, Gracey, D, 2119 Harwell
Salayen, Gracey, D, 2119 Harwell
Salayen, Fluence, GW, 1941 Vui
Salayen, Fluence, GW, 1941 Vui
Salayen, Sarashi, A, GG, 1915 Ohio
Salayen, Sarashi, A, GG, 1915 Ohio
Stephenson, W. M, 4000 Wongena Rd, Leeward
Stephenson, W. M, 4000 Wongena Rd, Leeward
Stephen, Teresa, M, 1000 Wongena Rd, Leeward
Stephen, Teresa, M, 1000 Wongena Rd, Leeward
Found, I.O. Oliver Hall
James, Jones, M3, 3000 Wyoming, KCMO
James, Jones, M3, 3000 Wyoming, KCMO
James, Donna, G1, 1590 W
James, Donna, G1, 1590 W
James, Richard, PM, 3322 Iowa
James, Richard, PM, 3322 Iowa
James, Martha, TM, M6, 46K CMO, KCMO
James, Connell, GG, 1037 II, KCMO
James, Connell, GG, 1037 II, KCMO
Ferrer, Terrace, M, 1015 Ohio
Ferrer, Terrace, M, 1015 Ohio
Ferrer, Terrace, M, 1015 Ohio
Georges, M3, 4735 Lovelock, KC
Georges, M3, 4735 Lovelock, KC
Toberbeck, Belf, K, 1227 Kaltai, Tpka
Toberbeck, Belf, K, 1227 Kaltai, Tpka
Anne, DG, 3D, new Yuda, F
Shrew, Brenda, 4D, Box 192, Tonguekill
Showe, Jean TJ, Memphis, KC
Showe, Jean TJ, Memphis, KC
Shaw, Patricia, G2
Shaw, Patricia, G2
Shaw, J.C. G2, 1030 Petrol
Shaw, Murray, G2, 1238 W
Shaw, Murray, G2, 1238 W
Shaw, G. O, G2, 1030 Pincoson
Shaw, Mark, M1, 42070 Mccloum
Shaw, Mark, M1, 42070 Mccloum
Shaw, M. P, G2, 1030 Roosevelt, Lenessa
Shaw, M. P, G2, 1030 Roosevelt, Lenessa
Shiffler, J.F, A4, 1684 N2, KC
Shiffler, J.F, A4, 1684 N2, KC
Shiffler, Delva, 21, 1135 Alabama
Shiffler, Delva, 21, 1135 Alabama
Shiffler, John, 24, 613 Mass
Shiffler, Yen, 794, 2026 Buchanan, KCMo
Sharp, L.J, G6, 11, Blen
Sharp, L.J, G6, 11, Blen
Shappell, J.J., 130, Knacky塔
Shappell, J.J., 130, Knacky塔
Sharbent, James, G2, 1430 Ells, KC
Sharbent, James, G2, 1430 Ells, KC
Shoardwood, Jono, 2034 Weddain
Shoardwood, Jono, 2034 Weddain
Shklele, Krilde, G1, 210, Leennard
Shklele, Krilde, G1, 210, Leennard
Terrill, 32rd, 1154 W
Shhung, Hibu, G2, 1290 Oslo
Shkir, Donald, G2, 1294 Ferton
Shkir, Donald, G2, 1294 Ferton
Shrey, D. G, 1031 Sturman, Dr Pk
Shrey, D. G, 1031 Sturman, Dr Pk
Shreedhan, Thunder, 102nd, 1031 Nalshamit
Shroken, James, G2, 3457 Orange, KC
Shroken, James, G2, 3457 Orange, KC
Shrotea, Jennifer, J.F., 1234 W
Shrotea, Jennifer, J.F., 1234 W
Shook, Jane, G2, 1033 Held, KCMo
Shook, Jane, G2, 1033 Held, KCMo
Short, Brunco, Campus, Queens, NY
Short, Brunco, Campus, Queens, NY
Shortridge, Neil, 1029 Emery
Shortridge, Neil, 1029 Emery
shorttaker, 221, D16 Oak
Sawater, S.R. G, 2000 N8 KC
Sawater, S.R. G, 2000 N8 KC
Sabrine, Barbara, 1289 Sandpit
Sabrine, Barbara, 1289 Sandpit
Sahu, Evan, J.J., 1414 Alabama
Sahu, Evan, J.J., 1414 Alabama
Smalon, Rutil, 1028 III
Smalon, Rutil, 1028 III
Shumele, David, G., 1290 Yem
Shmele, David, G., 1290 Yem
Sh苔, Ima, G2, 1031 Grn Dr Pk
Sh苔, Ima, G2, 1031 Grn Dr Pk
Shuji, J., 1301 W1, W1
Shuji, J., 1301 W1, W1
Shinger, Aloen, G4, 1030 KCMo
Shinger, Aloen, G4, 1030 KCMo
Shinger, L., 1110 Chiflin, Mahat
Shinger, L., 1110 Chiflin, Mahat
Steigel, W.J., 28, 128 Arkansas
Steigel, W.J., 28, 128 Arkansas
Steigel, W.J., 28, 128 Arkansas
Stejnke, Jone, G., 1032 Souffler, KCMo
Stejnke, Jone, G., 1032 Souffler, KCMo
Slidex, Dla., 1013 Kansas, KC
Slidex, Dla., 1013 Kansas, KC
Silverberg, J.A., 20MC, 380 KC
Silverberg, J.A., 20MC, 380 KC
Simmonns, Jona, A., 2000 University
Simmonns, Jona, A., 2000 University
Simmonns, J.
Fun by for the Summer
Things to Have
MAKING ENVIRONMENT
BAN 140239678
180 TH 70' W
151 ST 37' W
214 ST 36'
244 ST 45'
162 ST 31.50' W
194 ST 30' W
48.00' W
1029 Mass. HAAS IMPORTS
843-0871
Wind Chimes
Mugs
PAPER LANTERN
Candles
THE BIG MEMORY
Tiffen Lamps
Baskets
Wall Hangings
Solberg, V. b! GI. 640 KiDernbah, ShMn
822-3058
Still Robert, JA. 16279 JRH Ma
842-6848
Stinker, A. b! GI. 640 KiDernbah, ShMn
822-3058
Stinker, Arvie, J. b! GI. 1414 Wk Dr
842-9969
Stinker, Ann Lm, D. 1003 Wk 13
842-10949
Stinker, Leon Lm, D. 1003 Wk 13
842-14774
Stinker, Jacobson, C. D. 1003 Wk 22
842-6830
Stinker, Jacobson, Marlon, D. 1003 Wk 22
842-6830
Stinker, Steven Benton, D. 1454 KU
842-7122
Stinker, Rihikha, F. D. 1901 Avilon
842-3888
Stinker, Andrew C. D. 1609 Iowa
842-3892
Stinker, Andrew C. D. 1609 Iowa
842-3892
Stinker, Jackson, K. D. 1025 Wk 8
842-3013
Stinker, Bergeron, D. D. 1213 Riverview, KC
842-3155
Stinker, Sherman, A. D. 2008 Bock, KC
822-7407
stereo components
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916 MASSACHUSETTS 843-1267
12
Tuesday. June 19. 1973
University Daily Kansan
Tallock, Thomas AM, 2094 Bell, KC
Talbot, Michael A, 1012 Hitech
Tatchem, Catherine D, 1215 La
Tatchem, Catherine D, 1232 La
Tatchem, Glenn A, 1728 W 28 Per
Tatchem, Glenn A, 1728 W 28 Per
Tatchem, Martha J, 1012 Quirk QK
Tatchem, Jonelle J, 1113 Nalmith B
Tatchem, Seagel SG, 1818 B
Tatchem, Warren F, 490 Maine M
Tatchem, Warren F, 490 Maine M
Tatchem, Erma A, 1712 Teechum M
Tatchem, Noah A, 1023 QK W 10
Tatchem, Noah A, 1023 QK W 10
Tatchem, Resek JB, 1218 B
Tatchem, Resek JB, 1218 B
Tatchem, Treherst JW, 1126 Yellowstone
Tatcheverlaw, Joseph AM, 1424 Cambridge, KC
Tatcheverlaw, Joseph AM, 1424 Cambridge, KC
Tatcheverlaw, Charlie da Silva, 1113 Monroe Shs. Mt
Tatcheverlaw, Charlie da Silva, 1113 Monroe Shs. Mt
Tatcheverlaw, Lee A, 1425 Ala
Thatch, Hilli B, 0414 Glauke Lake, KC
Thatch, Hilli B, 0414 Glauke Lake, KC
Thatcher, John I, 1215 Nalmith B
*Uden, Douglas A.,1002 W 34*
*Uden, Douglas A.,6789 Ohio,KC*
*Uden, Douglas A.,6790 Ohio,KC*
*Uden, Robert K.,1603 W 34*
*Uden, Robert K.,1603 W 34*
*Indwood Johnson,A.,3589 NF 48,KCMo*
*Indwood Johnson,A.,3589 NF 48,KCMo*
*Divid, David A.,2100 Fdry,DkP*
*Divid, David A.,2100 Fdry,DkP*
*Jawshaw D.,1300 W 340,NY*
*Jawshaw D.,1300 W 340,NY*
*Robert K.,1632 Tremen,KC*
*Robert K.,1632 Tremen,KC*
*Taцsc, Scof,W 30 W 36*
*Taцsc, Scof,W 30 W 36*
*Anselm,7N 390 Adams,KC*
*Anselm,7N 390 Adams,KC*
*Izuelth, Thomas Z.,2201 Prairie*
*Izuelth, Thomas Z.,2201 Prairie*
Valentin Pellente, NJ, 19130 Glothe, KC 821-9490
Vallike Alten, NJ, 22522 Mass, KC 842-9053
Vallike Allen, NJ, 26700 Northam, TN 842-9053
Vandernor Bedson, VIRGINIA, GI 810-5193
Vandernor Bedson, MARY, JONES, WI
Wachs, William, D, 100 Gadhill
Wade, Linda, D, 114 Thompson, RC
Wade, Linda, D, 126 Thomas, RC
Waldman, Debbie, D, 135 V
Waldman, Debbie, D, 147 V
Wamman, Camille, B, 157 E
Wamman, Camille, B, 169 H
Wamman, Jan, G, 180 HI
Wamman, Robert, B, 189 Engel
Wamman, Robert, B, 190 Engel
Wamman, Carvary, D, 100 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 103 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 105 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 109 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 113 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 116 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 121 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 124 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 127 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 130 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 133 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 136 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 139 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 142 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 145 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 148 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 151 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 154 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 157 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 160 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 163 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 166 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 169 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 172 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 175 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 178 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 181 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 184 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 187 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 190 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 193 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 196 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 199 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 202 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 205 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 208 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 211 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 214 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 217 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 220 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 223 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 226 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 229 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 232 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 235 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 238 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 241 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 244 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 247 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 250 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 253 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 256 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 259 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 262 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 265 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 268 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 271 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 274 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 277 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 280 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 283 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 286 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 289 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 292 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 295 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 298 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 301 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 304 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 307 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 310 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 313 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 316 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 319 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 322 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 325 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 328 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 331 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 334 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 337 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 340 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 343 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 346 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 349 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 352 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 355 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 358 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 361 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 364 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 367 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 370 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 373 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 376 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 379 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 382 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 385 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 388 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 391 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 394 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 397 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 400 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 403 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 406 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 409 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 412 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 415 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 418 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 421 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 424 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 427 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 430 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 433 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 436 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 439 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 442 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 445 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 448 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 451 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 454 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 457 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 460 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 463 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 466 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 469 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 472 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 475 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 478 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 481 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 484 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 487 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 490 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 493 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 496 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 500 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 503 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 506 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 509 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 512 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 515 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 518 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 521 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 524 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 527 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 530 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 533 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 536 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 539 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 542 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 545 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 548 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 551 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 554 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 557 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 560 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 563 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 566 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 569 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 572 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 575 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 578 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 581 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 584 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 587 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 590 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 593 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 596 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 600 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 603 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 606 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 609 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 612 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 615 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 618 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 621 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 624 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 627 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 630 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 633 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 636 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 639 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 642 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 645 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 648 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 651 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 654 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 657 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 660 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 663 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 666 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 669 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 672 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 675 W
Wamman, Carvary, D, 678 W
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Soviet Jews Seized in Dragnet By Secret Police in Moscow
MOSCOW—Secret police arrested 12 Jewish activists Tuesday in various parts of Moscow, detained them without charges most of the day and then released them. It was the fourth time in 10 days that Jews had been picked up in dragnets. The authorities apparently fear the Jews may try to voice their grievances publicly in connection with the attack on KGB agents. A senior leader. All the Jews said KGB agents staked out their homes several days before Breznev left Friday, have followed them around the clock and threatened them with physical harm if they "misbehaved."
Jurv Convicts Yablonski Slaver
ERIE, Pa.-Albert E. Pass, former lieutenant to ousted Mine Workers Press "Tony" Boyle, was convicted of first degree murder in the Yailoron slayings. The prosecution had said earlier that the arrests were made in connection with that another arrest should be for forthcoming. The verdict, returned after a 6-hour deliberation by the jury, covered three first degree murder counts, one each for United Mine Workers insurgent Jeeck Joseph and another for United Mine Workers officer Andrew the United Mine Workers, appeared unshaken by the conviction and smiled at photographers as he was led back to his cell.
2 Killed, 3 Wounded in Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga. — Two persons, one a police officer, were killed and three others burned in a burst of gunfire on a downtown street Tuesday, as crowds returning from lunch looked on. The gunfire was accompanied by officers who rushed to the area. Muslims and police have clashed in the past. Police and eyewitnesses said the incident apparently revolved around the sale of a Black Muslim newspaper, "Umuhamed Speaks."
Thieu Sees Security in Army
SAIGON—President Nguyen Van Thieu said in an Armed Forces day speech that a strong army for South Vietnam was a better peace guarantee than any ceasefire worked out in Paris. He predicted further fighting and said it was naive to believe that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese would abide by what they had signed. To underscore Thieu's speech were 10,000 foot soldiers who, along with hundreds of armored vehicles, took part in a 5-hour Saigon parade to mark the occasion.
2 Youths Killed in Plane Crash
KANSAS CITY—Two Kansas City teenagers died Tuesday afternoon when their light aircraft crashed near the Platte County community of Riverside. They were identified as Douglas Allen Robey, 18, and Jonathan R. Berbery, 19. A witness reported the plane dived to the ground from a low level shortly after noon. Robey and Berbert were apparently killed on impact.
Astronauts Space-Walk Again
HOUSTON—Skylab's "fix anything" astronauts Tuesday perfromed another space walk repair job, harmed to life a dead battery, and recovered six cassettes of film that may give scientists new knowledge about the sun. The spacewalk came with only three days left in the 28-day mission of Skylab 1. The astronauts are scheduled to return to earth aboard their command ship at 8:48 am. Friday Lawrence time, with splashdown in the Pacific Ocean 828 miles southwest of San Diego, Calif.
Two Americans Win in Prague
PRAGUE—Al Feuerbach of San Jose, Calif., won the shot competition at an international track meet here with a loss of 66 feet, 11 inches Tuesday. The Czechoslovak news agency CTK also reported that Jim Bolding of Oklahoma City won the 400-meter hurdles in 49.9 seconds. Two hundred Czechs and 105 athletes from 10 other countries were competing in the meet.
Fleeing Con Welcomed Back
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (AP)—A persistent prisoner spent a full day knocking away pieces of a wall in the city jail. When night fell, he broke through, only to find himself locked inside the tourism office next door.
With all his might, the prisoner hurled himself against twin wooden doors, which were padlocked on the outside. They finally burst open and he was catapulted into the city square—and into the arms of Police Chief Enrique Wolburg, who happened to be strolling by.
Clear Today, Not Too Warm
Ku
The expected warmup, it appears, is going to be gradual and the forecast for today is generally fair weather. Day temperatures will rise to the mid 80s as the day progresses and we can look forward to a sunny afternoon. Light winds during the night will bring temperatures down to the 50s but there is little likelihood of rain.
Cold War Over, Brezhnev Says
Leaders Sign Agreements
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Communi-
leer Leonid I. Breshetnev returned
Tuesday to the summit conference with
President Nixon after urging leading
administrators to help the United States move
toward culture along the road to peaceful
coexistence.
In a long, Poliburo-style speech, Brezhnev denied that "a Jewish problem" existed in the Soviet Union and declared, "of old War, as far as we are concerned, is over."
Breznev told a lunchmen group of some 20 senators that only a tiny percentage of Jews who wanted to leave the Soviet Union had not yet received exit permits.
IN FACT, he said, even as he was traveling to the United States to see President Nixon a number of visas were granted.
Breznev began the day with Nixon at the State Department at a ceremonial signing of four agreements of cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Hamming it up for the photographers,
brevzhaev said, "Ne Smiajmate. Don't take an
eye."
THE LUNCHEON of caviar, beef, baked salmon, vodka and red and white wines began at Blair House at 1 p.m. and did not end until about 4:30.
Breznez playfully reached for a napkin to hide his face when photographer took his
Breenhw went from there to the White
library for a sixth round of summit
谈判. NXNZO
Aboard with them for the Potomac River cruise were Secretary of State William P. Murray, National Security Advisor Henry A. Kissinger, Soviet Foreign Minister Andre A. Gromyko, Soviet Ambassador Bertil Svedmo, Russian Minister Nikolai Nakolai, Patrologe and others.
THEY TALKED in the Oval Office for two early hours. Then the President took Rolex to his office.
AFTER THE luncheon with the senators,
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Min., said Breznev "gave the impression of being a man who was positively relaxed, not at all arrogant and mindful that he was talking to members of Congress."
picture as he sipped champagne. He spilled half the glass onto the floor. He recovered it.
Prosecutors Lock Up Evidence on Dean
Nixon complimented Brezhnev's political skill as they sat side by side and watched Secretary of State Rogers, Secretary of Agriculture Earl Jebl and Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko sign agreements on cultural and scientific exchanges, tran-
Nixon and Brehnen planned to spend the night at Camp David, the presidential retreat.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The evidence that federal prosecutors have against John W. Dean III in the Watergate planning and conviction case locked in a trial Wednesday in an unusual legal battle.
THE REPORTS said also that he failed to return another $9,200 to the campaign organization. Dean told both Justice Department and Senate investigators that he replaced the $141,000 entrusted to him by a law enforcement official in the report in the Washington Star-News said.
The action establishes a government copyright on the material to prove, at a later time, that it had the evidence in addition to the material. Senate Wateratez investigates committee.
There were published reports Tuesday that Dean acknowledged to investigators he used $4,800 in 1972 Nixon re-election campaign funds to finance his honeymoon last year.
The newspaper said Dean placed $14,000 in a special trust fund earlier this year when it became apparent efforts to cover up high-level involvement in Watergate would fail.
Dean, the ousted White House counsel, is scheduled to go before the senators when the hearings resume next week, after Soviet President B. Irezhev has left the country.
The police sources said both men apparently were being held for ransom, but no specific demands were reported. The police source said that a report of a ransom demand for Thompson
The Thompson kidnaping was the fifth abduction of a U.S. businessman in Argentina. Other executives were arrested after the other paid ransoms totaling more than $4 million.
Thompson is a U.S. citizen born in Chile, the U.S. Embassy said. He is an amateur actor and was to have appeared Tuesday night in a suburban community theater's production of "The Desperate Lady." Thomas will invade a home and hold a family hostage.
The kidnaping was apparently the work of leftist guerrillas. For ir pro-Peronist guerrilla groups in Argeina, they have agreed to a truce with the new Peronist civilian group, led by the vector J. Campu and his group, called the Revolutionary People's Army, refused.
American One Of 2 Kidnaped In Buenos Aires
Whether the hearings resumed Monday or Tuesday was unsettled because of an apparent misunderstanding between Chairman Dole and the seven-man committee. The committee voted a one-week postponement Monday, acceding to the wishes of the Senate leadership which wanted to avoid Brezhnev's visit. President Nixon during Brezhnev's visit.
BUENOS AIRES (AP) -Kidnapers grabbed two executives, an American and a German, police sources reported Tuesday as hundreds of thousands of Peronists mobilized for the homecoming of former dictator Juan Peron.
The police sources said that John Thompson, 50-year-old president of the Argentine subsidiary of the Firestone Tire Company, was on Monday night on his way home from work.
DEAN HAD BEEN scheduled to meet through the week with committee counsel Samuel Dash and Fred Thompson, but there were reports he abruptly canceled those sessions because of news leaks and said he appears only before the full committee.
The West German—Juan Kurt, 61, technical director of the Argentine firm Silvana, S.A.—was abducted Tuesday morning, they reported. Silvana is a principal manufacturer of women's hosiery.
The 34-year-old Dean reportedly was upset about stories appearing Tuesday that he had borrowed money from the Nixon reelection committee to finance his honeymoon and be blamed committee staffers for the publication.
Dean is known to be apprehensive that the White House is making efforts to discredit his testimony, which reportedly involves the President in the Watergate cover-up.
There also were unconfirmed reports that a member of one senator's staff has been charged with stealing cash.
CHARLES SHAFFER, one of Dean's lawyers, declined to comment on the report.
See PROSECUTORS, Back Page
sporatology research, oceanography and agricultural research.
NIXON led him from the room at the end of the ceremony, Brezwitne stopped to chat with J. W. Fulbright, D-Akr., Humphrey and other senators.
Later, Humphrey quoted Briznev in saying, "If the Senate won't come to me, I'll call for a new law."
On Monday a Soviet spokesman, Leonid Zamyatny, said that even asking about immigration policies and practices was not enough in the domestic affairs of another country.
The four treaties, prepared in advance of the summit conference, include:
- CONTINUATION through 1979 of exchanges of graduate students, researchers, language teachers, performing artists and official magazines.
- Joint study of the oceans with emphasis on the structure and movements of the ocean floor
- Study of earthquakes in the oceans
- Cooperation in transportation research, in leading railway operations and aviation in leading railway operations.
Expanding the exchange of information on agricultural production and crop production.
VOLLEYBALL
Up and Over the Net
Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Slamming a volleyball back and forth across courts can be lots of fun, especially when it's not a world match. Here in a game sponsored by SUA at
South Park, a player's eyes follow the path of the bail he has just hit, while others wait for it to come down.
Local Groups Fight Neglect of Elderly
Editor's Note: This is the first of a two-part series on the elderly.
By DON ASHTON
Kansan Staff Writer
In this era of clamorous group identity, one minority remains silent—the aged.
Recent inquiries into the welfare of elderly residents here show that interest in their well-being is gathering momentum throughout the community.
One local group, the Douglas County Council on Services to the Aging, Inc., which represents various service providers, established a model program here. The program would be designed to keep elderly persons out of nursing homes by providing such services as medical assistance, meals, transportation and recreation programs.
AT A RECENT meeting, the council decided to apply for government funds to hire an administrator to coordinate local efforts.
A survey sponsored by the council in 1971
suggests that the major problems of the aged are lack of financial resources and transportation, illness, loneliness, lack of recreation, inadequate housing and meals.
See GROUPS, Back Page
Israel May Block Entry Of E. Germany into U.N.
UNHAPPY NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Israel is unhappy over the imminent entry of East Germany into the United Nations and seems certain to vote against its membership bid.
'East Germany has not recognized the necessity for reparations to the Jews for over a century, and that is why it
Gov. Docking Praises Athletes Urges Support from Boosters
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) -Gov. Robert Docking said Tuesday night that successful athletic teams instil a deep sense of pride not only in a university, but also in a state.
"Kansas has this kind of pride," the governor said, "At KU, pride in the university is a tradition. And few Kansas students know of the Purple Pride in Wildcat Land."
The governor's remarks were prepared
for the Gripen, Sports Boosters
rapporteurs and staff.
“Continuing these programs is important not only to tents of thousands of viewers, but also the universities’ important recruiting efforts that fuel the lifeblood of collegiate athletics.”
Docking urged sports boosters to pledge support of the Vince Gibson, Don Fambrough, Ted Owens and Jack Hartman television shows.
Docking said athletics generated publicity and interest in the state when he was governor.
He said the shows were meant by which
ansas football and basketball could be
better played.
"Who can deny that Alabama, Oklahoma or Nebraska have gained considerable national prominence and positive influence in their football powerhouse," Docking said.
Tekahko told an interviewer Monday. "It has identified itself with the most extreme Arab attitude and supported actively the Arab terrorist organizations."
The Security Council is expected to take up the membership applications of both the Council and the Board.
Israel is not a member of the 15-nation Security Council, but will be able to vote when the General Assembly meets. The council is expected to recommend to the assembly that both be admitted, raising U.N. membership, and said that from land, no opposition is expected.
The admission of the Germans has been carefully orchestrated by the two German governments and the Big Four powers of Germany, the Soviet Union, Britain and France.
Tekoaah said that unlike the West Germans, who had paid reparations to the Jews for the Nazi outrages, the East Germans for all these all suggestions they act in a simpler way.
The Israeli ambassador, interviewed at his closely-guarded offices near U.N. headquarters, said he expected no Mideast breakthroughs from the meeting of President Nixon with Soviet Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.
2
Wednesday, June 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Red Dog Inn Up for Sale Again
Dain Cain, part owner of the Red Dog Inn, 642 Massachusetts St., said Monday that he'd like to see someone who would be a judge in a beer and music hall buy the operation.
The business was put up for sale recently after Cain and Jool Orthmann had owned it.
Gain said that once the sale was completed, he would have lost almost $30,000.
1" guess it's just being green and U-linking that you know what you're doing when you run into a problem."
He said that they could afford to keep the Inm, but that they had too many other things
that they were doing, and that the imw took up too much time. Cain is part-owner of Mid-Continent Productions and is involved in several other businesses.
Advertising was one of his mistakes, Cain said. He didn't know where to advertise, so he tried to advertise everywhere possible. He wasn't sure that he couldn't afford such promotion.
In the past year, the entertainment has included it's Beautiful Day, Arlo Guthrie, Commander Cody, Fleetwood Mack and Black Oak Arkansas.
Cain said he thought the Inn could be a real money-maker. He made the previous
The Intone Corp., owner of Ridgley
Apartments, was fired $2,500 and court
basis by Judge Mike Elwell in a Douglas
County Court decision entered Tuesday.
Ridglea Loses $2,500 Suit For Keeping Rent Deposit
owners, Mike Murfin and John Brown, had made enough money for one of them to retire the age of about 30 and for the other to have a large ranch in southwestern Kansas.
Michael Malone, an assistant county attorney and the state's attorney at the hearing, said that he was unable to locate any of the officers of Integra, where he lived or find out whether the corporation was chartered in Arizona or Kansas.
Cain said that if someone would take over the business as it is, "I'd be right next door, trying to help out every way I could."
Malone said that since the corporation officers could not be located, the fine would be assessed against the corporation and the judge would be asked to lien or judgment against the real estate.
The suit, involving a security and damage deposit, was filed March 28 by the Douglas County Attorney's office on behalf of Gordon Stuill, 3020 Iowa. A hearing on the case held Monday and the case was taken under admittance until Tuesday morning.
Stull said that either Intege or the managers of Ridgles failed to return the security deposit or to tell him that he had been deprived of treatment property while he lived at Ridgles.
Intone officers also failed to appear for two other suits pending against them.
The Red Dog used to be the largest draught beer account in Kansas, according to Cain. He said Brown and Murfur had been friends since 1950, and people at £3 a person to hear the Flippsers.
The building was originally the Bower-sock Opera House and later became the Dickinson Movie Theatre. Cain said it was used as a warehouse for Hallmark Cards for three or four years, and then was bought in 1965 by Murfin and Brown.
Two William Allen White School or Journalism and Public Information students have been named recipients of newly-created awards in journalism.
Cain said that he and Orthmann were selling the business and the fixtures for $9,500. He said that they had at least three times more than that in the Inn, but that they didn't want to price it out of the range of any possible new owners.
Beth Brother, Prairie Village senior, is the first winner of the $500 Wewsorth award, given in memory of Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the Kansas State University for 94 years. The award goes annually to an outstanding senior in journalism.
However, the hearings have not been held yet.
J-School Awards Made
In these suits, Connie Smith, a former resident of Ridgale, is asking for a refund of her deposit. The abolishment of the corpse also being sought by Atty, Gen. Vern Miller,
The building that houses the Red Dog Inn is owned by the Property Development Company, Inc., of Lawrence
Elaime Zimmerman, Leawood junior, was awarded the $300 Casady award to be given annually to an outstanding and promising junior in the school.
Former Student Faces Charges For Alleged Indecent Exposure
The trial of Michael J. Brady, 24, of 1600 Ky, has been set for June 29 in the Douglas County Court. Brydah has been charged with lewd and lascivious behavior in connection with an incident that occurred last weekend.
According to the Douglas County Attorney's office, Brady admitted that he had been arrested in Topeka and Kansas City on charges of indecent exposure in the past.
John Thomas, director of security and parking, said that investigators believe that Brady, a former KU student is connected to the killing of three teenagers in bionism that have occurred in the past.
Thomas also said that about 10 other cases of exhibitionism on campus had been cleared up, but no arrest resulted since the shooting in those cases was mentally retarded.
Local Band to Play Tonight at S. Park
Circus marches will be featured at the third summer band concert at 8 p.m. tonight
The concerts are sponsored by the Parks and Recreation Dept. and the American Federation of Musicians Local 512. William L. Miller, band of about 50 students and city people.
Tonight's concert will include maracas, overtures, popular and classical music that evokes a sense of nostalgia.
"This clears up most all of the indecent exposure cases," Thomas said.
Thomas also said that there had been no new developments in investigations of recent rape cases. He said that traffic and security had not conducted any 'selective enforcement' road blocks during the past week, but that investigators would continue spot-checking from time to time until the rapist is caught.
THE RED DOG INN
Owner Hopes Red Dog Inn Will Remain Beer Hall
Time Capsule At 60th Fair Depicts State
A 34-foot Sergeant missile—one of only two of its kind on public display in this country—will be erected at the 60th Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson this fall.
It will be permanently erected on the grounds and presented to the public today.
Areas represented will include business
education, education, farming, government,
forestry.
Each of the 105 counties in the state is being invited to submit material to be microfilled for a time capsule in the missile. During the nine days of the fair, materials from nine areas of Kansas life will be sealed inside the missile.
In the year 2013, the 100th anniversary of the fair's location in Hutchinson, the missile will be opened and the materials placed on public display.
Robert Teagarden, Kansas State Fair Board President, said last week, "Kansas State Fair activities are taking an unexpected leap in keeping a strong foothold in the present."
He said the missile honored the past 60 years of the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson with a product of both the present and the future.
"Opening the missile in 40 years to view the contents should provide the next generation with a rare insight into our present activities," he said.
Other new activities at the fair this year will include the appearances of Jimmy Dean, Sept. 15-18 and Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, Sept. 22-23. Barbara Mandrell, Johnny Paycheck, and the Plainsmen Quartet will appear on Sept. 19.
Bookstores Face Many Problems
In addition, the first "state amateur contest" is scheduled for the evening of Sept. 17.
By CATHLEEN SCHEIER And MICHAEL HOSTETLER
MICHAEL HOSTETLEI
Karen Hill Winters
"The whole idea that the Kansas Union Bookstore is a nip off is completely false," according to David Baird, manager of the local Town Crier bookstores.
Baird said last Wednesday that book prices in his store were virtually same as the last week, but it would be higher.
Baird said that new book sales represented a very stable market.
The "remainder" companies then sell the books back to the retail stores and the book
"BOOK PRICES won't vary much, if atall, from store to store," he said.
He said that retail book stores can return copies of books that do not sell to the publisher. The publishers sell the returned books to companies at a greatly reduced price.
Kansan Staff Writer
Last Thursday morning was an exciting one for 104 Lawrence youths as they noisily assembled for their first day "on the job" at Teenage Employment Program (STEP).
By DWIGHT HILPMAN
100 Jobless Youths Find Work In Community Summer Program
BAIRD SAID the used-book seller made more profit on each book sold, but that used-book dealers were limited by the volume they could handle. The used-book seller had to rely on his customers to supply him with books that he would then to build up a large volume, he said.
Bill Haas, manager of Burzy's used Book Store, said Wednesday a used book store could be very successful in a university town.
COBLER, A STUDENT at Central Junior High, said he thought STEP served a good purpose by providing kids with jobs and that they would also be involved in project churches should be involved in.
"I've always wanted to work on a farm," Cobler said. "Here, at least, I'll be working with small animals and washing dishes, and if I go to college, it will be good experience."
A year ago Dale Cobler, 15, spent his summer looking for odd jobs, playing baseball and just "bumming around." This summer he is working ten hours a week as a lab assistant of L. R. Draper, associate professor of microbiology.
stores are able to sell the books at a lower "sale" price, Baird said.
Carl Johnson, pastor of the Lawrence Human Resources Commission, said the STEP began as a crisis-oriented program created through efforts of the Lawrence
Human Resources Board and the Ministerial Alliance.
He said that the profit margin in new book sales was fairly small and that the Town Crier's profits came mainly from the sales of greeting cards.
Ted Dahlstrand, Lawrence graduate student, has been trying to line up jobs. It is often difficult to find jobs because employers are limited by laws or age
Johnson said STEP could develop into a well-rounded program, a springboard for many different youth-oriented programs, programs that would be year-round, where underprivileged youths could develop healthy interests.
STEP HAS NOT been an easy program to keep going. Johnson express doubts earlier this spring as to whether the program would survive this year, its fourth. Among other problems Johnson is fighting is apathy. There is often little interest in Johnson that aren't breaking windows, Johnson could have not been enough supervision or employers may have difficulty keeping the children busy and interested.
Johnson said he hoped that such programs would help help the repop and outwork of the community.
requirements, he said. Most have very legitimate reasons for not hiring young
Budget limitations are also a problem. According to Catharine McCree, one of the coordinators of STEP, this is the first year the team has received any federal or city funds.
THIS YEAR STEP'S budget is about $13,000. Lawrence revenue sharing funds received from the state and federal funds distributed through the East Central Kansas Community Action Agency. The rest of the money to pay youths in the community to pay player contributions or private donations.
Youths in STEP are paid by age. Children ages 10-15 are paid $1.35 an hour and youths 16-17 are paid $1.65 an hour. STEP will last two weeks for the job. Work involves working two hours a day, five days a week.
Johnson said the community would ultimately have to shoulder the burden for its poor. Churches collectively can help communities tie to the community together, he said.
"We provide a place where students can sell their unwanted books year-round, and we also have many books that are out of print and are harc 'o find." Haas said.
Hass said that he had about 30,000 books in stock and that about a third of those were in print.
ALTHOUGH BUZZY'S offers some damaged books purchased from publishers, the bookstore relies mainly upon books purchased from or traded from customers.
The Kansas Union Book Store depends mainly on the students for its used book sales. Beyond this, the book store orders new books from various companies, said Chuck Bills, manager of the store.
"We encourage trading books rather than just paying out money for used books," Huang said.
It is frequently the complaint of students who are critical of the book store that books that have been ordered by their professors or a particular class are not available, he said.
Bills said that this also held true for used books. If a professor does not decide whether he intends to use the same text again the next semester until after the buy-back period, the book store cannot plan how many books to keep on hand.
THE STUDENT does not understand, Bills said, that a book store order depends upon a request list from a professor. If a student wants to use the books, he wants to use until two weeks before the start of the new semester, the book store has no way of getting the books from the publishers
Another problem the Kansas Union Book Store faces is that many publishers will not
accept more than a twenty per cent return on new books, Bills said. This means that if a professor requests 100 books, and only 50 persons enroll in the course, the book store is left with 50 text books, only 20 of which can be sent back.
WHENEVER IT IS expected that a professor's book request might exceed the enrolment in the course, a file of past enrolment for that course and that professor is checked. Sometimes a request is cut as a necessary precaution.
"We carry 450 titles. It's a big job, but if the professors and their departments would get organized, more time could be devoted more effectively," the students more effectively. "Bills said."
The student who is aware of how the
Med Center Chosen Cancer Test Site
The KU Medical Center was chosen last week as one of eight sites for national cancer research efforts to detect new breast cancers.
Over the next two years the center will screen about 10,000 women with the most modern techniques to detect the disease at its earliest and most treatable stages.
Funding of $400,000 will come from the National Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society.
system works and who is interested in knowing where his dollar is going will always buy used books whenever be can, Bills said, giving this example:
IF A STUDENT buys a new book at $10,
he will receive $5 for it when he goes to sell
it back. The book store may then re-sell his
books, but the student who goes to sell back the used
book he bought, he will get the same price
as the student who sold it back new; $5.
In effect the student who bought the new book
was the student who student who bought it
used paid only $2.50.
Bills estimated that approximately $100,000 is paid to students each semester for college. Students also received five per cent rebates on tuition fees and the books, the bills stored. According to Bills, students at the University of Kansas get a much larger amount than in many universities across the country.
The Oread Book Store operates much the same as the Town Crier and makes most of its profit from the cards and posters which it sells.
Stewart Nowlin, manager of the store,
thinks that student ablogging is another
punishment for the wrong reasons.
when one $2.50 book is stolen, it takes about 30 book sales to make up that loss." In an effort to curb the shop lifting he signs in "sign reading "Stealing is bad Karma."
--new staff; Monroe David, editor; earn two yrs of experience as an Assistant General Manager, Rise Haugh, co-owner, Mary W. Cohen, senior director, Jerry Haugh, copy editor, Michael Leroy, marketing manager, Chuck Goodall, classified manager, Jerry Kirkman, Chuck Goodall, classified manager, Jerry Kirkman, classified manager, Jack Moltinner, assistant business manager, Jack Moltinner, assistant business manager
KU FOLKDANCE CLUB Presents:
Böra Özkuk
Teaching Turkish Folk Dancing
7-10 p.m. Wednesday, June 20 Potter's Pavilion FREE Everyone Welcome!
Everyone Welcome!
'Farm Life' Costs Rising, Agent Says
Although unpredictable weather has made a crop forecast for this year impossible, it is certain that farmers will be underpaid for their work, according to Oletha Blevins, Douglas County extension agent.
Kansan Staff Writer
By KAREN DIRKS
Farmers' products receive the same market prices as they did 20 years ago, while production costs have increased considerably.
83rd Year, No. 153
Telephones
Newsroom: 844-8100
Advertising-Circulation: 844-8358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No.153
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and summer, and Monday through Friday during the spring and summer periods. Mail subscription rates are $4 a semester or $10 per month. Email subscription rates are $6 a semester or $10 per month. 664A. Accommodations, goods and services employment and education programs. Students without regard to creed, cred or national origin are not necessarily necessary of the University of Kansas or of the State University of Kansas.
IN ORDER TO maintain a status quo, the farmers must produce in greater quantity, and they must breed processes have made it possible to increase the amount per acre. Machines allow the farmer to increase the amount of land he farms. They can compensate for the difficulty of getting farm labor.
The greater production has pushed the little farmer out of business, Blevins said. Douglas County land sells for $500 to $1000 an acre. Machinery costs might be as much as $100,000. Small farmers can't produce that kind of capital, she said.
Farmers fall in the low-to-middle class economic range. Blevins said that if the time farmers worked was divided by their number, they wouldn't even be the minimum wage.
The need for capital in starting farms, according to Blevins, makes farmers laugh at any "back to the land" movement. They believe difficult it is to make a go of farming.
BLEVINS SAID that there were no more truck farms in Douglas County. Merchants have found it inadvisable to purchase supplies in the seasonality of products.
While it is necessary for the merchant to offer produces the year round, he can only offer some of them.
Blevins said that market prices could increase considerably before the farmer received a fair price for goods. High retail prices are often unrelated to the price receive. They are caused by numerous middle men, particularly in processing.
period of time. the rest of the year he must get it from another source. Usually that source demands a yearly contract and requires that you buy to bus from him whenever he chooses.
"IF THE CONSUMER wishes to pay less for his food, he must be willing to so some of this processing labor himself." Blevins said. "Few, if any, farm products reach the store in their original state and the consumer must pay for the refining."
"If he buys mashed potatoes in a box instead of peeling, cooking and mashing the potatoes himself, he must pay for the labor of it."
The meat boycott was an action that did not affect the farmers. Most were unaware it and those who were aware regarded it as a serious action that did not concern them, she said.
BLEVINS SAID that subsidies and similar measures would not help the far-right members are independent people and usually favor their want to remain independent, she said.
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
CLOTHING STORE announces its
ANNUAL SUMMER SALE
now in progress
NEARLY EVERY ITEM REDUCED 20-50% Come In Soon While Selection Is At Its Best
University Shop
1420 Crescent Rd.
At the West End of Campus Across from Lindley Hall
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 20, 1973
3
Gardens Sprout in Milk Cartons
The motives for gardening by students are as varied as they are, ranging from the practical to the philosophical.
Students who wish to grow their own vegetables seldom have enough room to accommodate a complete vegetable garden. Scattered throughout Lawrence are apartment house porches crowded with styrofoam buckets and milk cartons serving as mini-gardens for apartment dwellers.
Jean Spooner, Rhode Island graduate student, grows tomatoes and peppers in one gallon milk cartons on her small apartment porch. She intends to can the ripeened tomatoes for tomato sauce and freeze the peppers for later cooking.
Spooner said she would rather use her own vegetables in her cooking and canning because of their freshness and flavor. She has not used pesticide because she said she feared the danger to her dog who sleeps on the porch with her garden.
Paul and Susan Greenbaum, Lawrence graduate students, have both health and philosophical reasons for their garden on Massachusetts Street.
The Greenbaums, who grow a variety of vegetables and herbs, said they were concerned with the lack of nutrients in grocery store food, in addition to its expense. Greenbaum said he thought the food institutions were more concerned with process and volume than nutrition.
He has used a pesticide on his garden only once.
The Greenbaums also see gardening as a political statement. Greenbaum said he and his wife were trying to put their white-collar existence on a more fundamental basis. Gardening is a way for him to remove himself from financial settings, he said, and it allows him to work with his hands which he enjoys.
Another said she was planting a garden although she would not be in Lawrence to harvest it. She enjoys gardening just for the fun of it.
YS
On Her Balcony, Jean Spooner Raises Tomatoes and Peppers for Canning
100%
Ice Chest Grows Garden
HARRY PARKER
Paul Greenbaum Grows Herbs and Vegetables
Kansan Photos by RAYNA LANCASTER
Israel's Mood Moves Toward Retaining Arab Land
The Washington Post
By JIM HOAGLAND
JERUSALEM—"If the Arabs wait longer to make peace with us, they will lose even more" territory, Israel's deputy Prime Minister Allon told American newsmen recently.
Six years after the six days that saw Iraq wreck three Arab armies and capture 26,000 square miles of lands belonging to Egypt, Jordan and Syria, the attitudes of Israel's leaders and public toward return are lands seems to be significantly hardening.
Keep land, but not Arabs, is clearly the drift of the national mood as expressed in recent months in public opinion polls, open political party debates and widespread爱国 of Israel's future in this, its 28th anniversary year, which is also an election year.
SURTLY BUT perceptibly, the context of the internal debate over the occupied Arab territory is shifting from immediate security needs, Israel's primary interest in the past, to historical Jewish population and to the size of the Arab population that Israel is safely keep inside the new borders it says must emerge from any peace settlement.
to increase as a result of Soviet-American detente, is also strengthening Israeli resolve to add to the 8,000-square-mile area that was Israel before the 1967 war.
For many Israelis, six years of fruitless waiting for the Arabs to sue for peace and to admit that they will have to give up large areas as the price for their military defeat is rising. The desire to maintain the occupation impedes an annex part of the territories unilaterally. The riseiding of immigration of Jews from the Soviet Union, which appears likely
BOTH DEVELOPMENTS have deepened Arab fears of Israel as an expansionist power. Unable to affect substantially the entirely Israeli-conducted debate over the future of the occupied territories, the Arab world marked another year of military intervention and imposition before Israel on the sixth anniversary of the 1967 war from June 5 to 10.
THE FAILURE of earlier peace hopes "leaves two candidates for blame, the Jews or the Arabs," asserts Prof. Yelshofat Harkabi, former chief of Israeli military intelligence and a keen analyst of Israeli-Arab relations.
Israel's role in the occupied territories has become the overriding domestic
"The result is self-harended or hatred of the Arabs," continues Harkabi, who teaches at the Hebrew University. "We cannot either develop, but they are there."
The focus of the crystallizing Israeli impatience with the Middle East vacuum is the 2,000 square miles of farmland, desert and mountains known in the Bible as Judea.
The shift in opinion was also underscored last month by former Prime Minister David Ben Gurion, who had said shortly after the 1967 war that, for real peace, Israel should give back all the territories, except East Jerusalem and the Golan Heights.
Only 5 per cent of those polled favored givein back "most" of the territories taken
"that was then," Ben Gurion told an "Israel newspaper. The Arabs 'don't want to leave.' We don't want to leave and we must do certain things. We should do everything we can to settle in every part of the land of Israel on this side of the River Hebron, because something we wanted to do then (1948) and we were."
The focus of the crystallizing Israeli impatience with the Middle East vacuum is the 2,000 square miles of farmland, desert and mountains known in the Bible as Judaea and Samar.
political issue, producing what Foreign
initiatives Abbas called "A political
'apprehension' of attitudes but not
political issues."
Thus, while Israeli hawks have been more outspoken in their calls for direct Israel control, there has also been unprecedented interest in the occupied areas. Even Prime Minister Golda Meir's comments on Palestinian Arabs have become more moderate, and the writers have found great interest in them that portray Israel guilt toward the Arabs.
China Reflects New Mood In Art, Sports, Diplomacy
TOYKO (AP)—With traveling sports teams, archeological treasures, documentary films, trade exhibits and diplomats, China is winning friends abroad.
From Dar es Salaam in Tanzania to New York, the Chinese in their Mao jackets are greeted with cheers for their athletic skill, critical acclaim for their recently unearned masterpieces and a surge of good feeling at their smiling presence.
SINCE the Ping Pong diplomacy in 1971, the Chinese have begun to look outward, gaining confidence as their first tentative overtures were greeted with enthusiasm. Peking's new mood embraces virtually each country, no matter how politically different the nation. Representatives of Greece are wined and teamed in Peking and a Chinese sports team appears in Spain, despite the anti-Communist coloration of those two nations.
Even Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists on Taiwan are being wooded. They are invited to send a Ping Pong team to Peking, and though they won't do so, some Taiwanese in Japan are drumming up some players to make the trip.
At the same time, foreigners are making points with the Chinese as more and more advanced in their knowledge.
All of this is in stark contrast to the days of the 1968-69 culture revolution when China broke off international contacts and turned a eye on foreigners in its midst.
MORE significantly, Peking has offered to talk out its differences with Chiang, to.
The archeological exhibitions opened to considerable fanfare in Paris and in Tokyo. The exhibits are rare finds, ranging from earthenware vessels from prehistory to exquisite examples of Tang and Sung years. The center of attraction at each is a burial suit made of small pieces of jade stitched together with silver thread.
There are exceptions to the affinity campaign. The Russians aren't included in the campaign.
A Chinese woman player sang the popular Italian tune "Bella, Ciao" in Rome, reports the usually restrained Hainhu news agency, and brought down the house.
reach a compromise on eventual unificance. The answer so far has been a buff.
Back in China, a Pakistani soccer team played China before 100,000 spectators in Peking last Sunday night. An American swimming team left Changsha for Shanghai, a U.S. basketball team is on a similar China tour; and a delegation of U.S. senators and congressmen also will hit the China circuit the end of June.
Chinese gymnasts were in Canada, a table tennis team is in Malaysia, a soccer team in North Korea, a volleyball team is playing in Tanzania and a Shanghai acrobatic team is performing for crowds in Italy.
ISRAELI SEE East Jerusalem as firmly welded onto their state. "Nobody in Israel will give Jordan more than a Vatican position in East Jerusalem, as the Pope does," says Ehlan, generally considered dovish in comparison with other Israeli leaders.
and Samaria, which became the West Bank of Jordan in 1948.
ART experts from all over Europe and
art from the United States flock to the PTO.
On the other territories, there appears to be no significant internal differences of opinion.
to keep the militarily strategic parts of our West Bank while negotiating with Jordan on the issue of security.
There is no serious discussion of giving back the Golan Heights to Syria, and Israeli opinion is overwhelmingly behind retaining the northern Golan. The eastern coast of the Sinai peninsula.
But a recent public opinion poll by the respected Israel Institute for Applied Social Research found that 58 per cent of those interviewed oppose giving up any parts of the West Bank—even in exchange for a peace agreement.
Much of the 24,000-square-mile desi peninsula could be returned to Egypt without serious controversy in return for a peace agreement.
THIS COMPARED with 47 per cent responding the same way last summer.
THE MAIN FORCE behind shaping the new context of the West Bank debate has been Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, whose public speeches recently have been studded to the religious and historic "Land of Israel" and Jewish rights in Judea and Samaria.
More substantively, Dayan pushed for an open debate on the occupied territories in Meir's ruling Labor Party, forcing other potential successors to Meir to define their positions on an issue Dayan obviously feels he dominates.
Dayan brought the debate to a head by proposing in March that Israeli citizens be allowed to purchase land individually on the West Bank, a step that Eban and others assisted on the grounds that they would reduce charges for any negotiations over the West Bank.
DAYA FINALLY withdrew his proposal after Meir wilhheld her support for it. But he also resisted, as favored Dayan's idea, let newsmen know that Meir's opposition was "reluctant," and the idea of Israeli settlement in the West appeared to take on a more concrete form.
"the discussion chipped up visions of the stage coaches lining up for a dash onto the West Bank," said a Western diplomat in Israel. "It will not be put to rest easily."
In all, Jordan would get back about 65 per cent of the land area under the Allon plan. Diplomatic observers noted that the security "strip" Allon had previously referred to had grown into an eight-mile deep belt that stretched 50 miles along the valley. Allon said that as many as 30 Jewish settlements could be placed in the belt.
In any event, the lines between government and private ownership and use of land are blurred in Israel, where the government owns 100 acres of West Bank land are 250,000 acres of West Bank land are
estimated to have been already expropriated by the Israeli government.
DAYAN'S CAMPAIGN, which critics depict as painting the way for Israeli absorption of the West Bank and its 650,000 Arab residents, forced revealing responses to their violence and contenders to succeed Meir, Yigal Alon and Finance Minister Minis Haap Saip.
In late April, Allon sketched in the details for his previously vague proposal for Israel
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THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
4
Wednesday, June 20.1973
University Daily Kansan
Watergate Explanation, Not Revelations, Needed Now
By ROBERT C. MAYNARD
WASHINGTON-For all of the stunning revelations of indecency on high, something very important is missing from my daily diet of news and information.
As I hear that the President was willing to place spies in the mailbox and burglaries in the apartment, "national security" every citizen was a suspect, I keep looking for an explanation of the meaning of all of this to the contours of his policies for nearly 200 years to call a democracy.
It almost seems as if we are all too stunned to consider it. But, that for me, is an absurdity. The revelation of hush money from the Philippines and perjury in the name of "the Philippines"
From that night to the present, the press has treated the affair largely as a police investigative story, which is properly how it happened. It is no surprise that something very different. Now, it seems to me, the press and the nation are overdue for a deep and continuing inquiry into the implications of these revelations for the public in democracy as we have always perceived it.
IT IS REMARKABLE simply to note that we have arrived at the anniversary of Watergate. It was just one year ago that five men in rubber gloves were found in the offices of the democratic national committee.
Regardless of the extent of wrongdoing
that is eventually proved, the press is under an obligation to go to the next and more difficult level of examining the question of whether there is a difference between government and the governed.
IT WAS ARGUGED during the height of the war in Indochina that often presses the
PETER L. TAHUNE
Robert Mavnard
was covering the wrong story. We were covering ground action and air support and many of our readers were fairly thrusting their questions to the experts' questions of what that war and the exercise
of awesome power were doing to the foundations of American society. Eventually, we in the press came to see that the war abroad was raising large and ugly numbers of people at home. It is fair to say that we have not come to terms with all of them even now.
Watergate reporting can benefit from the press experience with the Indochina crisis, where they have on those hearings and the ancillary revelations, many of which have caused some commentators to wonder aloud at the possibility that a state in the name of "National Security."
Having uncovered the police aspects of the scandal, the press is now obliged. I believe, to open up for debate a number of questions about how we have been doing it, and to clear up a desire to that dangerous misconceptions persist in the minds of many Americans.
I AM NOT just speaking of the woman from Sisseton, S.D., who wrote to the Washington Post chiding the press for its personal 'vendetta' against "the principal governor" and thinking of Patrick Buchanan of the President's staff. He wrote in the New York Times chasing those who called for Nixon to enlargen his current stewardship of the White House into some sort of government office, which would suggest distasteful in the extreme:
"What they are urging," he suggested, and that the President betray the mandate of 1962. "Why is it not done?"
behalf, the democratic verdict of the ballot box. . ."
There, it seems to me, is where the press might begin its deeper inquiry. Irrespective of any possible guilt on the part of President Nixon, Watergate dramatizes in another form the same imbalance in this society as the Indochina tragedy: how powerful should the chief executive of this country be? The press has gravitated to the coverage of the
Presidency in a manner that has in times past approached awa. Much of the rest of the society concurns in this way of looking upon the President as larger than life.
analysis
upon me trespasser as larger than inte. WE NEED A very clear understanding of what has become of the office when men have said that they lied, even committed crimes, because someone in a credible position to do so could utter the seven words, "It is the wish of the President." Arguments abound as to how the
Arguments abound as to how the Presidency ever came to be an office of such power that its holder could feel threatened by a force on the citizenry or bomb Cambodia without a shred of authority having been granted by the other elected representatives of the people. But the press could help us understand some of the extent of that power so that we can debate in an arena wider than ever, if that is what we in a democracy intend for the Presidency to be.
The nation was shocked when an attorney general, Richard Kleindienst, declared before Congress that executive privilege could be meant to extend down to the last filederk. Given Indochina and Watergate, it would obligeviation very seriously and begin explaining what people who made people what the founders intended by creating three branches of government.
ANOTHER PROBLEM FLOWS from the point of view of the Presidency. The President defined the role of a governmental body to illegally invade the privacy of citizens as one of "national security." It seems to me that it is time to take the question of both internal and external, from the top.
The special investigation unit the White House created was concerned at least in part with Weatherman and the Black Panthers. It would be helpful to know how much of a threat to national security is posed by such groups or any other group using extra-legal means to protest social issues; issue that America needs to understand themselves is how we are to work out our relationships with each other.
The men in the White House chose the route of the wireset and the mail cover. It was a long route, but the men made it work.
Watergate: 'National Morality Plav for '70s
By PAGE SMITH
The Los Angeles Time
Grim and grisly as the specifies of Watergate are, the episode is, in a larger sense, one that describes the process going back a considerable distance in time. On one level I am tempted to carry it back to the French 17th century and descartes and his "Discourse on Method."
In his "Discourse," Descartes offered the one-liner of all time, "cogito ergo sum; I think, therefore I am." The ultimate reality is nothing but the world we doubting mind. The world itself was perceived as "object," as mechanistic and quite separate from the all-powerful mind. Indeed, the only thing that connected the earth and the world was the intervention of God.
This destruction of outmoded authority and the "objectification" of the material world marked a dazzling new era in history—the age of science and technology. The inclination to imitate a winner is irresistible.
IN ADDITION to the studies of the natural world, all studies of man from prehistory are warranted.
themselves after an enormously successful natural science.
The world, natural and human, was treated as something to be organized and manipulated for specific ends. Moral and ethical questions were, increasingly, more and more relevant in a phrase once heard far more often than presently, especially in the academic world, "value judgments," and value judgments were, on the face of it, un科学istic. They were simply impediments to religious code and were simply impediments in the way of scientific objectivity.
comment Don Wright
PEACE
WITH
HONOR
by HENRY KISSINGER
SON OF
PEACE
WITH
HONOR
by HENRY KISSINGER
It may seem a far stretch from Descartes to "the plumbers" of the Committee to Reelect the President, but it is not so far as it seems. The lock-pickers and burglar of the White House were simply can-do boys who believed in the boss and in getting the job done by means of whatever technology was available.
Wrong? When the world is objectified,
where is wrong?
A NUMBER of them were obviously surprised and distressed when senators asked their moral questions—whether they said that what they were doing was wrong.
The senators were rather stiffly self-righteous. But in some instances, it was clear that they were on the other side of a wall, and there were no conventional pieties from the can-do boxes.
There was an especially ironic moment when one senator asked James McCord a question like this: "How could you, after a long and honorable career with the CIA, do
What we are witnessing is less a Senate investigation than a purgation, a ritual of exorcism, a remarkable drama in which we can trust to bridge the gap between these two world views. For objective, operational world where manipulation and results rule, and an older world we can't quite bring ourselves to entirely let go of or cease to believe in, a world where all things are right and other things are wrong, a world, in short, of "value judgments."
"MY GOD," one wished to cry out through the television receiver to the senator, "the CIA is the epitome of the can-do ethic, or non-ethic. It is the supreme, ultimate center of organized immorality, the dirty-tricks bureau of all time. In the name of keeping America secure and great, the United States is not merely condoned but sponsored, by building up natives to fight against their countrymen to things better not mentioned."
That was just the point. That was why McCord could, with an untroubled conscience, commute burglary. He had been a member of the national burglary, the thievery and doubledealing.
such a dastardly and illegal thing as
organize and lead the Watergate break-in?
PEOPLE WHO make value judgments are dangerous; they are kookies and Commies and long-haired students, hippies and agitators and dirty radicals. There is, it seems, only one legitimate value judgment—the greatest and most powerful and most benign power in history; all other value judgments are inoperative.
WRIDT
readers respond
We enjoyed the Curriculum & Instruction Survey article, as far as it went. ("Liberal Arts to Require 'Feedback' for 1700 students," CRI Journal, we would like to correct some of the erroneous statements presented in the article. Many of the comments printed in the story were founded on a lack of knowledge about the project and were set forth as if correct.
To the Editor:
We believe that students have both the competence and the right to evaluate instruction. Kenneth Eble, Director of the Project to Improve College Teaching of the AAUP and the Association of American College has said, "Student evaluations do not lead to perfect data departments use to judge teacher teaching. Surely a system which rests upon opinion, heartray, occasional high praise or bitter complaint, cannot be hurt by adding
to it some data on what actually goes on in a classroom."
(1.) Students are not competent to judge instruction.
(2.) One assistant professor objects to the lack of data, especially the use of profile answers instead of written comments. He obviously has not read the instructions sent to him through campus mail, which explain the use of comment sheets provided to each student allowing lengthy written comments. He also asks a student to answer a student answer card for 15 questions to be by the instructor to answer questions applicable to that course only.
High correlations have been found in numerous studies by respected statisticians to the moment experts showing that student ratings are associated with and that they compare positively with colleague ratings. (Guthrie, Lovell & Nolan, Webb & Nolan, Mazlow & Zimmerman).
(3.) The same person said the questionnaire should have remained at its previous 99 question length. It was shortened to 56 questions because of overwhelmingly negative response from both students and faculty to the length. Most faculty members contacted this semester believe the questionnaire is still too long.
GRiff, IF THERE'S ANYTHING ABOUT ME THAT YOU DON'T LIKE... JUST TELL ME...
I'D RATHER NOT
NO GO AHEAD...
I MEAN IT...
I VALUE YOUR OPINION
O.K...
I THINK YOU'RE SHORT-TEMPERED
I AM NOT SHORT-TEMPERED!!
(5.) One complainant purports that an entertainer receives higher scores than a "low-keyed" instructor. Studies have shown that the latter has judgments of a course's value are correlated positively with "instructor's interest in the course." No studies have found that sheer "entertainment" is what entertainers perceive a teacher as a "good" one.
(4.) Another person questioned believes that students mark their "card in pattern" for the 18,663 student answer cards returned this semester was manually checked for capriciousness. An obviously capricious student's results are recorded as capricious.
Every decade or so we must have an national morality play: an enactment on television, with millions of viewers, of our own schizophrenia, our inner dividedness. And yet the old values still hold and to demonstrate that some people must be punished.
In conclusion, we welcome criticism but do hope to dispel myths before they become widely accepted.
And when the play is over—the Hiss-Chambers play, the McCarthy play, the racket investigation play, the Watergateplay—why then we feel purged, purified,braced. We have seen the villains get thebane that he has triumphed over thefalse; good over well; justice over crime.
That, we say a little smugly, is theAmerican way.
AFTERWARD we note with quiet satisfaction that the rest of the world, or some of the rest of the rest of the world, rests on our dirty linen in public—that takes guts.
Nancy Harper, Director C&I Survey
There is one more particular in which all these poor wretches are the victims of history far more than, as they dreamed, its oppressive authority on almost every level of our society.
griff and the unicorn
Power and authority should, of course, go hand-in-hand. Authority invests power with respect to honor and even a kind of sacred trust; authority, kings become tyrants, and the strong become bullies. By the same token, Presidents become suspicious and insecure and everywhere see threats to their power. They must be able to escape aside by unscrupulous gulls and cunning.
MUCH HAS BEEN SAID about the dignity, nobility, etc. of the Office of the President of the United States: "A particular man may be fallible but be warranted we damage irreparable the dignity and the office itself." The office has already suffered for years from authority that is experienced everywhere and that, when it was intact in the Presidency, made it the greatest office in the world.
question that puzzles me with each new revelation about this domestic spy operation, as to whether fear and suspicion ought to be the mode by which Americans come to understand their mutual problems and quell their various fears.
GRiff, IF THERE'S ANYTHING ABOUT ME THAT YOU DON'T LIKE... JUST TELL ME...
I'D RATHER NOT
The real point of Watergate is that the man who presently holds that office knows that much of its authority is gone through no fault of his own. The president of the Partie's slight that he himself has never really believed in the authority of the office he occupies (or fitted naturally or comfortably into it), and sensing a loss of power, to desperate expedients to reassert it.
It is as though he were trying to compensate in some way for the diminution of the historic authority of the office by constantly augmenting its powers.
Lawrence graduate student
The same question applies to our external security. It would be helpful if we could gain some insight as to the level of the threat posed to Americans from other countries in this era of detente with the other nuclear powers.
I miss all of these explanations in connection with my Watergate reading because the issue of security looms large through all of this. The question must be posed and the issue balanced out: which was the graver of our security, the dangers being posed by our own systems or solutions devised within the White House to meet those dangers? If I could add to that my diet, 'I digst the remainder of the Watergate disclosures more intelligently.'
Two-for-One Trade As Bikini Devalued
1
Agence France-Press
NICE—Bare bosoms were bronzing in the sun on the beach at Nice today as the monokini craze took the Promenade des Anglais by storm.
The topless fashion was launched last week by a fulsome quartet, and rather than provoking hows of protest, spread rapidly. To avoid running foul of the law, the advocates of semi-nudity only reveal their charms lying flat on the beach.
NO a we
10th have
Local police said there could be no case of public indecentity since there has been no
Bathers on the whole had no objection to the new fashion, but most said they would rather wear what was right for them.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. June 20.1973
5
10 Years at Smith: Movie Mags to Love Comics
By SALLY QUINN
The Washington Post
NORTHAMPTON, Mass.—Overcome by a wave of nostalgia on the last day of my 10 reunion at Smith College, I decided to have just one look at my old house, Talbot.
Walking up to the front porch past the bicycles, past old swing and into "Fusers," a sitting room named for the old-fashioned term *fusering*, an astonished floor level ever over a bit.
I hadn't planned to go up to my old room on the third floor, but there I was, knocking on the door, petrified someone would say "come in." Someone said "come in."
1 GINGERLY OPENED the door to find a student sitting cross-legged on the bed firing her nails. "I used to live in this room 10 years ago," she said. I had said it. She smiled prominently.
"Oh, we'd read movie magazines any more," she replied. "We read love comics
"Yes," I went on, trying to recoup, "and when I lived here I had, piled up in that corner, the largest collection of movie magazines on campus."
IT WAS EASY to remember two other times I had driven into Northampton, Mass, the foreblooded black, wrought with pyre-covered sign, "Smith College 1871."
The first time was 14 years ago when I was driven up by my parents on the first day of my freshman year, not knowing a soul, and was deposited on the front steps of Talbot House in tears, wearing the darkest red eyes. I could find to hide my swollen red eyes.
The second time was driving back from New York with friends the day before graduation, not knowing whether or not I was going to graduate. I did graduate . . . at the very bottom of my class, which I ignored until the presence of a distinction than second-from-bottom.
THIS TIME I drove back with my old classmate and class president, Toni Kissel. I worked in the laundry room at Abighr House. I wore a beige safari suit, a pullover and chains. Perfect, I thought. Everyone else, it turned out, was wearing little summer cotton dresses, slacks, laffers
Having my suitcase carried upstairs by a freshman who called me "ma'am" was the first shock. The second was seeing a sign on the door of the communal bathroom saying, "Man inside." That, we later found, was only in deference to alumnae.
the rooms.
still, after 10 years, produces the same
same oil as he did when it was packed with
earnest, white-haired VIP.
Among the procedures listed by the search committee are the following;
Search Process Outlined For Business School Dean
--smoking, no men in the rooms at any time. When a Kingman (campus policeman) or father visited, we were to yell "man on floor" before he appeared.
The search committee established, to screen candidates for dean of KU'S School of Business has completed a list of procedures to be used in the search.
Alumnae, in cable knits, McCollen blouses and pleated skirts, similar, except for the color of their hair, to the students of 14 years ago at the first freshman assembly.
Nichols to Name Tenure Groups
- To schedule a meeting in which the outgoing dean is invited to offer advice on her future.
The committee will search for possible successors to Clifford Clark, who has resigned. Joseph Pichler is acting dean of the school in the interim.
Each committee will have a special problem to study.
WE LEARNED RULES 14 years ago. We had housemaothers who helped us obey the rules, and we did great work.
Last weekend was not only reunion weekend for every fifth year (starting with the class of 1083, whose members stayed in the infirmary) but also commencement weekend, the graduation of the largest class (more than 600) in the history of Smith College.
It was in that room that Miss Charlotte Fitch, our class dean, had announced 14 years ago that our class was the first one at Smith that had ever had less than 50 per cent of her students. She stunned silence throughout the hall, then a gasm of disgust from the prepreps. One classmate, very upset, confided to me that if she liked two girls equally and she found out one was from a private and the other was from a public school, would like the private school girl better.
ONE OF THE first activities was a special panel on where the college was going. It was held in Sage Hill, remembrance of those who died in the naps. The slow hissing sound of steam heat
Chancellor Nichols said the names of the committee members would not be released until one last position was filled today. The meeting will conclude their business by September.
It was in Sage Hall that same day that Miss Fitch informed us we had two blacks in our class. There were those who were unhappy with that and, later, at a compulsory assembly with Marian Wright Edelman, a law student from Yale and the first black woman to speak at Smith, some of whom are survived by their mother and snickered, bissed and chanted "Alabama niggers should be free," on their way out.
Chancellor Raymond Nichols announced Tuesday that four subcommittees would begin meeting today to discuss the basis for procedural rules and regulations in granting tenure to members of the faculty and administration.
Nichols said the subcommittees had been created in response to a controversy last April when a large group of professors and the Committee of Promotion and Tenure differed over what specific guidelines were used in determining tenure.
Sophomore Grant
Michael VanRons, Kansas City, Kans. sophomore, has been awarded a grant-in-aid for the next school year from the Newspaper Publishers Association.
'The foundation has awarded grants totaling more than $23,000 to 51 blacks and other minority students enrolled in 30 accredited journalism school programs.
VanRoss received his award through the foundation's Scholarship Program for Negro and Other Minority Students.
—To solicit recommendations from the faculty of the School of Business, alumni, department of economics and Advisory Board of the School of Business on nominees for the dean's position and the type of dean needed.
- To schedule a meeting by the search committee with the School of Business faculty to discuss the committee's parties to discuss the committee's characteristics of rehabilitable candidates.
—To conduct a general screening of nominees before sending letters to them.
—To send letters to nominees asking whether they would be interested in the dean's position, and if so, requesting personal information.
- To screen nominees to establish a wye of prospective candidates to be interviewed
—To schedule visits of the prospective candidates with the Chancellor, vice-chancellors, deans and student representatives.
After the visits are completed, the School of Business Assembly will vote on a ranking of the candidates and rankings of the candidates, the vice-chancellor will select and negotiate the job position.
—To schedule a committee meeting in which the School of Business Assembly is invited to hear prospective candidates present a brief talk and answer questions.
Curfew hours were announced and strictly kept. We were on the honor system. We were to have posture pictures taken, nude, then a semester of required basic motor skills or "BMS" (one learned to walk and down stairs in high heels carry a bag).
Miss Fitch told us that day that our class was mostly interested in art history, English, languages and history. We were really happy with the averages and the dredged Regurgator's Last.
“*REGE*, AS I came to know it, was the opposite of Deane's List. I was on Rege the entire time I was at Smith. I lost my scholarship because of it the first year and never made it through to him. I had to him I had made the Registrar's List, he misunderstood and thought it was an honor.
Lawrence Sherr, associate professor of business and chairman of the search committee, said the committee was hoping to have a new dean selected by July 1, 1974.
Shortly afterward an announcement appeared in my father's home town newspaper to the effect that Miss Sally Quinn had attained the honor of being placed on the Registrar's List at Smith College . . .
We were also told about President Thomas Mendenhall, our new president that year. As a present to our class, which came with our graduate school trip, we gave us a concert—three hours of Ella Fitzgerald. He announced simply, on the radio, "You've come to hear her, not me; so I will get to hear you."
LAST WEKEND, on the panel were President Mendenbail, now two years away from retirement, the junior-senior dean, and two outstanding seniors.
We learned that much has changed.
An aristocratic, elderly alumna, stood up and demanded to know why a course in accounting would be "Well," explained Mendental soberly. It increases the students' chances of getting jobs in the summer, gets them out from school, gets them into the higher echelons of the labor force.
"AUTO MECHANICS is on the curriculum. We feel that any institution which can turn out someone who can swim, bartend, short-order cook, repair a car and any home appliance is fitting its students to the needs of the times."
Last weekend we were told that the largest major today is psychology; that students are electing—that's right, elec-
tricity is the most popular subject, something sexy like Joyce, Yeats and Eliot"; that "junior year abroad" can be spent at Yale or other men's colleges, at Spellman and other black colleges, in government (or) (for government major)—or abroad.
There will be 38 blacks in next year's class. Three years ago they would have elected to live in an all-black house under the Black Student Alliance but, next fall, only prefer to be integrated: Separatism has downed them, say, out of lack of interest.
WE LEARNED THAT there are longer rules. "twenty-four-hour parallels" is the way they say men are allowed to spend the night in the rooms.
Other than that, things are pretty much the same.
Friday night was the class dinner. There were more than 100 classmates and husbands, everyone pinning name tags on at the door with maiden and married names, of course. Most of the classmates married, at least those who came back.
MOST OF THESE who came back seemed to be happy with who they were and what they had become. (Otherwise they might not have come back.) At the head table at the outgoing and incoming class officers, they not corsages.
There seemed to have been some confusion about what to wear; the class of '83 was in everything from chiffon and wool trousers to neck-neck sweaters, and paint-shredded chirts.
There was a lot of screaming, tentative recognitions, comparing of notes . . . "How are you?" "Are you married?" "Do you have children?" "How many?" "Are you divorced?" "Do you work?" "Do you have a beau?"
There was a great deal of heavy and not very-suble scrucity of the state of each other's faces and figures. "Look at all the lines in so-and-so one's face." was overheard
THERE WAS RATHER a lot of drinking.
Mostly bourbon. Husbands were trying to establish their roles. "I carried someone's suitcase today and just now offered to hang a coat," complained one. "And both time I've been called a male chauvinist pug."
It was sophomore month that we were first allowed to smoke in the room. Senior year, we were allowed to have men in the rooms on Sunday afternoon from 3 until 15. Shades up, lights on, doors open and feet on the floor was the idea, if not the rule.
and, "I can't believe it. She hasn't changed a bit."
Junior year abroad can be spent at Yale or other men's colleges, at Spellman and other black colleges, in Washington, D.C.
Saturday morning, half awake and groping down the hall in a flimsy nightgown to the communal bathroom (which housed sinks, toilets and bathtubs), toothbrush in band, I was relieved to see that the "man inside" sign was not on the door.
'Junior year abroad' can
The idea that men now stay overnight was unsettling, but something I could live with. The idea of sharing a bathroom with strange men was something I could not.
athletic supporter. I had just begun my morning toilette when the door was flung open and two semicirclal men walked stall and the other began to brush his teeth.
Back at the houses after dinner, the husbands, who were sharing rooms with their wives, broke out the bottles, and everyone sat up and drank all hours.
"OH, YEAH," said a young man with no shirt on. "We drink bong now."
"I just ignore them, pretend they are not here, I thought, and go about my business. I casually took out my special cosmetic beauty grains and began washing my face. How, what that crap that you're putting on me?" "that's the one who was brushing his teeth."
INSIDE, SOMEONE HAD done the wash
the might before and hung it to dry—two
forks.
My year was the last one of apathy. I loved John Kennedy because he was so sexy, and few really understood one of our classmates from Rhodesia, who had been declaimed persona non gratia by her own mother, making out against Rhodesia's racial policies.
"LOOK WHAT SHE'S putting on her face," said the first one to the others, who came over to stare. "It's hard to believe she will do to make themselves look good."
The seniors who were still left had men sleeping over and they were having their own parties down the hall. They were borrowing the husbands' bourbon.
KEY WEST, Fla. (AP)-Two of the four men aboard the minibus Sea Link, trapped beneath the ocean for 31 hours, were pronounced dead Tuesday as the small craft was returned here aboard the deck of its mother ship.
Last year when I ran into my old government professor in an elevator, he said: "The people are all so cute."
"I never thought I'd see the day when you would be writing about politics." (I was a single-minded theater major, intent on becoming a movie star.)
BUT IN NOVEMBER of 1963 John Kennedy was slain and that clearly was the beginning of political and social awareness across everyone, including Smith College.
Joint funeral services for Link and Stower were set for 9 a.m. Friday (Lawrence time) in Vero Beach, Fla., the Smithsonian Institution announced. It was the Smithsonian that sponsored the fish research project in which the men died.
Today's students apparently are losing interest in movements, marches and major protests, or braved ideological positions, and they often do not know about what they can do or be, themselves.
Burial Set for Two Dead in Mini-Sub
In several long discussions with different groups of students, most surprising was their apparent lack of interest in the women's movement.
The formation of the Individual Fulfillment Coalition was the result of a meeting Tuesday of the Political Action Committee of the KU Commission on the Status of Women.
THERE IS NO large women's rights organization on campus. Although there is a women's center in Northampton, none of the students seemed to know much about it. They were all aware and sensitive to the issues, but not actively involved.
"Why should we be?" said one student,
"We're all women here. There's one to pop up."
"It is a colection of concerned Lawrence residents," said Lynn Knox, St. Louis, sophomore, chairman, "that represents all different types of people concern abut the problems of educational sex stereotyping in Lawrence."
The committees are designed to investigate athletics, resources and extracurricular activities, career education, training in the Lawrence public school system.
Two companions in the forward chamber of the Sea Link, Robert Meese, 27, and Archibald "Jock" Menzies, 30, were in excellent condition shortly after the 21-foot craft was freed Monday from the wreck of a ship that had trapped it 351 feet deep in the Atlantic.
Dr. Helen Gilles, member of the board of education, attended the meeting and described it as interesting. She expressed a sense in keep in touch with the group's activities.
Coalition Formed to Investigate Sex Stereotyping in Education
The coalition established a group goal and created four individual committees.
Clayton Link, 31, the son of the man who designed the minibus and Albert Stover, 51, an expert in underwater survival, were injured when a jet engine of almost 24 hours there had been no sign of
life from the tiny compartment in which they were trapped.
The deadline for Douglas County residents to pay the second half of their 1972 personal property and real estate taxes is midnight tonight.
The other two men were reported in excellent condition.
Members of the coalition plan to present the results of their research before the Legislature.
County treasurer Edythe Norman suggested that residents mail their tax payments to the treasurer's office to avoid crowds at the pay windows.
Tax Deadline Is Set
Link's father, Edwin Link, 71, who built the small research submarine in his basement.
The Sea Link returned to Key West shortly before noon on the deck of Seal Island.
"Death was not abrupt; it came slowly," said Dr. David Youngblood of Duke University who is attached to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington.
"He was as much of a scientist as his father," she said. "And he would understand if he could be aware what had happened."
His mother, Marion, said she understood why her son had died.
The elder助手 had helped direct the rescue attempt and his wife said he had been stunned by the event.
He said the most likely cause of death was exposure to temperatures that dropped to 40
Rescuers decompressing the chamber in which the two dead men were trapped said it might take another 36 hours to get their bodies out of the sub.
Youngblood said pressure inside the rear chamber was so great that the bodies could be seriously damaged if pressure was dropped too quickly.
Yonghouship said that despite the fact that there were no signs of life from the men after 10:15 a.m. Lawrence time Monday, rescuers tried to revive them "under the longshot assumption there could be a speck of life left."
He said any attempt by the men to swim out of the trapped sub "would have been more likely."
Did Giora Steinem's commencement address two years ago had much effect? "Oh, some of the parents were a little shook when she said 'Housework was s—t work'"
Ten years ago at Smith, you wanted to get married and have children. "Ring by spring" was the goal of most seniors. If I couldn't be a movie star, then I wanted no part of any other career—but marriage—oh maybe a volunteer job on the side . . .
MOST OF THE SENIORS said they wanted to get married and have children (they figured they had already lived together with men and know what that was like), but they didn't want to be married, saving for a career. Many of them had no idea what they wanted to do after graduation.
After we ate a Saturday night, we sang happy birthday to one classmate and happy
They sang the same songs too. In the middle of their concert, after they had asked two of our classmates, former "Smiffis" to sing, and after they had sung "Deep Purple" in honor of their fathers, they gave presentations to two departing seniors. There were corsages. Everyone hugged the seniors.
BUT THE SMIFFENPOOFs looked the same as they had 10 years ago. They had shiny hair and long dresses and they "all looked like virgins," as someone pointed out.
anniversary to another. Presents were given, a few hugs exchanged, a few tears shed. Just like 10 years ago. Everyone was feeling a bit foolish and sentimental. And a couple of them were laughing at the Smiffendogs, the big college singing group, suddenly appeared to serenade us.
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer; $1.50
each additional word; $.60
The seniors cried
Three Days
15 words or fewer: $2.00
each additional word: $0.21
Deadline: 5 p.m., 2 days before publication
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students in regard to their accommodation. Please BIRING ALL CLASSIFICATION TO 111 FI LINT HALL
FOR SALE
2. If you don't.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two waves of looking at it.
**GORTH Side SIDEN Shop—5 Blks. No. 4k.** Of used furniture, each day hey $29.40. Antiques, used furniture, curtains, pillows, rugs and loveseats, bicycles between 10 speed, old pot belly dishes, buckets and mugs, brushes and tubels and *1* brushed basket & wood crates. The oil price doubled after the dollar price shaved afloat. brons and wheat flour, canned meat. Open 9 to 7 days. 842-318. Herb Mertens
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage
2. If you don't
1. If you use them,
their location.
Either way it comes the same thing—New Analysis of Western Civilization."
"thing—
New Analysis of Western Civilization
Available now at campus Mallown, Town Center
PIZZA HTM SOMGASSORD. All the pizza you
need. 11:30-13:00, W 2d wlrd only. Monday -
Saturday 11:30-13:00, W 2d wlrd only.
Saint Bernard pupil, ARC Registered Champion,
Young pupil and older adult. Available. Most
young pupils, and older adults. More info.
10 x 55. Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension. 3 bedrooms, bad dishwasher, good appliances. Partially furnished. Carpeted. A/C: Skirred. Fenced for dog.铺地, shed, garden. Asking $16,210-$29,099
5099
For Sale. 1965, VW. Rebuilt engine. Red with gold trim, AM Radio: 8050. Call-821-7427. 6-23
G. E Color portable TV, excellent equipment. Comm Constellation trunnel 1 A bargain; make offers. Ships free in the U.S.
Foil Sale-1971. Toyota Citica SL-A1C, radio
and stereo, front windshield wipers, with black
clip on top, must sell, going to Geneva
to meet dealership requirements.
Wine and Beer making supplies at the Mercerian Grocery Company. 703 Mass. 843-968-626
Apr for rent for summer. Excellent location
1 $125/mo. Will negotiate. Standate 8:36-6
1 $125/mo. Will negotiate. Standate 8:36-6
FOR RENT
HONDA. 450 Scrambleer, 1972, 6200 miles. Luggage
rack. Just打欠 $800. Call 842-8644. 6-25
*FREE RENTAL SERVICE*
For the *first time*, rent a pallet call Livermore Exchange 226-875-3400 for rental services.
*FAST CLEARANCE*
SAVE GASOLINE. Wash to clean and classes
mess up with all appliances. No pets. 842-151-3100
www.mcg.gov/savegasoline
For Ren. Apt. for one person, on campus $100/
485-250. All bills paid Call 643-895-
845-250.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEP
BASE! PARKING IN FAR-LONG LOTS!
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
computer buildings, parking parked lot. Free: Cab
cabin, free parking. Rates available: rate
saves, furniture available. roommates
rate. Saints Ave. Saints Ave. 123d. Avt. 9
4a 831-218-3600
Furnished room in older house near campus. Fully furnished rooms. Quaint area, nice house, utilities included. No smoking. Call 212-690-3745.
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air conditioned and off street parking, bordered by street.
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cooking facilities. B雇ers KU and near downtown.
NOTICE
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH*** Small Pizza or a special price of $12 at 804 Lowria Park, Omaha. MORE INFO:
515 Michigan St. Bar-H-Cue. We Bar-H-Cue in
the 460 South. A slab to buy here $490. Large rib plate
chicken platter $145. One pound of beef $125. Beef
chicken platter $145. One pound of chicken platter
$145. One pound of chicken platter $145.
2-101 910-545 Tables. Check Slim and Tues. Phone:
2-101 910-545 Tables.
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION, 731 Main Street, Suite 250, Dayton, OH 45414. Saturday, 10-6:30 - 6:30, R.C. Repair is an organization of progressive repair shops. We are independently owned and equipped shop. Because we are independent retailers at prices which reflect our efficiency, WITH THE REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE. Manual and electronic repairs. Mobile phones; small appliances; small appliances and devices. 6-27 Bobcats now in stock at the Mercantile Grocery Store.
THE HIDE in the WALL
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. — Phone Order
841-765-865 — We Deliver - 9th & 11th
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
10th DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
Five Days
15 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $.83
**LOVE 18 GENIENDLESS** *GAY LIBERATION*:
meetings on Monday 7:30 p.m. MCDONALD, COUN-
STANTON, PA 19424-4257TH, for details: office-
6-212 B-112 Union 844-4009, Box 234, University 6-21
new WAXMAN CANDLES for the more frequent
equipment from WAXMAN CANDLES, W. 14th
street, New York, NY 10026.
Have a dog, cat, rabbit, fish, or bird? If you do,
get to the pet store and see seed, and pellets from people like Sergeants. Ingest them and your pet will learn, leaflets, collars, and other pet supplies available from GRANTS DRIVE IN PET CENTRAL.
Head scaffold welding canisters start, on law and safety maps, to the people that make them. WAXMAN is the people that make them.
STRANGER IN TOWNS* As an Aven representative,
he helped the finest homes and made good money too.
He is a member of the House of Commons.
WANTED
RADI AUDIO=have you heard the H-750
SPEAKERS? Have you watched you too had a stereo
in a home situation instead of a store room?
We've got a new iPhone and our thing 78 Rhode Island IS. 842-297-7, 7-88
Need Female to share house for summer. Own lawn. Near campus and downtown. $50/mo. or $120/mo. for extended stay.
I would like to share commuting with someone from Topeka. I am on the Lawrence campus 8 miles north of Topeka. Our female friend wanted to share a house. Owen bedroom $32/mo. Call or Tunya. 811-44311. 6-42
Wanted: female to assemble for summer. Private room in house with four others. Rent $50 per week. Please provide a resume.
Wanted. Photographer to take slides of jewelry
and watch displays at the Museum of Arts.
Call: Callen at 841-3833. Need 6-23
TYPING
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
490. Myra. Also minor editing and/or proofing.
Typing--my home IBM SelectR-PCia type
phone number experienced, accr.
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MISCELLANEOUS
Expertized in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mise, typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt typewriter. Correctly spelling corrected. - 835-954. Mrs. Wright - 7-28
ENTERTAINMENT
PIZZA HUT DELIVERS A hot pizza right to
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THE INSIGHT TAVERN 2298, Hammond (1206) 574-3355
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Monday through Friday, June 12 - 8:30 PM - $12 per person
Friday, June 12 - 8:30 PM - $12 per person
SERVICES OFFERED
Tennis lessons: given by two experienced teachers.
Soccer lessons: low-rate lessons: 842-366, ask for Kevin
Employment Opportunities
Attractive single girls with good personal qualities are sought for appointment in April and May. No prerequisites. Call for appointment 900-326-8711. EOE.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KU KARATE CLUB now accepting new summer
classes for women, 1295 hours for women
Catholic Church 1295 hours for women
Fitness Center 1295 hours for women
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
"Finishing Work a Specialty' 842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
sirloin
AWRENCE KANSAS
Delicious Food and
Superb Service with
Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been
There in her subscript for quality
and food
1. Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Stalein
Phone
843-1431
5%
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Wednesday, June 20, 1973
University Dally Kansan
New Hospital Goes Up
Although work seems to be progressing rapidly at the new student health center, another KU class may graduate before its doors open. The hospital is scheduled to open in May 1974. The present Watkins Hospital building will probably be used for classrooms or administrativ space.
THE LINCOLN UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
THE LINCOLN UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
Kansan Photo by RAYNA LANCASTER
Referendum Attempt By Firemen Denied
By KAREN DIRKS
Kansan Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission discounted a petition Tuesday that called for a city referendum on the question of an equal pay scale for firemen and policemen.
Milton Allen, city attorney, told the commission he did not find the matter appropriate for a referendum. Milton cited several court decisions that had determined police and firemen's salaries to be administrative matters.
"city needs and economic conditions fluctuate." Allen said. "It would be desirable to have the city vote on it. It is my opinion the matter is not subject to referendum."
Groups Fight Neglect of Elderly
From Page One
The study was compiled by sampling 11 per cent of the more than 3,700 county roads.
Visiting Nurses and Meals on Wheels are active agencies included in the council plan.
THE COUNCIL ALREADY has been granted funds to purchase a minibus, and it
The Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association gives care to the homebound, and provides medical care.
"IT MAY REQUIRE skilled nursing, teaching, physical therapy or personal care," according to Marcele Laupe, assistant director of the association. "And 75 per cent of our patients are senior citizens."
The visiting nurses also screen potential clients for Meals on Wheels.
MEALS ON WHEELS serves nearly 50
middley meals, Monday through Friday,
to be served on weekdays.
"Funding is totally through the community," said Debbie Beene, agency chairman. "We do charge our clients $1 per person and we are working with local organizations are willing to help out."
Meals are prepared at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Immanuel Lutheran Church and Cottonwood Inc. Some 125 volunteers deliver them.
"AS WELL AS giving them food, it helps them psychologically," Mrs. Beehe said. "Otherwise, these people wouldn't see anyone."
However Meals on Wheels is limited to preparing a maximum of 25 special meals a day. The Council on Services to the Aging has discussed supplementing this service with congregate meals at various locations throughout the area.
Some housing relief for the elderly is due Aug. 1, when the Babcock Citizen Citizens Highrise at 1700 Massachusetts St. is scheduled for completion. Under the authority of the Highrise Authority, the 7-story, 120-building will be open to low income residents over the
age of 62 who are able to meet financial eligibility criteria and to take care of
John L. Derrick, county welfare director, applauded recent efforts by local organizations to improve the life of senior citizens.
An elderly couple was living in the back of a station wagon because they couldn't come up with the money for a rent deposit.
xxxxxxxxxx
"WE CUDN'T AND didn't do the job," he said. "The welfare effort has not been effective because we never had the personnel to do the job. It takes the community. We don't have a registered nurse on our campus instance. We can't build a building."
The County Welfare Office has 230 persons over the age of 65 on their current rolls, more than one half of them in boarding homes.
By Jan. 1, 1974, responsibility for the aged will be shifted to the Social Security Administration in accordance with federal legislation passed last year.
DERRICK POINTED OUT that area welfare recipients totaled only a small fraction of the more than four thousand residents on 65 on Social Security rolls.
"I think economists are still saying that 10 per cent of the population is self-sustaining by retirement age, which indicates an imbalance somewhere," he said.
Derrick's implication is borne out by the council's survey. Elderly persons here listed financial woes as their primary concern, with difficulty in paying property taxes and maintaining houses topping the list.
THE LAWRENCE PARKS and Recreation Department is another organization involved in the welfare of the elderly. The Pioneer Club, open to anyone with an interest in South Park Recreation Center for lanceeches, trips, games and other activities.
"We have had up to 200 members," said kathy Fodo, center director, "including the staff of our office."
Fode said meals always drew a good crowd, some coming from as far as Otwua, Kibu, or Mombasa.
THE CENTER DOES not provide transportation, however, so club members must rely on themselves, their families or a taxi service to attend meetings.
Occeer Moe, secretary of Penn House, a self-help organization for poor persons, is in frequent contact with aged residents who need help.
"We have an extensive information service for the elderly," she said. "We provide security, medical assistance, welfare and housing developments, among others."
"WE HAD AN emergency transportation service for a year, but it has been curtailed for the summer because we lack moneyed girls. I hope we can start it again in the fall."
Penn House is run by and for poor persons
and the organization has no steady source of
fund.
"We rely on scrounging." Miller said.
Eric said,
PENN HOUSE MANAGES to encourage enough money to maintain an emergency medical fund, run a grocery service for the elderly, run a food stamp car pool to the welfare office.
Government sources do not provide for non-prescriptive drugs, so Penn House chips in for items like aspirin. It's usually the elderly who use this service.
"Often our elderly clients receive some sort of official form or document through the mail, but no one has said. "So they bring it to us. We help them it is and, if necessary, fill out a form."
KANSAS CITY (AP) -- Mandatory urinalysis tests for National Collegiate Athlete Association performers could be a requirement, an executive Director Walter Bever said Tuesday.
First, however, the NCAA must determine which drugs should be denied athletes, and that research is under way now, Byers said.
The NCAA already is working with some member institutions on a voluntary urinalysis drug testing program. The second major project in the research is a questionnaire on drug usage, mailed this spring to 143 member institutions.
Ballard Center serves about 350 families a year, many of them regular visitors. In 1972 it received $14,000 from the United Fund, their only guaranteed income. Their budget was over $33,000 last year. The deficit was made up through contributions.
Byers said in the near future, hopefully the NCAA Council meets in early August to address a number of issues.
"WE SPENT A day finding them a house and advanced the deposit. The couple moved in and with that little advance they would become self-sufficient." Finday said.
After nearly five months of competition, the track season for the University of Kansas finally came to a close at last weekend's National Amateur Athletic Union Championships, held in Bakersfield, Calif.
NCAA Executive Director Forecasts Urine Tests for Athletes by Fall '73
More than 70 players, members of the Association of Tennis Professionals, met Tuesday night after a British high court refused to quash the suspension of Plica, and their plans to boycott the prestigious Wimbledon classic, due to start next Monday.
Last January, the center learned that an elderly couple was living in the back of a station wagon. The couple couldn't come up with the money for a rent deposit.
LONDON (AP) — The world's top tennis stars announced late Tuesday night they would boycott Wimbledon because of the suspension of Yugoslav star Nikki Pilic.
"Old people are potentially ver, powerful," Findlay said. "One of the beauties of being retired is that you have the time to lobby for your own welfare. When people are noticed, they begin to take notice of themselves."
In the morning the All-England Club announced their seedings-16 in the men's. Of the women, 10 of the seeded men, 15 had been to the tournament if Pill leftright his case.
The players include Americans Stan Smith, Arthur Ashe and Charlie Pasarell; Australians John Newcombe, Tony Roche Stolte, and British stars Mark Cox. Gary Benson
The court decision and subsequent boycott announcement, which could reduce the Wimbledon tournament to a semifinal, is one of a long day of uncertainty and tension.
Two of the four Jayhawks entered placed in the competition.
KU Track Team Earns Honors; Coach Is Optimistic Of Future
Stan Smith of Passadea, Calif., rated the top spot in men's singles, and Margaret C. of Australia was the No. 1 woman. A total of 6 U.S. men and three women were seeded.
Mark Lutz, the Big Eight Champion in both the 100 and 220-dash. dishes, finished with an eighth-place finish.
Players Announce Wimbledon Boycott
Because of his second place finish in the meet, Lutz was selected to represent the United States in a series of AUU meets this summer in Europe. The AAU Team will team up with the U.S. Army, July 11 and 12; in Turin, Italy July 17 and 18 and in Minsk, Russia July 23 and 24.
Also named to the team were Terry Porter in the pole vault, Delario Robinson in the high hurdles, Randy Smith in the high jump, Kent McDonald in the steepelech.
Lutz's time broke his own KU varsity record of 20.7. Also placed was Terry Porter, who finished third in the pole vault at 16-6.
Also announced last weekend was the All-District Five Track and Field team, selected by the Midwest Region of Track and Field Writers of America.
Sam Colson, the NCA record holder in the javelin, was named Field Athlete of the Year and Lutz was named Track Athlete of the Year.
Bob Timmons, KU track coach, was named the Coach of the Year for District 13.
Timmons, in an interview Monday, said he was extremely proud of the performances turned in by the team in the last five months.
"I'm happy with the way our team performed all year," he said, "I was pleased that six of the guys made it on the All-District Five team."
KU swept all the honors and placed six men on the All-District team.
Programs at Ballard are developed directly from the needs of those who come to the attention of the center. A senior citizens group is one such program. A medical program and an emergency food program are others.
"THE SITUATION with the elderly here is pitiful," she said, "but it has been imminent."
"The council has done a lot to bring the problems of the aging to the attention of the community, but the elderly don't have a lot of time to wait for a pilot program to become a reality. Many who come here have incomes of only $65 a month."
THE BALLARD COMMUNITY Center in North Lawrence is also involved with low-income housing projects.
Lenore Ffinday, co-director of the center, also is involved with the Services to the
Once the council officially approves a list of non-permissible drugs, the drug education committee will propose before the executive committee a testing program at NCA4 championship events, beginning this fall.
"What we need is hard information on whether there is a drug problem," said Jerry Miles, NCAA public relations manager for the New York City schools but a similar unrnalysis they found that drugs were not that big a problem among the athletes themselves."
have a recommendation on which drugs should be banned.
Byers said the details of a program had not been defined but the tests would be mandatory, and if it was determined that an athlete had used an unauthorized drug that manager his health or give him an unfair competitive edge he could be ruined ineligible.
An NCAA spokesman said university division football probably would not be affected by the testing, since it had no single championship event. He ruled out the likelihood of urinalysis tests for bowl game participants. But testing could be undertaken at the NCAA college division football championships, he said.
Miles said there was no record of drugs actually improving an athlete's performance and this has been a theme of the NCAA's drug education program, undertaken in cooperation with a variety of other groups.
"Education is the first part of the picture," Miles said. "The second is an awareness, which is where we are now. The third is the development of an enforcement program."
It is anticipated that such a recommended testing program would be selective, Byers said. That is, not all NCA4 championship events in any one year would be affected.
WASHINGTON—Kansas City Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley told the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday that as FBI director he would not collect political data for the White House, would not make any political speeches and would not provide documents to any White House aide except through the attorney-general.
Kelley Faces Senators
Kelley's assertions, in response to questions from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who was the lead candidate for former acting FBI head L. Patrick Gray III, Gray was subsequently nominated as permanent FBI director following the death of his wife, Katherine, 1972, but his name was later withdrawn.
Asked what he would do if the White House requested him to make a political speech, Kelley replied: "I would notify the attorney general that I had received such a request and would refuse to have appeared."
KENNEDY ASKED: "Would you provide material to a White House aide without his consent?"
"I would refuse and notify the attorney-general," Kelley said.
Kelley, 61, who spent 21 years with the FBI before being named police chief of Kansas City. Mo, 12 years ago, said he would not bow to political pressure.
"NO ONE should be confirmed who would bow to such pressure," he said. I have never bowed to political pressure and I'm not about to start."
Kelley would become the second permanent director of the FBI, succeeding Hoover who spent 47 years as the chief before his death 13 months ago.
baseball standings
American League East
W. L. Pct. G.B.
Allianceville 14 24 794
New York 14 24 791
Baltimore 30 37 526
Detroit 30 37 524
Boston 30 31 492
Cleveland 30 31 492
Baseball's League Leaders
West
Minnesota 33 27 550 ___
Chicago 32 27 542 ___
Skokie 32 27 542 ___
California 33 29 532 ___
Kansas City 36 32 521 ___
Tampa 20 28 532 ___
Cleveland 8 Detroit 7
New York 5 Baltimore 4
Baltimore 11 Washington 6
Boston 8 Milwaukee 12, Ind. 11 innings
Minnesota 7 Texas 3
Colorado 9 Houston 8
National League
W. L. 91, Pct. G.B.
Chicago 59, 28, 50
Montreal 30, 28, 51
St. Louis 30, 28, 484
New York 28, 31, 484
Pittsburgh 28, 31, 473
Philadelphia 27, 33, 440
By the Associated Press
Los Angeles 41 25 621 2
San Francisco 40 20 562 1
Houston 39 25 547 2
Cincinnati 35 29 547 5
Atlanta 35 29 547 5
San Diego 26 30 547 12
Chicago 6, Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 1
Pittsburgh 3, Pittsburgh 3, 2nd
Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 3, Montreal 3, 5th Louis 1, LA
Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 0
BATTING 125 at bats - Biomberg, NY. 40. W Horton
Def. 357
DOUBLE= D- Allen, Ch. Jr., min. 14.
DOUBLE= Carlew, Min. 7, Logs 1, B. Burdry,
8, Logs 2.
BUNS BATTERY, KC 43, R Jackson, Oak 42
BUNS BATTERY, KC 62, R Jackson, Oak 42
DIA 55
MEMORIUM, Mt. Pleasant
HOME RUNS - Masherley, KC JI D. Allan Chg, 12
HOME RUNS - Masherley, KC JI D. Allan Chg, 12
BITCHERS - Cibernaon, Co 89, 81-201 Lloyd, 12
BITCHERS - Cibernaon, Co 89, 81-201 Lloyd, 12
BST. 72; 78, 70:
STRUNKETS - N, Ryan, Ca, 149, Singer, Cal, 113
RUNS BATTED IN—Bramch. CI. 927 Wesson, LA. 49
RUNS BATTED OUT—Bramsch. CI. 857 Wesson, LA.
DOCUMENTS—Carson, CH. 15, Shumwood, NY. 15, Simmons, NJ.
BATTING 125 at-half. - MCA, L44. 340ad. SF, 327.
RUNS - Bonds, 56 at-half. W. Davis, L44. 66
Doubles= Cardinal, Chi, 15, Stuart, NY, 15; Simmons,
St. 15, Bonds, SF, 15.
C, 13) Borns: A.
TRIPLES—Mertner, Hm. 9; Sanguillet, Pgh. 7
On the matter of surveillance of citizens, kelley said that it should be used to gather information about potential threats.
Kelly received endorsements for the FBI job from Atty. Gen. Elliott L. Richardson, Democratic Sens. Shaunt Symington and Rep. William J. Mussouri, Missouri, and Rep. William J. Randahl, D-Mo.
STOLEN BASE - Morgan, Cin. 28, Ronda, St. 22,
PITCHING & Decisions - Brewers, Fl. 113, 716, 178.
DRAFTING - Morgan, Cin. 28, Ronda, St. 22.
RICHARDSON SAID the administra-
conducted a nationwide search and "Kelley was clearly the outstanding candidate from an outstanding field of candidates."
STRIKEOUTS= Seaver, NY, 99; Carlton, Phil, 99
Bob. Dole, R-Kan, noting that C. M. Kelley has "root in Kansas," has also expressed complete support of the Kansas police chief's nomination to head the FBI.
"Since coming to Kansas city, he has demonstrated an impressive capacity to respond to changes and has built a national model of modern police science and technology.
"Having served with great distinction in the FBL, he knows the bureau and the basics of enforcement on a personal level. He understands his responsibility, its mission and its history."
7
The commission passed a motion proposed by Commissioner Jack Rose asking for a declaratory judgement so that the court could know what the legal implications are.
IN OTHER ACTIONS, the commission approved a motion for further investigation of a proposed judicial building to be shared with the county at a joint city-county level. Participation in the facility would require $500,000 in city revenue sharing funds.
Commissioner Barkley Clark stressed that it would be a cooperative action for city and county law enforcement officers, not a combined action.
Buford Watson, city manager, said the funds were available. He cited the advantages of participating as the prevention of duplication between city and county law enforcement officials and a chance to update jail facilities, which are inadequate at present.
Commissioner John Emick objected to the motion on the grounds that it restricted the commission to using the space for city offices when it might not be adequate.
ROSE DISAGREED, SAYING Lawrence police facilities were perfectly adequate. He said he would not consider further investigation unless he was assured that the police building would be used instead of a prison. He then proposed a motion for investigation and meeting with the stipulation that the police building be used for city office space.
THE MAYOR'S AMENDMENT was defended and Rose's motion with the support of her peers.
Mayor Nancy Hambleton agreed with Emick and proposed an amendment to the motion which strongly suggested using the commission but which would not restrict the commission.
Local Musician's Union No. 512 asked the commission for a budget increase of $2,000. Speaking for the union was William Kelly, University of Kansas registrar. He pointed out that benefits the city concerts offered to Lawrence and the need for an increase of funds.
The commission declared it a budgetary matter to be considered when the budget was proposed. The commission also recommended that federal culture funds as another resource,
The commission discussed and then deferred action on a controversial re-zoning plan.
He was told, however, that he could move to some property which he owned across the street. Later it was discovered that this property was not zoned for auto salvage yards.
MILLS WAS OPERATING an auto salvage yard. When his office building burned down. More than 50 per cent of the building was demolished and a city ordinance prevents re-building in these circumstances.
Because Mills was mistakenly to move, attempts have been made to solve his problem by re-zoning or reclassification of auto salvage yards.
The commission debated what reclassification of all zones for an individual might mean to zoning laws. The matter was then deferred.
From Page One
Prosecutors Lock Up . . .
Staff members on the committee refused to attend the meeting and had been requested to meet with the team.
The White House had no comment on the report that Dean borrowed campaign funds. Federal District Court Judge John J. Sica has ordered Dean to testify to the Security committee under a grant of immunity from the government will have to prove it gathered the evidence independently of what Dean said at public hearings.
"We cannot allow you to trade your testimony about the culpability of others in return for dropping all charges against you," Cox said.
He refused to talk to the grand jury, where he has no immunity, claiming his Fifth Amendment right against self-crimination.
The rejection was coupled with an offer to allow Dean to plead guilty to a one-count indictment charging a conspiracy to obstruct justice.
"THE EVIDENCE that has been gathered and is still being gathered establishes that you were at the center of a very profound kind of corruption," special prosecutor Archibald Cox wrote Dean on May 22.
There was testimony at the Senate hearings last week that Dean helped plan
both the burglary and bugging of Democratic headquarters a year ago and the attack on a Jewish school.
JUDGE SIRICA ordered the government's evidence on Dean sealed and deposited with the court Tuesday after a request by Cox's assistant, James Neal. Neal told the court the prosecutors want to insure that if Dean is indicted they can prove that he did not come from Dean's testimony before the Senate Watergate committee.
Sirica ordered that the seal "be broken only in the event that Dean should challenge at any stage of any criminal proceeding the validity . . . on the ground that such injury was evidence was derived directly or indirectly from testimony compelled from Dean."
Sources reported Dean has told the Senate investigators that there were discussions at the White House early this year on ways "to affect" the uptick in the hearing prices would have.
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn, the committee vice chairman, said Sunday he had been approached by a presidential assistant who asked if the White House have some say in the selection of committee counsel'. Baker said, 'I told him no.'
One plan, Dean reportedly said, was to try to get a student friendly to the White House or the Capitol.
ATTENTION: ALL STUDENT SENATE FUNDED ORGANIZATION
June 22 is the deadline for encumbering funds allocated for the 1973 fiscal year. This measure is in compliance with the University's closing procedures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1973.
Be sure to turn in all travel vouchers, service order vouchers, A-form orders, and outstanding bills to the Student Senate treasurer's office by June 22.
Your cooperation will be appreciated.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THURSDAY JUNE 21,1973
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
ACLU Asks Court to Acquit Watergate Trial Defendants
WASHINGTON—The American Civil Liberties Union moved Wednesday to have the convictions of the Wategate trial defendants thrown out because they "resumed from . . . frauds upon the court." The ACLU asked permission of U.S. District Court to file a brief in support of Watergate conspirator James W. McCord Jr.'s motion for directed acquittal or a new trial.
Kellev Asks for FBI Freedom
"Those convictions should be set aside and the defendants retried under a properly drawn indictment which charges all of those responsible for the Watergate conspiracy regardless of their station in life," the legal document said.
WASHINGTON—The Senate Judiciary Committee, considering Clarence M. Kelley's nomination for FBI chief, went into recess until Monday, when several witnesses are expected to testify. The committee also said it would seek the FBI to have a degree of independence that would prevent it from becoming a White House police force under the influence of "the wrong director," the wrong attorney general or wrong President." The committee said it would put a stop to law enforcement officers posing as newsmen and pat a stop to FBI agents acting in this manner as undercover agents.
Running Mate Selection Attacked
WASHINGTON—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey has called on a new Democratic party commission to revise the vice presidential selection process to insure selection of top-grade candidates. "We ought to be offering the people best that this party can offer," the Minnesota governor said in an executive committee to collect proposals on the vice presidential selection process and to decide whether to hold any public hearings.
Peace Commission Fails Again
SAIGON-Vietnam two-part joint military peace-keeping commission, meeting for the third time in six days, failed again to put into effect any of the major 14 points in the Paris communique de la deuxième anniversaire du Vietnam that though the number of violations by the Communists had decreased, the intensity of clashes had increased. The Viet Cong said Saigon's forces had carried out many battalion-sized land-grabbing operations with support from bombers, tanks and artillery. In Camboys, forces also entered sides of Highways 4 and 5, both of which are vital transport routes.
Pope Ready to Leave Vatican
VATICAN CITY—Pope Paul VI is reported ready to abandon the Vatican and St. Peter's Basilica, symbols of his claim to be supreme ruler of Christianity, if it would advance the cause of Christianity. The Pope was quoted as saying he would be prepared to move to the Pope Palace, his see as bishop of Rome, but would never agree to abdicate to Pope. In his words, this would be "against the will of Christ."
$1 Million Fine Asked of IBM
WASHINGTON—The Justice Department has asked a federal judge to hold IBM Corp. in contempt of court for failure to produce some 12,000 documents that the government wants as potential evidence in its long-standing anti-trust action against IBM. Asst. Atty. Gen. Thomas E. Kauper has proposed massive fines against the multi-court entity and asked the court to find IBM in either civil or criminal contempt. He also ordered the central part of IBM's earnings for each day it continues to hold out, which he estimated at $177,000 per day, or a criminal fine of $1 million.
Mexican Jetliner Missing
PUERTO VALLARA, Mexico—A Mexican jetliner with 27 passengers was reported missing today on a flight from Houston, Tex., and witnesses said it apparently exploded as it approached this resort city. Several witnesses reported seeing a flash of fire in the sky over the airport as the aeromexico DC9 approached the airport here. The air traffic control last contacted the DC9 at 10:23 p.m. Wednesday Lawrence time. The plane was then at 14,000 feet over the Pacific about four miles offshore, preparing for its final approach.
EUGENE, Ore.,—Bowling Green's Dave Wotte has run the third fastest mile of all the time in the Hayward Restoration Meet, charging past Oregon's Steve Prefontaine to win in 3:53.3 as six millers broke the estimate mark. Wotte, now with the U.S. Air Force, passed Prefontaine second in 3:54.6, just ahead of John Hartnett of Villanova, who was clocked in 3:54.6. Jim Ryun holds the world record of 5:51.1 for the mile.
Dave Wottle Runs 3:53.3 Mile
Cool Night to Follow Warm Day
It's going to be another pleasant day here in Lawrence, with just the right amount of sun to keep bright walls and comfortable.
The temperature should stay below the mid 80s during the day and drop during the night to the mid 50s. Good weather is expected to continue on through Thursday.
FANTASTIC
Brezhnev, Nixon Puff Peace Pipe Nuclear Ban Likely Today
CAMP DAVID, Md. (AP)--President Nixon and Soviet Communist leader Leonid I. Brezhnev have reached agreement on a new declaration designed to spur a permanent ban on nuclear weapons, offensive sources disclosed late Wednesday.
The signing is tentatively set for Thursday. At the same time, Nixon and Brexiteer may announce an accord for joint energy in peaceful uses of atomic energy.
The finishing touches on the guidelines for the now-recessed SALT II talks in Geneva were reached by Nixon and Breznev in conferences held in a mountain retreat here.
The agreement could rival in importance the accord reached in Moscow last spring when Nixon and Brenzweig held their first nuclear summit. The agreement would limit on some nuclear defensive weapons
and a temporary limited ban on some offensive weapons.
It was understood the new guidelines reached here were mostly general in nature. But they are intended to accelerate the suspended technical talks covering such complex systems as multi-targeted missile warheads.
The document would not be a treaty, but is essential to essential to the stalled Grassland Conference.
A companion pact would pool U.S. and Soviet research in the field of peaceful uses of nuclear energy, including fast-breeder reactors and controlled explosions.
Gunbattles Disrupt Peron's Homecoming
Nixon and Breznev met late into the evening. Wednesday and planned to
The fired White House counsel was describing a meeting he attended with Nixon and presidential chief of staff H. R. Bush, who accepted, 15 according to the official summary.
BUENOS AIRES (AP)—Gunmen opened fire in a threed of two million that waited Wednesday to welcome Juan Domingo Peron back to Argentina. Scores fell dead or wounded, and Peron landed at another airport.
There were no details on the alleged 1968 bugging incident in the summary of Dean's talk with Senate Watergate committee staff members last Saturday.
With Nixon and Breenzey, as they talked until 2:15 p.m. Lawrence time about strategic armies limitations, were Secretary of State William P. Rogers, Henry A.
Police reported at least 13 dead and wounded in the gunfire near Ezeiza International Airport, where the former Argentine president's chartered jet was to have landed. Doctors tending the victims said the death toll could go to 50.
Nixon said that Hoover had told him that he (Nixon) had been bugged in the 1968 campaign. Nixon said that sometimes in the 1970s he would have to use it to their advantage.
Dean Reveals Nixon's Intent To Bug Rivals
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Nixon said at a meeting last September that he once told FB1 Director J. Edgar Hoover he might use wripping against political opponents, John W. Dean III has told Senate investigators.
Another portion of the summary quotes
See DEAN, Back Page.
Nixon also is quoted as saying in a summary of Dean's testimony to Senate investigators that Hoover told the President that Nixon had been the subject of electronic eavesdropping in the 1968 presidential campaign.
Peron, en route from exile in Madrid, put down at a military air base several miles away. He canceled his public appearance, and he left the airport Wednesday night, the government said.
Two earlier gunbattles that left three persons wounded appeared to involve rival Peronist groups. Peronists in the crowd blamed a Marxist guerrilla group for the prolonged gunfire that spoiled Peron's peaceful return from 18 years in exile.
The shots were fired into the crowd from a clump of trees 300 yards from the speaker's stand. Peronist security guards returned the fire and charged toward the trees.
The new Peronist president, Hector J. Campora, said after arriving with the former Argentine leader that the fighting was caused by "elements who are against our nation."
Sporadic shooting near the international airport continued after dusk as hundreds of thousands of Peronists started back toward the capital.
Witnesses said some of the gunmen fled in cars, but others were captured. Minutes later, other shots rang out and the fighting spread.
Police withdrew quickly from the area after the shooting broke out.
The Trotskyite People's Revolutionary Army, a Marxist guerrilla group, has pledged to disrupt the new Peronist government.
Peron was topped by a military coup in 1965 after 9 years of rule with dictatorial powers, which the military and his followers were prohibited by the military from putting up a presidential candidate until this year. This return to power is his seconde in the last six months.
A DUBLE COMEDY bill, "A Slight Case of Murder" and "I Married a Witch," will be shown at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. "A Slight Case of Murder" is a gangster satire starring Edward G. Roberts, the author of the story of a girl and her father who are reincarnated in the 20th Century. It stars Frederick March and Veronica Lake.
The third and most serious gunfight, near a cloverleaf bridge close to the international airport, broke out after left-wing militants of the Peronist youth movement and moderate Peronist labor followers taunted each other.
on campus
"JULUS CAESAR" will be presented at 8 tonight, Friday and Saturday at the University Theatre in Murphy Hall as part of the "Murphy College Invitational Institute. Admission for students is $1."
"THE LEOPARD MAN" AND "I Walked With a Zombie" will be shown at 7 p.m. Friday in Woodruff Auditorium. Val Lewton, one of the motion picture industry's finest horror movie producers, produced the double horror bill. Admission is $1.
TWO JUNIOR HIGH school bands, two choirs, and one orchestra, composed of campers attending the Midwestern Music Festival on Saturday, p.m. 2 p.m. Friday in the University Theatre.
EWDARD ZELLER, professor of geology, will be featured on the television show *respective* at 11:30 a.m. Sunday (Wednesday) in DAFAT's video series of the various aspects of the energy crisis.
A FREE CONCERT will be held from 2 to
4 pm. at Sunset at Fort Lake featuring Tree
Rock Music.
A JEWELRY and silverstones exhibit by Lynn Ridenour, Lawrence, and Bob Willis, Las Cruces, N.M., graduate students, will open at 2 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Gallery. Many of the pieces will be on sale.
"SHAKESPEARE and the Romantic Painters" is the topic of a lecture to be presented by Randy Youle, teaching in the Forum Room of the Union. Sunday in the Forum Room of the Union.
"JOE MACBETH," Shakespeare's story transformed into a modern-day gangster setting, will be show at 7 p.m. Sunday in Auditorium. The film stars Paul Douglas.
Kissinger, the President's national security adviser, Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobryko and Soviet Ambassador Anolby Zobryko.
The talks resumed in Nixon's lodge shortly after 4:30 p.m. with Kissinger and Dobrynin attending. Rogers and Gromykov met separately to discuss the Middle East,
The two leaders met under tight security. Heimated Marines in combat green lined the electrified barbed wire double fences that line the 143-acre presidential retreat. The setting was Aspen Lodge at Camp David, the heavily guarded presidential compound high in Maryland's Catocin Mountains.
TAYLOR JOHNSON AND MICHAEL KINZON
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
Minorities Explored Today
The University of Kansas is not a community unto itself but at one with the people it serves. Kansas staff writers provide a look at some ongoing services
to and for minority groups, within and without the Lawrence campus, on pages 2,3 and 4 of today's Kansan.
Blacks Promised Equality
By GERALD EWING
Positive commitments to do everything possible to reduce the inequities associated with minority groups at the University of Kansas were given by Chancellor Designate Archie Dykes and Chancellor Raymond Nichols in meetings Wednesday.
Dykes, contacted by telephone at his office at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, said that in the case of any minority group, the University had an obligation to take those steps which seemed necessary to meet the needs of all students.
"The important thing is that people are committed to responding to the needs of all people, black and white, rich and poor, or whatever." Dykes said, "The University has to serve to nerve all of the people in my concern what he be that we do that in every way possible."
DYKES SAID THAT at this time, he didn't have any specific plans he might implement to help the minority groups at KU.
“What one would do would vary from circumstance to circumstance and from location to location. What would be suitable here in Tennessee might not be suitable in Kansas. You have to adapt the steps you would take to a given situation,” he said.
Like most major universities, the University of Tennessee has had instances of racial problems and complaints by black students that discrimination does exist.
DYKES SAID MUCH of the concern centered on the number of black faculty within the university and the number of black students admitted to the university.
See related pictures and stories on pages 2,3 and 4.
He said the administration at Tennessee responded to these problems in two or three ways.
One way was a series of programs about the campus that were designed to bring more black students to the university, to better meet areas where they didn't normally enroll.
Connally Hopes To Leave Job, But Not Upset
Dykes cited one program in which the College of Engineering recruited blacks and provided financial aid for them for the first two years of their college education. The last two years would be taken by a co-ap program where the student would work one quarter for either the Tennessee Valley Authority, Alcoa Corporation or General
See EQUALITY, Page 3
By FRANK CORMIER Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - John B. Connally said Wednesday he was not unhappy or upset about his White House job, but wanted to quit as soon as possible.
He seemed to deny published reports that he was restless and displeased about his White House role, and felt cut off from ready access to President Nixon. But Connally puzzled newsman at the White House by declaring:
"You have some leakers who are fairly accurate in what they have been leaking to."
THE ONE-TIME Texas governor, who shifted from the Democratic to Republican party eight days before becoming a part-time, unpaid presidential consultant on May 10, was asked how long he planned to remain on the job.
“As short a time as possible,”
he responded to the question he had to return to
him because of illness.
Asked if he had conveyed his wishes to Nixon, Connally told the news conference he was "trying to send word to him through you all."
THE STRONGMAN of the Nixon Cabinet when he served 16 months as secretary of state.
See CONNALLY. Back Page
2
Thursday, June 21, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Cash Shortage Cancels SES Program for Summer
By KATHY TUSSING
and LYDIA BEEBE
Kansas Staff Writers
There have been Supportive Educational Services (SES) programs at KU for the past four summers, although there is no SES program this summer because there are no funds, according to William Balfour, vice chancellor for Student Affairs.
"There are two lacks of funds—a lack of Student Senate Funds and a financial aid cutback due to cuts in federal funds," Balfour said.
SES is designed to provide tutoring, scholarships and loans for racial minority students.
THE SES PROGRAM has been criticized during the last year for failing to include minorities other than blacks. It is currently having difficulty finding funds to expand the program to include non-black minorities, and avenues of funding are being explored.
A request was made last spring to receive funds from the federal government, Balfour Bank and others concerned federal funds. In addition, Balfour said that the application is for only the 1975-74 academic year, and it would not sustain the program before that even if
Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said no National
MICHAEL P. WASHINGTON
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTEC
A Student Sniffs Perfume Before Buving It
HE SAID it appeared this spring that the federal government was not going to fund NDSI loans at all next year, so the decision would be to lend them next academic year, except for students who have been receiving such loans and who are graduating at the end of the school year.
Thus, virtually no NDSL loans were available to any students for the summer
Rogers said that later he found that the program was going to be funded, but didn't.
Some of the students in the SES program have in the past received financial aid or loans such as NDSL on their own, though not as a group, he said.
"As of this date, we have not been able to get a permanent or a definite commitment yet. We are still pursuing this and we might have to change some of our requirements for the program and maybe start bringing those students who can finance their own way."
Direct Student Loans (NDSL) were available to minority students this summer
"WE DON'T HAVE a program where all you have to be is a minority to get aid. You have to have financial need," Rogers said. He has considered other avenues of funding.
"We called the city manager's office and asked about revenue-sharing money," Capula Taylor, acting director of the SES program, said in an allocation hearing before the Senate's Finance and Auditing Committee last spring.
"SES does not qualify because we don't fall into any of the eight categories that we described."
BRENDA MARZATT VANN, acting director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said at the Senate hearing, "At this point, I think what we're trying to avoid doing is saying anything definite because there are things that are as of yet undetermined.
"WE HAVE TALKED with Chancellor Nichols and explained about our admirers, but we haven't helped us and looking for other alternatives, and endowments was one suggestion. This doesn't mean that they have commitments to us or that this will be a problem."
Taylor would not talk with the Kansas about these funding sources about which she had spoken to the Senate Committee. However, SES has apparently received no financial commitments, at least for the summer.
"We're seeking other means of funding and right now we can't say to this committee that definitely money's going to be used by students from endowment or from whatever.
"But there are students who we feel we would be able to serve, who would be able to come here, who would be low-income and same students that we have been serving."
"The sorts of funding would be changing
By DEAN FORD Kansas Staff Writer
Minorities to Stage Own Show At Business Exposition in K.C.
At a time when government expenditures are in a period of transition from the Model Cities plan to the President's proposed Better Communities Act, minority communities are continuing programs to increase the growth and development of minority business.
Kansas City, Missouri's Municipal Auditorium will be the site of a two-day midwestern minority business expoion in Kansas City. The event's position, minority businessmen can display
their products and services to potential financiers and prospective customers.
"New programs will make this year's exposition quite different from its predecessors"; R. H. Selleck, promotion chairman for the harman for the exposition said Wednesday.
ACCOUNTING TO Selleck, the people with booths this year will be the minority businessman, instead of the majority businessman as it was in the past.
Sellack said that at previous expositions, a few minority businessmen came to sell the company.
"This increases the chance for contracts," Selleck said, "because the majority businessman have a chance to view the businessman's product right on the app."
products, because the number of minority businesses has grown, there are now enough minority businessmen to set up their own businesses to the majority businessmen come to them.
More Effective Plan Required For Minorities, Nichols Says
Chancellor Raymond Nichols said Wednesday that the new advisory board for the Office of Minority Affairs was intended to assist with the development, adequate and was meeting its responsibilities.
Nichols said that he thought the office needed some help in making its program more efficient.
The Office of Minority Affairs exists to provide whatever services are necessary to minority students and staff, according to Brenda Martelli Vann, acting director.
Vann said there were four full-time staff members in the office who worked directly with her. All four, she said, were members of minority groups.
She said that most of their work involved recruiting minority group members for staff positions and for prospective students, and that a great deal of work was done to
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Selleck said that the invitation of minority and majority businessmen who are outside the Kansas City area was another new program.
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Vann said that the office had been trying to develop more job opportunities for minority group members and had also been trying to work with departments to develop a more extensive system for recruiting more minority group members for faculty positions.
Members of the new advisory board were reluctant to make any comment. Don Green, assistant professor of human development and family life, said the board had met only once and had not yet determined its internal organization.
obtain funding and scholarships
The office has been conducting job interviews in cooperation with some of the large corporations that visit campuses to recruit personnel.
Adams said that, as he understood it, the board was to evaluate the University's various programs for minorities, rather than those for whites. He programed of the Office of Minority Affairs.
She said that she had not formed any opinion yet about the new advisory board, but that it had the potential to be helpful to the office.
The board may make recommendations to the chancellor if it chooses, it may make recommendations directly to departments and other subsets of this University, if I understand the chancellor's charge," he said.
Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism, said that he expected the board to assist the University by assisting the minority students.
"WE ARE ALSO opening the exposition to the public for the first time," said Selleck. "This will give the prospective customer a chance to see the minority businessmen's products."
Adams said that one responsibility of the board would be to determine what the real problem was.
The original goal in 1970 was to generate $500,000 in new business for the area's minority businessman, Beckel said, adding that about $500,000 in new business from 1970 to 1971.
The Mid-America Minority Business Exposition is a part of the Minority Business Week activities that started Sunday.
THE LACK OF A nummer SES program
will, he said, make it difficult for student
writers to succeed.
"THE NEXT EXPOSITION produced over $800,000 in new business, according to Selleck, and in 1972 the exposition was made for more than $1 million in new business.
"They'll have to be pretty careful and give them some intensive help, because I think it has been an advantage to have it in the summer."
The SES summer program the last four years has provided intensive remedial aid to underprivileged minority students, according to Balfour.
but not the direction of the program."
"This is reported monetary increases," Selleck said. "For every dollar that is reported, there is probably a dollar that goes unreported.
However, the University Senate Committee on Financial Aid to Students said that the summer program could be eliminated.
The exposition will be open to the public from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Saturday.
Another highlight of the Minority Business Week will be a dinner tonight at the Hotel Muehlbach in Kansas City, Mo. Missouri Governor Christopher S. Bond and James Tern Jr., assistant director of the Business Enterprise in Washington, D.C., will participate in minority businessmen. Cookie Rojas of the Kansas City Royals baseball team is the banquet chairman and will be the master of ceremonies.
"In other words, minority businessmen who were not connected with the exposition may be indirectly aided by the exposition and therefore would not send in a report."
In an April letter sent to Taylor, the committee said, "Although we realize that the summer session provides unique advantages for the SES program, we feel that
--most of its goals can still be accomplished in the academic year."
The SES summer program the last four years has provided intensive remedial aid to underprivileged minority students.
ROGERS SUGGESTED that the committee had discussed the idea that an intensive program the first eight weeks in the fall would probably be adequate.
Last November, the Student Senate passed a bill urging the University of Kansas Memorial Corp. Board of Directors to freeze funds for the SES program until SES reorganized with other campus libraries and opened its records to the Senate.
Prior to this bill, the Office of Minority Affairs, which SES was under, the Association of Mexican-American Students, the National Council for African American and the Black Student Union (BSU) decided to unite in an attempt to gain more funding for the operation of the Office of Minority Affairs. The action followed complaints by the BSU that the SES program did not serve all minorities.
At the time, Vann said that her office did not enough money to serve other majorprises.
SHE SAID THAT the SES program was begun by the BSU and was originally funded as an all-back program and that she had never been informed of a change from an all-back program to one that included all minorities.
In response to the Senate's request that the Memorial Corp. freezes funds, the board of directors requested and received from the offices on the policies and finances of the program.
Richard Von Ende, acting executive secretary of the University, said in November that the original SES proposal was terminated by students, not "black" or "minority."
After reviewing the reports, the board decided to provide $12,000 for the SES program. The Board recommended that the Office of Student Affairs seek additional funding for the remainder of the year to serve students of the SES program, now participating in the SES program.
"We know it isn't easy to find money," said Richard Wintermote, executive director of the Alumni Association and corporation's financial affairs committee.
THE CORPORATION directors also recommended that the Chancellor study the program and assign it to an administrative officer who is responsible for sources of permanent financing be pursued.
At the same time, the corporation allocated $3,000 to be used for services to students of minority groups not currently participating in the SES program.
He said that the corporation's funding was tentative funding.
"NO MATTER HATter worthwhile any program is." *Winternote* said, "it's hard to take funds away from all the students who do business in the bookstore.*
The corporation said further funding of the SES program would depend upon the making of the program available to all minority groups and the program accepting and utilizing University accounting procedures.
"The biggest change should be in getting more minority students in the program, Bailfour said. "Whether this can be done with the same funding is questionable."
There are currently 120 students in the SES program, according to Tavlor.
"OUR STUDENTS come to us through the same channels as any other student in the school."
"As of March 5, 1973, there were 215 students in Ohioans, two Indians and 19 Orientals. Our order to be a participant, you not only have to apply for admission, but you have to be eligible for financial aid—either an undergraduate or a National Defense, work or study what您.
A program that was to become the SES program was started in 1989 through the BSU and the Urban Action Council, according to a report on the SES program submitted to the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Jan. 8, by Vann.
"In terms of selecting students for our summer program, number one, we look at the University. We have accepted to the University; number two, the student qualifies for financial aid; and number three, the student has indicated that will be attending the University in the fall.
"We serve as the administrative body that implements program and courses that are needed to help the students succeed at college," he said, then them here, but we want them to succeed.
"OUR STUDENTS are low-income students from urban areas, and they are predominately students who are academically deficient in specific subject areas. They work in the school or environment or whatever, but we take them as they are when they come to us.
The Urban Action Council was composed at the time of people who desired to make an impact on the urban community through programs, research or both.
THE BSU WAS setting up committees to develop programs to meet the needs of black students. These needs were defined as including the retention of black students already in school and the recruitment of other blacks to enter KU.
When black students became aware of the Urban Action Council, they requested that the BSU take action for implementation of their plans to bring more black students to KU. Consequently, the BSU/Urban Scholars program was transferred to the education committee of the BSU.
Fuding for the original program came from $17,500 allocation from Kansas Union University and $25,000 increased to $80,000 later that year. National Defense Student Loans (now National Direct Student Loans) and Educational Loan Programs have been made available to the BSU-Urban Scholars.
The education committee of the BSU then began recruitment and selection of urban scholars. Admission to the program required students be high school graduates or pass the GED (a high school equivalency test), qualify for the National Defense Grant and the Educational Opportunity Grant and show interest in attending college.
IN ADDITION, other black students who applied directly through the Office of Financial Aid and who were recruited by the BSU urban scholars program.
In the spring of 1989, Philip Gary was hired as director of Urban Affairs. The BSU and the Urban Action Council interviewed all applicants for the job.
When the program was put into effect, students were able to get academic and social counseling. Tutors were also assigned to students who needed them.
The program focused on utilizing the unique heritage and cultural norms of black people as an asset in providing an education that will well as support services." The report states.
Tutors were selected on the basis of their interest in the program, ability to relate to black students and academic competence. Many black graduate students provided services without pay, according to the report prepared by Vann.
THE NAME SUPPORTIVE Educational Services came into being because the term tutorial" was thought to denote a program that uses instructional materials. The program was already providing a variety of resources.
The report stated that the SES program was designed for students who lacked traditional admissions criteria, financial support, past educational opportunities for college and graduate school, that college was a possibility. Priority was given students from an urban setting.
"The program focused on utilizing the unique heritage and cultural norms of black people as an asset in providing an auditory and visual well as support services." The report states.
"The initiative for the development of the program came about because black students at KU and throughout the country were attempting to fulfill their needs. Thus, the program, reflecting the mood of the country, was designed for one ethnic group."
IN AUGUST 1972, the Office of Urban
Affair changed to the Office of
Minority Affairs.
The concern should be with minorities", he said, "not with the broader area urban of Chicago."
The name of the office was changed to give a more descriptive title to the office. The office was renamed.
According to a report made to the Memorial Corporation Jan. 31, grants, scholarships and loans are awarded to students who have met severe financial need or failure to receive a paycheck on time. Students must have exhausted all other avenues of aid and must have indicated that without aid, they could not afford their education. They also indicate some source for repaying the loan.
The report said the requests for aid were approved by the EES staff in consultation with representatives from both the financial aid and the admissions offices.
For the fall semester of 1972, the staff consisted of one assistant director, eight counselors, two graduate assistants and 16 full-time, and six part-time tutors. There were 146 students in the program that semester.
Department Seeks Minority Members For Grad School
Black, Mexican-American and American Indian graduate students are actively recruited by the department of human biology at Green, assistant professor of human development.
A minority recruiting committee sends information on the department of human development to psychology departments of major, predominantly black institutions, Green said Wednesday. Students who show an interest are contacted by telephone.
Of the 103 graduate students now in the department 79 are white, 15 are black and Asian. Of the 84 departmental staff Flora Thompson, departmental assistant. Two out of 24 faculty members are black, Asian or Hispanic.
Other departmental resources for recruiting include professors at other universities and former human development students.
"We're pretty well represented in the minorities," she said.
Two out of 24 faculty members are black Thompson said.
Thompson said that before the department hired a preschool teacher a few years ago, it had set out looking for a member of a minority.
The most recently hired professor happened to be a member of a minority, she said, but the job was unique and he was the only person who filled the qualifications
Kansan Staff Photo by PR15 BRANDSTED
POLLY HARRIS
Sitting on a Park Bench, Two Lawrence Residents Listen to the Band Concert
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 21, 1873
3
KU's Black Engineers Increase
By CATHY O'BRIEN
Kansan Staff Writer
Enrollment of black engineers at the University of Kansas has risen from 6 to 35 since the creation of SCOEMBEE, Student Employing and Educating Black Engineers.
SCOKMEW was started in 1970 by Wille J. D. Numersey, who is now at the University of Minnesota as a professor.
Charles Lockhart, president of SCO-RMEB, listed three goals of the program. These are to assure that more minority engineers graduate from KU, that there is an effort to increase readiness and to help all minority students find suitable job placements.
SCORMEBE does not begin its program with the college student. They recruit high school students of high ability and with a strong background in summer program in engineering at KU.
THE ASSISTANCE given these students includes personal and educational counseling and tutoring. Lockhart said the job opportunities presented to the student dealt directly with the engineering discipline and the industries that helped support the program.
Students were recruited mainly from metropolitan areas through a cooperative effort with high school administrators and teachers.
ANDREW DARTON, former director of the program, suggested that a lack of knowledge on the part of teachers and counselors may have contributed to student confusion about what an engineer really is and really does. For this reason, the former programs are set up as identification programs as well as motivating forces.
"We try to motivate and interest students to go into the School of Engineering," said Durton. "We have to get right down to earth and remove and that invisible screen."
This summer the funding for the engineering program has been through the NSF, which created the need for the development of new courses. Last year this part of the program was financed by the KU Endowment Association.
THE ENOWMENT Association has made it a habit not to support the same program for two consecutive years, Darton and Hunt. The group is around for a different means of support.
The NSF has a Student Science Training Program that gives assistance to students with limited educational opportunities. Darton said the correlation between the NSF program and SCOMMEB led to a proposal for funds from the NSF.
In the past the program had been for high
school seniors, but NSF rules only allow use of their funds for juniors. This, therefore, created the need of the development of the new courses.
ALTHOUGH THE high school senior was not provided for through NSF funds, SCoRMEBE funds have worked to provide the needed assistance, said Darton. This summer there are eight seniors among the 37 in the engineering program.
NSF does not allow the use of funds where there is discrimination, so no one has been or will be kept out of the program because of race, color or creed, said Lockhart.
"The University should feel proud. Out of
No one has been or will be kept out of the program because of race, color or creed.
the new NSF proposals they accepted but
50. This is one of the "D炉" ondion said.
DURING THE WINTER the emphasis is on the college student, except for a recruitment period in the fall when SCORMEBEM members speak to potential engineers, who will attend that during this time the financial aid was almost entirely contributed by industry.
"SCoMEBE is unique because the students have a great deal of input into the program. Most are controlled by the University. In our case, the students are the ones who make the decisions," said Lockhart.
SCorMEBE has been busy. Lockchart said they had been working on progress reports, their constitution, and in the past year have started a newsletter that is put together by someone who knows it are now in the process of putting together a structure that would explain SCorMEBE fully.
JUST BEFORE the end of the semester, Lockchart said, his committee went to the dean of men's office and suggested that a wing in a residence hall be designated for engineering students only, on an experimental basis.
Lockhart said this environment would be ideal because the engineering student had to spend more time on his studies than the average student, and this would rid the student of the chance to be influenced by the people who didn't need to study.
This is planned for men and not the women because there is only one woman in the house, so they are accepting four in the fall, said Lockhart. There were few women was that they did not
apply. He said they thought there was no place in engineering for them.
BECAUSE OF THE lack of women, Lockhart said that an experimental program wouldn't be practical or accurate. It wouldn't be practical because many women live off-campus or are married. He would have men for an experimental wing, he said.
They are also making an effort to set up some kind of permanence within the School of Engineering to know exactly how many jobs will be available and where the money for their program will come from. Lockhart will send me now, if it was like "walking a tighrope."
Lockhart said they had no way of knowing who would provide a job or contribute to the program, but he had to spend half of their time going to various companies asking for contributions to SCOMEE, which took away from the program to work on improvements in the program.
THE GROUP'S proposal to the National Science Foundation (NSF) said more than 60 per cent of the $65,000 available to the program had been contributed by industry. One recent contributor was the Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp., which gave the program $2,000 for the 1973 summer session and $8,000 to be used in a ten-year period.
In addition to financial help, the industries provide speakers, tours of their plants and material aids. An example of aids are the slide rules that have been provided for the past three years by Atlantic Rich Company of Dallas, Darton said.
Two grants to be used for student assistance have been awarded to the department of chemical and petroleum engineering at the University of Kansas.
Grant Pipeline Pumps Funds To Engineers
Dow Chemical Company has announced a $2,300 award which is to be used primarily for undergraduate scholarships in chemical engineering. The KU students holding Dow scholarships.
Continental Oil Company has awarded a grant of $3,000 for use as a graduate fellowship. This is a continuance of the Continental Oil Fellowship that has been received SU for a number of years, according to Don W. Green, department chairman.
Vernon Breit, Scott City engineering graduate student, is the current fellow.
They are John B. Bowman, Hutchinson sophomore, William Renner, Rantoul freshman; Dennis Schlepp, Goodland sophomore; Eric Wheeler, doctorate; and Lee Zeugin, Leavenworth junior.
One of the things accomplished in the past year, Lockhart said, is the approval of a position of minority dean. They are now "offed footers" in an effort to fill the position.
HE SAID THAT they were looking for someone who was a minority member because such a person would have the right to be heard in the program. Lockhart said that a minority member in the same field would have gone through the same problems that the other group did.
Another thing that they are working on is a basis for the selection of the students into the program. Lockhart said that in the past, they simply looked at the transcript. He said that because of the increase in the number of new applicants more selective in awarding scholarships
A study by the American Society of Engineering Education said that out of 40,000 B.S. engineering graduates in 1970, there were only 314 blacks. Over 50 per cent of this number were from traditionally black institutions.
According to the proposal written to the NSF for funding, the average GPA of black students under $C$RMMEB is above that of the rest of the freshmen in engineering.
LOCKHART SAID that many of the SCOMME students were in the upper 8% percent.
A Ford Foundation Report said that of the 470,000 blacks in higher education, almost 70 per cent were in predominantly white universities and colleges.
C. H. H.
Eugene Nichols Works in a Petroleum Facility
Jansan Photo
African Studies Program Grows Though KU Enrollment Dwindles
The KU African Studies program is gaining momentum despite the constant threat of fund shortages and the decline in funding. Jacob Gordon, chairman of the program.
Equality Promised
The program was approved by the Board of Regents in 1971. Since then, it has grown rapidly in faculty, curriculum and scope; more than 20 faculty and nearly 50 courses.
The program was originally aimed at achieving recognition for the role of Africa and people of African descent in world civilizations Gordon said. The objectives were to add a new dimension to the study of Western civilization. Eventually, Gordon
said, the integrated program was to become recognized as a resource center to the community and surrounding areas on black affairs.
to coordinate a program that will allow Ku students to study there.
Gordon said he believed that the objectives had been achieved or will be.
There are now three KU students studying in Africa. Gordon said he hopes to help send many KU students to Africa for summer study sessions.
The program is now attempting to develop black studies courses in the curriculum of Lawrence and surrounding school districts. Through this process of teaching, the said he hopes to "pull the state together on the many multicultures that exist."
One of the major failures of the program, Gordon said, had been a lack of understanding by students of the program. Many mistakenly believe that the program is for blacks only, Gordon said. However, he added, enrollment showed that more whites enroll in some black studies courses than do blacks.
The program is just getting started on a national level, Gordon said. He will travel to New York City in October.
From Page One
Nichols said that part of the commitment was to employ minority groups. He said that as fast as qualified people were available and as vacancies occurred, the University would fill them with qualified individuals, regardless of their racial background.
year we have a problem. We don't know whether we'll find enough money because the program last year was essentially limited to blacks."
Electric and go to school the other quarter. ANOTHER PROGRAM was Dykes' appointment of a chancellor's task force last fall. He said the task force, made up of students and faculty, was designed to study students and to make recommendations about bringing them more fully into the mainstream of university life.
"That applies to the faculty; that applies to the administration; that applies to the clerical staff and the maintenance staff of the physical plant," he said.
"We have increased substantially, in the two years that I've been here, the black student enrollment and the number of black students enrolled," he said. "I take a great deal of personal pride because of whatever else I've done here. I think we have made a significant way the roles of blacks and women."
Nichols said KU's Affirmative Action Plan, which was adopted March 1, was evidence of the University's commitment to opportunity in admission and employment.
"We have to get our money from the Memorial Union Corp. through book store rebates, from the Endowment Association and from work-study," he said. "For next
According to Nichols, the main problem at KU is where to get the money that is needed to support the programs. He said KU applied for a federal grant but was turned down because Congress didn't have money to start new projects.
"IT IS DESIGNED for not only equal opportunity, but to make an improvement in the lives of the unadmitted and to help the minorities," he said. The American Indians and Mexican-Americans and involves giving them a chance to be involved in overcoming the cultural lag that they have."
Watson Library and Kenneth Spencer Research Library include a little-known collection of black newspapers among their holdings.
KU Libraries House Black Newspapers
George Griffin, librarian of the Kansas Collection, said Wednesday that the collection was obtained in fiscal 1970-71 for research materials in black studies at the University.
Much of the collection was purchased from the Library of Congress. Publications can be found at us.gov.
There are some old black newspapers in Spencer Library, Griffin said, but most of them are from the 19th century.
in Watson Library or micronase. The conduction was paid for by the African
Griffin said these newspapers dated from the late 1820s. The first black newspaper published in America was Freedom's Journal, which began in 1827.
Black newspapers, both sensational and somber, can be found in Watson Library.
Black Mortuary Thrives in Lawrence
The Bowser-Lee Mortuary was established in 1941 and today is one of two black-owned businesses in Lawrence. The other is Reed Water Conditioning.
Pearl E. Bowyer, the owner, said that she and her husband established their mortuary 32 years ago, they encountered only a few problems.
At that time there were three mortuaries in Lawrence, Bowser said. Blacks had always used white funeral homes and were accustomed to them.
Bowser said the Bowie-Loser Mortuary now has 40 per cent of the black business in it.
"It was difficult for us because we had to draw business away from the competition," he said.
Bowser said that in the past, white-owned
"This has changed. There is no discrimination now," Bowser said. She added that white-owned mortuaries are even soliciting black business.
In 1919 Bowsher's husband received his morticians license. When they came to Brooklyn, he and their brother lived. There they established their first funeral home. They moved to Coffe-yvine and established their second funeral home in 1831, they made their final move to Topeka.
funeral homes had discriminated against blacks. There was a time, she said, when whites would refuse to serve blacks for fear of losing other white business.
Prior to his death, the Bower's had funeral homes in six Kansas towns. She said they sold all but the Lawrence and Topeka homes because they didn't have enough
licensed directors to manage them. Bowser now manages the two homes.
The only problem she sees is that black men and women generally don't have the financial basis to back a business of their own.
They had little trouble establishing themselves in new places, Bowser said, because her husband had created a good and dependable image of himself and his work. She also said that members of minority groups today who wish to enter their own business, shouldn't have a very difficult time.
"This too is changing," she said. "The really hard part comes to the first person who does something different and who is the pioneer."
J-School Recruits Minority Trainees
A.
Another problem, Gordon said, was that few students knew that Introduction to African Studies will fulfill a social science or a humanity requirement.
The news media, particularly broadcasting, has discovered the token minority in Facebook.
By BETSY RIORDAN
Kansan Staff Writer
Cookery, fashion and the number of Baptist Church that were being erected in the area made up the pages of an 1893 issue and Headlight, a headlight, a black newspaper from Topela.
THE PROGRAM offers consulting services to newspapers, in-service training, job placement programs and internship training.
Edward Bassett
To insure this, the School of Journalism has begun a program of actively recruiting minority group members, especially in Kansas City.
the William Allen White School of Journalism, said Wednesday. A black token, for example on a television news show team has become a common sight, he said.
But this tokenism will pass, Bassett said, and minority group members will have to accept the fact.
INDIVIDUALS ARE attracted by scholarships offered by the William Allen White Foundation and the KU Endowment Association. Funds are contributed by
"It is helpful for the media to have minority group employees," Bassett said. "They bring expertise to the job and their backgrounds are vitally important to all."
The School of Journalism has been concentrating on recruitment of blacks, Bassett said, because the American black culture was more solidified in its goals.
Through summer workshops, high school students are given first-hand experience.
"We hold classes in seminar form," Bassett said. "They are less formal, also less intensive. They are held simply to interest people."
If an individual should be unable to attend the University of Kansas because of lack of money or time, the school would bring the program to him. Bassett said.
BASSETT SAID the program was complicated by difficulty in finding interested people and getting them to make a commitment to the profession.
alumni and through "broad soliciting," Bassett said.
Once the commitment was made, however, the individual usually stayed in job security.
Bassett said that he had always been interested in attracting minorities to the job.
"IT BEHOVES you help to someone," he said. "If we share, then others will also." There have been criticisms of the program, Bassett said.
"You don't see a broad acceptance, and there have been reversals. Some people worked out, so the critics say they should learn," he said of talents, and they should be put to use."
A lack of firsthand information characterized local black reaction to the nomination of Clarence Kelley for the governor of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Local Blacks Have Limited Reservations About Kelley in FBI
In contrast, a 1998 issue of the Chicago Defender stressed sensational news. Its pages were filled with stories on murder, robberies and kidnappings. This paper's front page often carried a political cartoon. One cartoon pictured Uncle Sam carving the turkey of opportunity and serving huge slices of meat to children, while a small black child was passed over
"I suppose at the moment I'm neutral, leaning toward unfavorable, regarding the nomination," said Don Green, assistant professor of human development.
"My only reservations are based on comments from black leaders in Kansas City on Kelley's policy and treatment of blacks on various issues," he said.
Jacob Gordon, chairman of the African Studies program, expressed a more fascination with his work.
"He seems to have a good record of experience with the FBI," Gordon said. "I have no evidence whether he was unfair or not to any racial group. I'm not going to say he's going to be unfit in his job. He's had a lot of experience."
"I really can't make a comment," said
one student. "All I know is what I've read
one student."
Many of the individuals questioned admitted that they had been relatively inexperienced.
Although the success depends on availability of funds, Gordon said, there is another factor. He said that students needed to know that the program was not black or Hispanic, and he program for everyone, which represented an integral part of Western civilization.
Watson Library also has microfilms of three black newspapers from Nicodemus, Kan. This community, located in the rural countryside,ateleate, at one time had an all-black population.
The Defender also carried advertising for Ford's Hair Pomade, which claimed to straighten the hair. The paper's moto was "if you see it in the Defender it's so."
Copies of the Frederick Douglass Paper can also be found in the library. Douglass was an important black leader during the Civil War and was an admier to President Lincoln.
Two Win Internship
James Kendall, Rockford, Ill., junior, and John Pike, Wichita State, are among 30 students selected to participate in the 1974 Congressional Internship program sponsored by the University. Both are in the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
They will receive three-month appointment to the staff of a U.S. senator or representative.
The 30 students selected represent 18 colleges and universities. The University of Kansas is one of 10 schools that had two students who will receive the internships.
Students were selected on the basis of their interest in governmental reporting, academic record, samples of their work and experience, or academic dean or department chairman.
The School of Architecture and Urban Design is considering a four- to five-week orientation program for minority students, according to Charles Kahn, dean of the school. The session, if held, would take place later this summer.
Kahn said that 100 freshman were expected to enroll in the school next fall, 12 of which were expected to be minority students.
Architecture School Considers Minority Orientation Program
The architecture school, according to Kahn, was one of the first schools in the University to become formally involved in minority recruitment. The focus has been on American Indian, black and Chicano students.
Faculty members and minority students recruit potential students through visits to schools
Kahn said that American Institute of Architects—Ford scholarships have been offered to some students but that money is not available to them for more scholarships. On one occasion he mailed 75 letters of inquiry and received only five responses, all of which were
"The groups approach the team with a
Apart from activities on campus, the school sponsors and directs an advocacy program to promote awareness.
This architect team was begun in 1968 and is housed at the old Coach House Hotel in Kansas City. Mt. The team, made up of seven people, manages the teams, is used to assist volunteer groups.
problem. Renovation is a simple one," Kahn said.
The team also helps to prepare proposals, which are then submitted to the departments of Health, Education and Welfare or Housing and Urban Development. The training funds has not been consistent as with other administration priorities. Kahn said.
The school of Architecture employs 24% full-time faculty Members. Of the 24%,
I
Charles Kahn
4
Thursday, June 21, 1973
University Daily Kansan
PLEASE DO NOT EDIT THE IMAGE. THIS IS A PHOTO. ALL COPYRIGHTS RESERVED.
'Round and 'Round We Go
Children play on a merry-go-round in South Park before a Band concert of the band.
concertes are sponsored by the Park and Recreation Department and the Ameri-
Fired KU Assistant To Get New Hearing
The U.S. District Court of Kansas City will have to reconsider its decision denying Gary D. Jackson a hearing before the Kansas Board of Regents.
Jackson was fired from his job as assistant to the dean of men and black studies instructor after Topeka police reported he had purchased a large quantity of ammunition on July 26, 1970, the day after Rick Dowdell was killed in Lawrence.
The decision reached by the Denver court Saturday required the Kansas City court to
Jackson has been trying to bring his dismissal before the Kansas Board of Appeals, which sent a letter City had ruled that Jackson had no right to be bared before the Regents, but the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver has rejected the lower court to give Jackson a new hearing.
Jackson, whose dismissal caused a great deal of controversy at the University of Kansas was a strong advocate of black students' rights.
little better." he said at the time.
"I think there are plenty of student problems that need to be looked at by the administration, such as the need for more math, less math, or just better understand the problems of black students as
His dismissal came at a troubled time in KU's history. The Board of Regents had questioned the ability of then Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers Jr. to handle student disorders during the spring and summer of 1970.
By KATHY HODAK and JOHN CHIZA
Thirty undergraduate interns will begin preservice training Monday for a new teacher education program that is designed to prepare students for work with children of different schedules.
Kansan Staff Writers
Juniors Train for Teacher Corps
The program at the University of Kansas is called Multi-Cultural, Multi-Racial Education, which was established by Congress in 1965 under the Higher Education Act. M. Evelyn Swartz, professor of education, and Herbert W. Baldwin, director of the directors of the University programs.
Teacher Corps is a nation-wide program designed to give children of low-income families better educational opportunities and to improve teacher education. There are now about 90 Teacher Corps projects in 36 states.
KU'S PROGRAM IS unique because it covers areas in two states, Kannas and Missouri, and extends into both a large city and is held as a small city, Swartz said Wednesday.
Multi-Cultural, Multi-Racial Education is a two-year program that involves 30 interns and six experienced teachers who will function as team leaders. The 30 interns will be divided into six teams at the end of the first year. Each team will consist of one team leader, and one representative from the community in which the team will be teaching.
Preservice is a period of orientation for teaching, the schools and the communities involved in the program. Two phases of preservice will take place this summer on campus.
Each team will be assigned to one of six elementary schools and communities, two in Lawrence and four in Kansas City. Mo. The Lawrence schools are Pickney and Cherry. Mo. The Kansas city schools are Knotts, John J. Pershing, D. M. Pinkerton and Troost.
THE FIRST PHASE, which will run from June 4 to August 10, is for the six team leaders. During this time, team leaders are being taught to assume an active role in university affairs. Students take the intern's liaison with the University, school and community. Swartz said.
The second phase, which will begin Monday, is a seven-week training session for the 30 interns who are beginning their junior year in school. These students will be assigned to which team to which they will be assigned in the fall. Self-directed learning skills and the prin-
Each intern will receive $90 a week throughout the two years of the program. An additional $15 a week will be allotted to the intern for each dependent. Team leaders will be employed by the school district in which he works.
cibles of team development will also be taught.
A PROPOSAL OUTLINING KU's Teacher Corps project and requesting federal funds was prepared by Swartbilt last year. The proposal was accepted by Washington upon first application.
Swartz tailed her purpose was two-fold in writing the proposal. Her intention was to assist the School of Education in developing something different from other programs and to assist in recruiting education majors from minority groups.
After the project was approved for funding in May, a committee was set up to recruit and select team leaders and interns. The committee was composed of University personnel, school district officials, and community representatives.
PARTICIPATING SCHOOL districts submitted the names of possible team leaders to the selection committee. One man and one woman were chosen. Of the six men, four were women.
Swartz said she received at least 90 local areas applied for interns. Many nonlocal applications were referred to her from the Office of Student Recruitment and Referral at Ormaha, Neb.
Priority was given to local applicants of minority groups. Men were chosen over women because there are so few male children in elementary education, Swartz said.
AN INTERN'S TIME will be divided among the University, the school in which he teaches and the local community. His Greek will add up to about 60 or 70 hours.
The focus of the intern's course work at the University will center on multi-culture education. Courses necessary for teaching are taught in English and may also be an integral part of the curriculum.
"The multi-cultural component of the intern's education is important," Ruffin said "because it provides insights into inner city living and the behavior patterns of low-income cultural groups. Such insight is necessary so that文化genocide can be
avoided."
SWARTZ SAID THAT studies would be self-paced and individualized as much as possible. A certain competency would be expected of each intern. When a certain degree of proficiency had been reached, the intern would then move on to the next task.
Teacher education must address itself, Swartz said, to a child's total environment, which extends beyond the walls of the classroom.
To accomplish this goal, both team leaders and interns are expected to live within the community where they teach. In addition, they must attend at least 10 hours in community service.
Minority Group Enrollment Up
The University of Kansas, through the office of Admissions, is making the following changes to students:
Marsailh R. Jackson, assistant director of admissions, said Wednesday that he visited Kansas high schools, concentrating on those in Kansas City, Wichita and Topeka, as part of his efforts to improve communication office was in constant communication with high schools from other states as well.
When asked if he felt minorities were any less qualified to attend college because of their educational background, Jackson said his minorities received the same education as what all the high schools in Kansas are integrated except Summer in Kansas City.
Jackson said that he told high school students that they could secure a good education and return to help their local communities. Because any student who graduated from a Kansas high school would be eligible to attend KU, Jackson said he told them what they should expect here and answered any questions they had.
Jackson added, however, that some students who desired to come to KU were deficient in college preparatory programs. KU does offer compensatory classes to such students, but they do not receive credit for the classes.
Jackson said that there was an annual increasing trend for minorities to attend college and that this fall semester's enrollment could be the largest so far.
Revivals: Charismatic or Chaotic?
By NANCY COOK
By NANCY COOE
Kansan Staff Writer
I attended two different church services this week. One was at my home town church—a beautiful almost-new building with a lot of big cars parked in its parking lot. The other was at a Lawrence church just as beautiful and even newer.
The format of the services in the two churches was similar. Both services included the singing of hymns, listening to a sermon and giving an offering.
At my home town church, the message of
But the messages and the audiences in the services were very different.
Student Architects Design Indian Center
The architecture team offers free architectural services to lower income groups. University of Kansas students and five VISTA volunteers make up the group which works out of the former Coach House Hotel in Kansas City, Mo.
A University sponsored service group, Architecture Community Team', is designing a community center in South Dakota of Sioux Indians as one of its latest projects.
"We work as a team. Everybody gets out of their own ego and down to the collective," said Joe Vaughan, one of the team members.
The社区 community center will be located in a place to hold Indian ceremonies, festivals and
At the Lawrence service in the First Presbyterian Church, the message of the sermon and of the whole meeting was that Jesus was the one who needed was the baptism of the spirit.
the sermon was that the church needed to change. The speaker did not say in what way the sermon was supposed to be.
The team traveled to South Dakota to investigate the Sioux's needs in relation to the community center. ACT decided a building with a dome would best satisfy the Indians' sociological and psychological needs.
Vaughan said, "We are, as a team, trying to midwives—letting the building give birth to them."
The team hopes that construction of the building will begin next spring. The team plans to return to South Dakota to oversee the progress.
Another ACT project involves a non-profit organization of Mexican-Americans that is trying to get a good low-cost housing development in Kansas City.
The people at the first church service responded by dutifully singing hymns and dutifully slipping dollar bills into the collection plate.
Vaughan said ACT is working with them to construct a low-cost, pre-fabricated house to fit on a narrow lot. The people house themselves in sections, he said.
The long range plan and purpose of ACT is to involve local architects, educate lower income people and eventually phase itself out. Vaughan said the team was meant to be involved in planning started, after which ACT would cease to be just an architectural service.
Vaughan said, "Our ultimate goal is to flower out into a multifaceted organizational service that wants to serve a community service group eventually set up community workshops.
The people at the second service didn't respond; they participated. They sang rather than numbed and even inserted a few "Amens" into the sermon.
The occasion for the first service was the routine arrival of a Sunday morning. The occasion for the second service was a sort of charismatic revival called Christ for people working in the crusade was in Lawrence for meetings Wednesday and today.
Some may say that the reason for comradeship at the second meeting was that revivals always arouse people's emotion. They might add that after the revival, everybody goes back to their normal dutiful ways.
Well, this must not have been a typical revival. I had met some of the people who were at the meeting before. They were always the wav they were at the meeting.
In the singing during the meeting, several people spontaneously raised their arms in gestures of praise. Those same people are the ones who because the sun is shining, "Praise God!"
Doing either of those things in my
hometown church would be a cause for shock.
But it seemed to me that the people at the charismatic meeting were much happier than the one in the office.
The reason for the happiness I cannot testify to. The speaker at the charismatic
Blacks Not New to American Musicals
comment
Bv HOLLIE I. WEST
BY HOLLEY R. WES
The Washington Post
meeting said that in order to obtain it, one had to be saved and one had to be baptized in the spirit. I have done neither of those things.
But I do see the difference in the services. In high school, I dreaded going to church. I went to church because it’s a very occasional thing. But I enjoyed the charismatic meeting. At that meeting, we sang spontaneously and danced, pamperment. I didn't want to stop singing.
To me, the whole difference between my home town church and the charismatic meeting (and the Jesus movement that it represents) is the difference between a public faith and a private one.
WASHINGTON—From a cursory gaze, the history of American musical theater would appear to be almost an all-white saga. But black participation, though limited, has become obvious in recent years.
The conventional thought is that this increased black involvement is new. But it can't. Blacks were performing in the and music scene before the digital books for musicals throughout the '20s.
There were still black productions around the turn of the century. Most closed quickly for lack of an audience. But at least one "Shuffle Along" in 1921 and 1922 enjoyed a run of more than 500 performances and the springboard for many black performers who were to become outstanding artists for several decades afterward.
Their remembrances are not only of this show but of their careers, and those of other black musicians, in the 1890s and early 1900s.
The show, which introduced the song "I'm Just Wild About Harry," capsulated much of the spirit and energy of black life in the post-World War II era, humour and zippy music about race politics—is warmly recalled by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissile, the show's composer and lyricist, in "Reminiscing with Sissile and William Bolcom (VIRKING Press. 25."
IT WAS the most successful and widely performed piece of musical theater written by a major producer.
In the production were Josephine BARRE,
as a chorus girl, singer and dancer Florence
Mills, Paul Robeson, violist Hall Johnson,
who was to found a famous choralle and
oboit Symphonic Grant Still, who went on to
compose symphonic music.
The first church is not public in the sense that its members stand on street corners and it is public in the sense that they are, but it is public in the sense that it is concerned with public things. The speaker talked about the church, not what was wrong with society and what was wrong with
It's a book laid with careful attention to detail and knowledge of the large sweep of musical history in this country, Kimball, former curator of Yale University's American musical theater collection, and author of two books that writers speak for themselves. The authors interject their own comments occasionally to provide historical perspective.
The book is crammed with lively and memorable photographs of performers, sheet music, advertisements and reprints of newspaper reviews. This memorabilia helps open up a previously ignored chapter in the story of American music.
THE BOOK INCLUDES photographs of the youthful Sissle and Blake, the ethereal Florence Mills, showgirls of the 20s, Ethel Waters, the comedy team of Flourmoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles and the elegant James Reese Europe.
Sisile and Blake, who began as a team in
writing by "It'S All Your Fault" for
Europe apparently was a genius at organizing. He founded the Clet Club, an organization for booking musicians and artists in Europe. He had black artists from dishonest agents and waiters. His strong ethnic feeling about black music, as reported in an interview article in the New York Evening Journal, led to many contemporary black nationalists.
review
The speaker at the charismatic meeting talked about private faith, about what it is like, personally, to have a belief. The people at the meeting showed their private faith and told them an impression when the ones who talked about making an impression didn't.
Sisley, born in 1899 in Indianapolis, came from middle-class stock (his father was a Meb沥他 minister and his mother a man of faith officer), which accounted for his urbanity.
HIS VIEWS, which emphasize the particularities of black experience, such as an emphasis on race and gender.
Sophie Tucker, trace their own lives from childhood to the present.
Both men are still active. Blake, who came along at the tail end of the Ragtime era, has reaped benefits from the revived interest in that music. He is in great demand for concerts and television appearances and still composes in the ragtime style.
Despite their differences in background and temperament, Sissie and Blake came together by so ne strange chemistry. In the first stage of their partnership the most important person was James Reese Europe, the magnetic conductor-composer who won fame for taking jazz to Europe as leader of an army band.
BLAKE, BORN in 1838 in Baltimore, was the son of former slaves. His formal education was limited, but his musical ability was natural and quick. He is also a charming reaconture, as his reminiscences attest.
He was primarily a vaudeville performer before teaming with Blake and I danced a dance.
Of the latter, critic George Jean Nathan castigated the show's producers for disbemowling it by trying to update it. Writing in the New York Journal-American, he wrote that "the producers (producers) ever put the show on again, what they best do is throw away all the
In this regard, critics were sometimes no more enlightened than audiences about human courtney. Alan Dale, reviewing his book *The American in 1921*, described the production
Sissie and Blake drifted toward vaudeville and then to musical comedy after their mentor's death. So came消失 of the musical comedy chocolate Dandales." The latter was not accepted by white audiences and critics, (primary supporters of any musical comedy in those days) because it veered off into the racial stereotype of the former.
"semi-darkytot that emulates the 'white' performance and--goes it one better . . .
The book was devoted to darky politics, but it had some humor."
SISSLE AND BLAKE went their separate ways for a while in the early '30s. Sissle tried living and performing in Europe; Blake preferred this country.
They teamed up again later and their published collaborations ran through 1952. Few people perform the large body of Sissle and Alison's performances, respects, their material is a fascinating relic of a bygone era. The songwriters' most popular show, "Shuffle Along," has gone through two revised versions, one in 1933 and the other in 1952. Sissle-Blake team, and the other in 1952.
Europe was the most influential black musician in New York until he was murdered in 1919 at the age of 38 by an erased performer in his orchestra.
Both men grew in stature. Sissle led a successful dance orchestra, which at one time included Lena Horse as vocalist; Blake continued writing and performing. The song was the lyrical "Memories of You," still a standard in popular music.
Their saga goes on. Sissle makes in-frequent public appearances but not as a performer. Blake is still an enchanting artist.
many variations and present it exactly as it was in 1921. It is, if anything, a nostalgic show, and you can't work up any nostalgia by dressing up a favorite old aunt like a bobby soxer . . . it was, as I said, have we seen it before. I went to see it no less than five times—and it might still seem at least a good show if they left it alone with its story of small-town politics instead of its altered one about an army post in Italy, with its imbecile Negro humor instead of its changed sentimental tone, and instead of politely tamed stage action."
Your cooperation will be appreciated.
Be sure to turn in all travel vouchers, service order vouchers, A-form orders, and outstanding bills to the Student Senate treasurer's office by June 22.
ATTENTION: ALL STUDENT SENATE FUNDED ORGANIZATIONS
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
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7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
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June 22 is the deadline for encumbering funds allocated for the 1973 fiscal year. This measure is in compliance with the University's closing procedures for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1973.
THE PROOF
NOW APPEARING
COLUMBIA ROCKS
YUK IT UP AT
THE YUK DOWN
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Mon.-Sat. 8:30 a.m.-Midnight
Sun. Noon-Midnight
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Closed Sunday
Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 21, 1973
5
ually extend the
one tized whose
ense meners know in the feelings. not and
I'll go with that. It's likely a family gathering, given the casual attire of the children and the relaxed atmosphere.
Let's re-read the text.
"1980s"
"family gathering"
"casual attire"
"relaxed atmosphere"
The image shows four people sitting around a table, engaged in what appears to be a conversation or activity. The setting is indoors, and they are facing each other at a desk. The environment is informal, suggesting a home or community setting.
Kansan Photo
Members of a Cooperative Hold a House Meeting for a French TV Crew
24 Selected for Tenure Studv
University of Kansas Chancellor Raymond Nichols announced Wednesday the appointment of four ad hoc committees of six members to review recommendations that will submit recommendations to the Faculty Senate Committee on Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities (FRRP) which will forward a single report to the university in a final recommendation to the Chancellor.
Each committee will comprise one member of FRPR as designated by SenEx. one student nominated by student members of SenEx, one faculty member selected by student members of the group representing the schools, the libraries and the College of Liberal Arts and Science.
Members of the "policy review" committee are Nicolaas Willems, professor of civil engineering; Donald Chambers, professor of social welfare; W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history; T. P. Sperry, professor of business; Beverlee Anderson, assistant professor of business; and Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs junior.
According to Nichols, this committee is charged to "evaluate the concept of tenure and the current tenure system at the University of Kansas, especially, but not exclusively, in the light of current economic conditions."
They will also consider alternative tenure
National League
baseball standings
Los Angeles 42 25 627 ...
San Francisco 40 29 627 ...
Cincinnati 39 28 654 ...
Houston 37 31 544 $1/
Atlanta 37 31 348 $1/
Chicago 38 29 418 14 ...
W. L. P. M. L. U.
Chicago 59 30 18 48%
Arizona 31 28 28 40%
St. Louis 32 28 42 46%
New York 32 28 42 46%
Philadelphia 27 35 15 6%
Pittsburgh 27 35 15 6%
American League
**YEARLY GAMES**
Philadelphia 4. San Francisco 1.
Chicago 5. Pittsburgh 8.
Montreal 5. St. Louis 1.
San Diego 6. Houston 10.
New York 11. Indianapolis 13.
W. L. Pct. G.B.
New York 35 50 303
Milwaukee 34 30 331
Baltimore 30 28 517
Detroit 30 28 517
Cleveland 31 31 500
Cleveland
West
Chicago 33 27 500
Minnesota 33 27 541
Kansas City 37 32 532
Oakland 37 32 532
California 30 32 524
**Sunday's Games**
Cleveland 7, Detroit 5
Chicago 8, California 3
Michigan 10, San Diego 4
Kansas City 5, Oakland 4, 12 baskets
Boston 3, Minneapolis 2
Members of the "impact of tenure decisions" committee are John Glinka, associate director of Watson Library; Ronald Calgaard, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Ernest Angin, professor of geology and civil engineering; Sam Adams, associate director of Lawrence Harper, Lawrence graduate student.
Nichols said this committee was responsible for evaluating the effects of current tenure policies and procedures on the future composition and strength of the University faculty, with special attention to the proportion of faculty that should be tenured. This committee will also consider alternatives and recommend changes.
Board Accepts Bids For Hospital Repair, O.K.s Tax Request
The members of the committee entitled
The Lawrence Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees accepted bids for three renovation proposals Wednesday. The board approved a $16 million expansion and revocation project.
The board accepted bids for the addition of a new stair tower and renovation of the west exit, for renovation and enlargement of the hospital's administration offices and for repair of the exterior wall of the Intensive Care Unit.
In other action, the board approved a 1.75
allowance request (the $1.75 per 1,000 assessed
value allowance) to
The board designated that the money raised by the mill levy be used for permanent improvements.
KU Cyclists Plan Pedal-to-Perry Trip
The Mt. Oread Bike Club will sponsor a 22-mile cycling tour to Pervy this Saturday.
A meeting will be held for all interested
parties to discuss the future of the
international Room of the Kansas University.
Registration is $2 and late registration $3. This fee includes Saturday dinner, a light Sunday breakfast and wagon service for stragglers.
The tour will begin at 2 p.m. Saturday at
South Park. All sleeping bags and other
equipment will be loaded into a wagon and
taken to the camisette.
Maps will be available only on Saturday.
Food will be available at Perry,
Lakefront Village.
For more information contact the SUA office or the bike shop, Gran Sport or Ride-
"rights and responsibilities of individuals, departments and schools" are Peter Thompson, associate professor of painting and sculpture; Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education; and Melody Williams, Lawrence senior.
The Chancellor said this committee was to evaluate the functions of those persons and groups within the University who carry out research. The Committee will study how tenure decisions are constituted, the inputs they receive, the manner and criteria on which decisions have been reached in the past and how any changes in their evaluation of new changes might improve the process.
The members of the "structure and decision-making" committee are Barkley Clark, associate dean of the Law School; Clark, associate dean of the University of Journalism; Edward Smissman, professor of pharmacy; James Moeser, associate professor of organ; Bill Webster, Carthage, Mo. sophomore; and Donald Young, vice president of human development and family life.
When was the last time you stood up and applauded a movie?
All four committees will be expected to evaluate criteria and recommend beneficial
Chancellor Nichols assigned this committee to "consider the rights of individuals, and the units recommending them for tenure, together with the membership of those units and the University, in regard to tenure and notice of no repurchase."
The Chancellor expects all combined reports to be finished and turned in by October.
THE RULING
PETER O'TOOLE
CLASS
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SID Caesar — Imogene Coca
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—Kevin Raimon, A.L. Times
Wednesdays at 130, 7:30, & 9:45
Saturday at 12, 4:30, & 7:30
Twilight Prints at 45 Only
The pay raise and a preliminary budget presented at the meeting are contingent upon approval by the State Board of Taxation and increased in the 1973-74 budget lid by $14,794.
biggest and the best.
THE MACK
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A recommendation was made for continuation of the South Junior High School students who are not progressing satisfactorily within the regular school system. The future of the center will not be completed until this summer, the board decided.
Weekdays at
GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCH-NEH,
Germany (AP) - Avery Bründug, the 85-year-old former president of the International
German business association, German princess as his bride Wednesday.
"World's Greatest Athlete"
—and
"SCANDALEOUS JOHN"
Walt Disney's
They exchanged vows—both responding by saying an emphatic "yes"—before a justice of the peace in a hotel in this Bavarian mountain resort where the bride, Mariam Princess Reuss, made her home. It is her first marriage and his second.
The princess served as the interpreter for Brandease at the Olympic Games in Munich and the Chelsea Games.
Boxoffice Opens at 8:00
Show Starts at 9:25
The outcome of the request, made Monday before the Appeal Board, will not be known for several days. Carl Knox, counsel to the panel, said it was optimistic about the pending appeal.
Max Stalcup, director of continuing education, reported a summer school enrollment of 1,377, an increase from last year.
A six per cent salary increase for all personnel was approved at the June 18 meeting of the Lawrence District 497 Board of Education.
meadowbrook
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE - West of Highway 44
Salary Boost Approval Given By City BOE
French Film CIA House for TV Show
A 2.14 m levy was also approved by the School Board. The levy would raise an extra £250,000 per year, to be used for capital improvement, maintenance and imprisonment.
Hot lights created a movie atmosphere Friday when the French National Television Company filmed segments for a documentary at the Campus Improvement Association (CIA) House, 1406 Tennessee St.
Apartment Hunting?
Keith Miller, professor of human development, said the documentary, entitled "New Horizons," was a one hour series consisting of four seams.
The first segment is an interview with B. F. Skinner, a well-known behavioral scientist. Miller said that the interview would deal with how behavioral techniques
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*UNITED STATES DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE GRADED CHOICE
Miller said the last two segments will show examples of an application of Skinner's theory. Achievement Place, a home for pre-detainment boys in Lawrence and an experimental living project, were the two examples chosen for the documentary.
The third segment will be an interview with a write of Skinner who will explain why he thinks behavioral motivation is not the answer.
Miller said the crew filmed a variety of sequences at the CIA house to show how behavioral motivation worked. The crew taped residents signing up for house jobs and checking finished jobs, in addition to a house sing-along.
At Achievement Place, the crew filmed a research meeting, according to Mary Jane Shewmake, a research assistant there. They attended a trip to her home, including a picnic. The youths who
It is unlikely that anyone in Lawrence will see the end results of the program, Miller said, because the series will not be shown in the United States.
live at the home had invited girls from a girls' home for a picnic that day.
Swedish Grant Given
One Day
35 words or fewer $1.10
each additional word $1.21
While in Sweden, Erickson wu be working at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. He be assisting Dr. B. Holmstedt to the chemist assay method for brain neurotransmitter.
Carlton Erickson, associate professor of pharmacology and toxicology at KU, has been awarded a fellowship to study in Sweden for one year. He is one of three Americans to receive the Swedish Medical Council's fellowship award.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
25 words or fewer: $2.0
Vaccination dates:
Deadline: 10 p.m. d. three days before pubr
Accommodations, good, services and employment
of residents with disabilities;
ACCEPTS PEDIATRICIANS AND ADULTS;
CLASSIFIED MEDIUM INFO BRING
MEDICAL RECOMMENDATIONS.
FOR SALE
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
NORTH SIDE Country Show—bikes No. 1. No of the bikes sold is limited. The furniture, collections, gas, boating and cooking stoves, bicycles in speeds of old pot bikes and flat baskets are available; bulbs and *1* bucket baskets & wooden crates; two wheelers; two-color paint; ballet skirts; brune and wheat shoes; one
You don't an advantage.
2. If you don't.
You're at a disadvantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New York City."
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Cty.
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Cty.
PIZZA HIT SUMMERASSBORD! All the pizza is
Monday through Friday.
11:30-13:08, W 24w only 2d
7-26
Saint Bernard nursery - ARC Registered. Grown up children. Young puppies and old dogs available. Mountains views. Wifi internet.
For Sale: 1965 YUW, Rbw Embellient, Red with gold trim, AM RD; 8005 - Rods B4 - 8217-721-6-21
G.E. Color portable TV, excellent condition. Comm trumpet. A bargain. make offer. Call 811-385-4210
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, a bedroom, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially furnished. Carpeted, A/C; Shipped. Fenced and enclosed, shed, garden. Asking $360-821-5099.
For sale—1971 Toyota Chira CA-AC / radio
for six-wheel drive. Great value, still selling.
For black silky top) can sell, going to Ge-
neration. 50% off. See photos.
Apt. for rent for summer. Excellent location
in New York, NY 10036.
$1,125/no. Will negotiate. Call 818-3886- 6-26
HONDA, 450 Scrambling, 1722, 6500 miles. Luggage
rack. Just盯回 $800. Call 842-864-66.
6-27
Wine and beer making supplies at the Merckens
Grocery Store 7305 Thayer Mass. 843-692-6-28
For sale - 37 Chevy, $100. Runge good body, bad
brakes, and soft suspension on 864-2593 during the day.
25 w/ workweeks on 864-2594 during the day.
Motorcycle—1965 Bridgewater #9 cc, won't start.
Make offer on all or parts. Call Bridgewater at 844-723-7000.
Sports car — $4,999.
YARD SALE • Electric Stove $15, Portable Build-Up Kit $25, Electric Toaster $30, Electric Kettle. *FREE* Electric Skillet. You can use any item, your age. Your kit can be used from blankets on Heater Road 3/4 mile. June 22 and 23 only.
1971 Volkwagen Camper-Mitcheln steel radial bumper. Call after 8 a.m. or anytime during call. Call after 8 p.m. or anytime during call. Call after 8 p.m. or anytime during call.
FOR RENT
RENTAL SERVICE
For the late summer call Lawrence Rental Exchange, in rental location 1205 East 6th Street, Lawrence, MA 02475.
SAVE GASOLINE. Walk to campus and clauses.
Enroll in a program with all appliances. No pets. $835/mo.
Pay on-site. Call 212-476-0925.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? THIRD OF STEP BEHIND
a 2 bedroom apartment, directly across Mastin.
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking lot. Free: Cab
and large motorhome. All available rates.
furniture available. Ideal roommates.
843-213-6198. Aids 1823, Ideal 1785,
7-26
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air
conditioning, parking. Located near downtown.
No pets. 843-767-5077
Roomas for men, furnished, with or without cooking facilities. Borders RU and near downtown.
Furnished room in older house near campus.
Quartet area, nice house, utilizes No. 200
Quiet area, nice house, utilizes No. 200
NOTICE
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH** ~ Small Pizza or
Large Pizza, price of $13 at 804 town
park, Monday - Friday.
Bayside now in stock at the Mercantile Grocery Company 720lh Mass. 843-9746 6-26
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION, 731 NE. 54TH ST., River City, NY 11370. Daily dawn to dusk, 10:90-1:30 and by appointment days. NATURALS 10:90-1:30 and by appointment repair technicians on organization or progress report
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
"Finishing Work a Specialty"
842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
DELICATESENE & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-765-7810 & 9th & II Ad
THE HILE in the WALL
Five Days
35 words or fewer $2.50
each additional word L.01
Hand crafted candles can start as low as **£40** and go up to **£125**. We can make the people that make them **WAXMAN CANDLES**, who make that happen. WAXMAN CANDLES is a brand of candle makers.
nastiganian B. Bar-Quar. We Bar-B-quar.
24. A slab to cover here, $25. R大型 rib plaque
$25. A slab to cover here, $25. R大型 rib plaque
chicken platter $14. Pound of beef $13. Beef
chicken platter $14. Pound of beef $13. Beef
chicken platter $14. Pound of beef $13. Beef
chicken platter $14. Pound of beef $13. Beef
chicken plas
STRANGER IN TOWNS! As an Avon representative, I stress the finest flowers and make good money by selling them at affordable prices.
"LOVE IS GENDERLESS" PAY LIBERATION:
meetings on Monday 7:30 PM. MUN. COUNSILLIING RA4-866-3504 for referrals. SOCIAL:
LAWS B-112 Unit 864-4089 Box 234 Lawrence. B-112 Unit 864-4089 Box 234 Lawrence.
WANTED
R.A.U. AUDIO=have you heard the H-1250
Speakers? Have you youted you too had a stereo
in a home audio instead of a store room.
What's your name? (1) 748 Ave. Island St.
our thing. 738 Rhode Island St. 842-2047. 7-26
Female wanted to share a house. Own bedroom.
322/mo. Callie or Tulsa, 814-4231. 6-25
Wanted: Photographer to take slides of jewelry. Must have professional skills. Need images 24x36, 18x24, or 12x18.
TYPING
Need Female to share house for summer. Go out
Near camp and downtown. $50/day
$62/week
Need German instructor for junior high student.
Please call 842-6411 after 5 P.M.
6-28
Wanted: Female to submit for summer. Private
Hotel in Tampa, FL. Req's 6-21 yrs.
£310 - calls my number 853-621.
Experienced thesis typet, Close to campus, 841-4909. Myra also minor editor and/or proofing.
MISCELLANEOUS
Typing-my home IBM Selectric-Plca type,
experienced acculturate
work. Call Katie 841-255-6000
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mise. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt responses when letters copied correctly. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. 7-26
Pilot or student pilot-flying club membership
$25.00
Dues $60.00
Dues $85.00
Phone 812-1144
6-25
PIZZA HOT DELIVERS. A hot pizza right to your door. Sunday, June 34th - p. 794. Fri., June 31st - p. 826.
ENTERTAINMENT
THE INSIGHT TAVERN (2025) Haskell) serves good times, sandwiches. beer. Open 10 A.M-12 P.M. LIVE entertainment. Rockin' rollin' POLIO on Friday, June 13, 8:30 P.M. $1.25 per person.
SERVICES OFFERED
Tennis lessons given by two experienced teachers, who grade low—less than 82, 146–156, ask for key points.
Employment Opportunities
Attractive, single girl with good personalities
and a strong work ethic. Preference to writing and to work
not easily. Child for family. Send resume to:
321-750-8020. Job #104.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KU KARATE CLUB now accepting new summer students. Classes start on Friday, 12pm to 1pm for lessons for boys and Church Club, 12pm to 1pm for lessons for girls.
FOUND
Found watch in Hawkport parking lot Tuesday
Found watch. Yours on description. Call 841-4225
*
THE
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Jones Farm Store
Delicious Food and
Superb Service with
Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, in K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been.
There is no substitute for
quality food.
11. Miles North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Phone 715-829-4000 Open 4:30
Phone
843-1421
86
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Thursday, June 20, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Meade Hall Actors Incorporate To Finance School by Plays
Bv C. S. GROOM
Kansan Staff Writer
The Meade Hall Players will present "Puss'n boot's" and "Aventures of Nyfrm the Sprite, Part I," at 1 p.m. for the next two weeks to build a new street building at 11th and Vermont streets.
Admission for the children's plays is 50 cents. Adults will be permitted "only when needed."
Meade Hall is a profit corporation designed to finance the non-profit Kaw Valley School of Arts and Crafts and Performing Arts. The school will present Shakespeare plays, children's theater, and several other forms of creative art.
At this time, the players in Meade Hall productions are outpressed the founders.
Meade features a performance hall in a comfortable atmosphere with refreshments, an art gallery, small shops and a children's theatre.
In the future, however, they hope that children will try out for the productions.
Both corporations have been formed only recently.
Various activities have been planned for Meade Hall, including playing music for the KU Shakespeare Festival, and a weekly television show, Meade Hall Presents.
"We seek to provide a place in Lawrence for people to develop their creativity and to watch the expanding creativity of others," said Terry Foster, former KU student and one of the founders.
Averill is the author of "Adventures of Nyfm the Sprite," which will be a continuing series throughout the summer. He graduated with a degree in music composition and is now studying electronic music.
The Kaw Valley School will feature an art music studio and a community theatre for the
"We want to provide local artists and musicians with a place to show their work and to keep them within the community," Averill said.
A schedule of classes for the Kaw Valley School's first summer session, beginning the week of June 25, should be available online or by phone. Equipped in a bix yellow house at 17 W. 4th St.
artists, and Jean Averill, who is studying for her masters degree in theatre at KU. Kathy Url, Richard Linker, Mona Habur and Caroline Garrigues will present July presentations in the Children's Theatre will include Averil's 'Nyform the Spire, Part I' and a Chinese fair tale titled 'The Lion'.
Kansan Photos by A. B. Solsky
[Pencil sketch of a young girl]
The founders of Meade Hall are Sandy Dale and Bernard Baker, both free-lance Children Are Captivated
BARRY BRAINSTONE AND JIMMY CALVIN
Meade Hall Players Warm Up the Afternoon's Program with Singing Before the Play Adults:Only with Children
Jane and her daughter.
CORNERSTONE CITY, Calif. — The WWE superstar Seth Rollins and the wrestler Randy Orton are set to perform at the Santa Monica Convention Center on Jan. 27 and 28.
Sandy Dale and Bernie Baker, as Queen and King in 'Adventures of Nyfrm the Sprite,' Take Their Bows
Elderly Lack Money, But Are Rich in Experience
Editor's Note: This is the last of a two-part series on the elderly.
Cansan Staff Writer
By DON ASHTON
The elderly. Senior citizens. Old people.
How are they?
Some are well and some are miserable. A few are wealthy and many are poor. There isn't much statistically to distinguish them from any other group of persons, except age. And their age has allowed them to adopt a special wisdom and value all their own.
A Kansan writer visited with four local citizens recently. All of them were over 70
LEO BEUERMUN IS an old man. He was born in 1902. It is the least of his problems.
Leo is a dwarf, a cripple, deaf and completely blind. He is not wealthy. For Leo, life itself has been an overwhelming struggle.
But Leo Beuerman is truly a rich man. He has done more than conquer life. He has celebrated it. With heroic courage, unshakable faith and a spirit that has soared higher than any seagull. He has managed with a sharp intelligence and a Rube Goldberg inventiveness, but with more purpose.
LEO'S HOME has been in the Wakauras
lamp since 1960, when his vision failed
to see.
In the corner of his room is his bed, a 3-foot 1-inch mattress with bolsters. When he closes the door, the room fills up.
Storm Damage to Field House, Stripped Roof, to Cost $1,000
Last Saturday's storm caused damage to several roofs at the University of Kansas and possibly 80 per cent of the trees on campus were either damaged or destroyed, according to Harry Buchholz, director of the physical plant.
One-third of the south wing roof of Lewis Hall was stripped to the concrete, Buchholz said, and part of the roof on the east side of Allen Field House was also stripped to the insulation. Damage to the field house was estimated at $1,000-$1,100.
Other damage included a roof blown off the south traffic control station in O Zone, roof damage at Moore Hall and the Continuing Education building, several broken windows in cars and buildings, including some at residence balls.
A complete estimate of the damage will not be available until a later date, Buchholz
Dean Reveals Nixon's Intent
Crews began to clean up campus immediately after the storm and continued all
From Page One
Dean as saying that the White House, on Nixon's orders, successfully torpedoed a congressional investigation of the failure prior to last year's presidential election.
"Nixon said William E. Timmons should get on the Patent hearings and make sure he got the REE nomination CRP, Committee for the Re-Election of the President, blocked the Patent hearings by
The official summary says Dean reported:
Connally Hopes . . .
From Page One
While saying he is eager to return to his Houston law practice, Connally said, "I'm not going to sit on the bench."
By some account, Connally found his access to President Nixon restricted after offering advice on Watergate-related matters that the President found inimitable.
The former Treasury chief denied, among other things, recommending to Nixon that the U.S. go into a state of emergency.
to leave by saying "I believe I've given all the advice that I have to give."
ASKED IF NIXON had been receptive to advice he had given him, most of which he said dealt with economic affairs, Connally reported, "he's spoken a great deal of it."
bringing pressure on people to vote against subpoenaing witnesses."
Rep. Wight Patman, D-Tex., chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, sought to stage a full-scale investigation of the June 17, 1972, break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters. Timmons at the time was a White House lobbyist with Congress.
On Oct. 3, Brown's forces won. The committee voted 20-15 not to grant subpoena power for the investigation. Patman tried to persuade the judge to allow executive privilege and refused to appear.
The indictments referred to were the conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping indications handed down against the seven Waterate defendants last Sept. 15.
A White House log obtained by the AP shows that Dean's only substantive meeting with the President in 1972 was on Sept. 15, when he were returned in the Watergate break-in.
Patman became embroiled in a heated struggle with a Republican member of his committee, Rep. Garry Brown of Michigan, over whether the probe was to continue.
That was three days after Patman sent his committee a confidential preliminary report indicating Nixon campaign funds used to finance the break-in had been routed through a Mexican bank, possibly illegally. The report was leaked to the press.
A cabinet lies against the opposite wall. It contains his work, the things he makes and occasionally sells. Things like cases for toys or change purses, strings of wooden beads.
wooden platform fitted with the casters that are his lees.
FROM 1962 TO 1968. Leo薪 his odds and downstown. His work still is very imptu-
tive. He works in the office.
During the school year, Pearson College students set up a shop displaying his wares in the Kansas Union. Some shops downtown carry his goods.
There is a Bible in the cabinet, one whose well-worn pages he can no longer see. Leo believes in it absolutely. Many of the tapes in his cabin, with large impressions of letters which he can feel, are Bible passages.
Lee's tractor was a familiar sight here. He drove it downtown every day to sell his wares. It was fitted with a hoist Le rigged so he could mount and dismount the machine, not an easy task for a man about 3 feet tall who could never walk.
crenge gives LEO the trophy that sits on the cabinet. It is a trophy topped by a man on a tractor. A testimony on the trophy reads. "Best actor-1968."
LEO'S FILM EXPERIENCE is well-known, too. Centron Corp., a Lawrence firm, made a short documentary in 1969 starring Leo Beaucran. There was no buyer for the work when it was filmed, but since then it has been nominated for an Oscar (in 1970), has been seen by hundreds of school, business and military audiences and television audiences. It has been translated into German, French and Spanish.
ABOVE LEO'S CABINET is a chart which describes the two systems persons use to communicate with him. One system invites visitors to write large letters by hand in a splay and continuous movement over Leo's entire back. The other intructs persons to arrange a message from letters on a lap board that rests on Leo's low table.
It is a slow and tedious process, but coupled with strokes on Leo's head, or taps on his shoulder, a pull on his ear lobe or a shake of his arm—all codes which have meaning to Leo—communication is possible.
Communication is necessary for Leo. He is interested in the news, how much his wares are worth, religion, his friends, the people he becomes lonely if visits are frequent.
Leo can talk, although the sound of his own voice is a mystery to him. He and a friend recite the Lord's Prayer together every time they part.
"HE'S MORE ALIVE than any of our other patients," an aide at Wakauras Manor
For Leo Beurerman, old age itself is a miracle.
LOYD CRAIG IS 74 years old and he's a been a farmer almost every one of them.
He was born near Vинил, 10 miles southeast of Lawrence. To take his 8th grade examination he walked 22 miles. The survey that distance to graduation exercises.
Craig has lived either in or near Lawrence since 1915, except for a few harvests in western Kansas and a short-lived job on a railroad crew in Mobery, MO.
HE AND HIS WIFE have raised two children of their own and three nephews.
"A hay baler put them all through college," Craig said.
I, ought a 166-acre farm near Vinland. I decided if I was going to raise a family, them on a farm. There's no use in bringing them on a farm. There's no use in bringing them on a farm. And they've all done dam well," he said.
CRAIG WORKED FOR THE Constant Construction Co. here as a warehouseman for five years.
He hasn't retired, unless rising at 5 a.m. to milk goats, doctor calves, feed horses, tend a 20-acre garden, plow and plant someone else's land, sell organic fertilizer and do more chores than anyone can list or remember sounds like retiring.
Craig doesn't fancy the idea of apartment houses, and rest hopes for the elderly.
A LARGE PART of Craig's money comes from social security. All of it goes toward paying for the farm behind his home on Lindenwood Lane. He said he would starve
"I'd say that anybody who's still capable of doing something for himself should be on a little spot with a garden," he said. "The fresh air, exercise and decent food they eat would do them a world of good. Doctors don't get much of my money."
The pasture land Craig has turned into a bountiful garden has never been touched by fire or human activity.
an organic farmer ever since he was a farmer. He referred to chemicals as poisons.
"The horses I board will eat my hay before they'll eat bagh buy it. It's got more food value. Animals are smarter than we know what's good and what isn't." he said.
The Craigs belong to only one senior citizens club. They play pinchone once a month.
"I BELIEVE IN earning a living in this world," Craig said. I worked my life; I was a teacher.
Summer days are filled with order, simplicity and repetition for Mona. Oma Mzhickteno. She has seen many days come and go. She is 77 years old.
Mrs. Mizchkiteko spends much of her time sitting on the porch of her home, sewing, reading a book or a newspaper, waving from the porch at an offending insect flutter, five weather.
A HOSE RESTS against the side of her aurea. A gray cat rubs against her leg. A brown cat rests on her back.
Mrs. Mizckenhoe, who worked as a cleaning lady at the University of Kansas for 12 years, lives alone. Her husband has three children, and her 13 grandchildren come and go.
"I'm one person who never leaves the house, except for necessities," she said.
HER HEALTH, she has, always been good. Social security and retirement checks
Mrs. McHicktenko came to Lawrence from Oklahoma at the age of 14 to attend school at
LADIES' DAY TODAY
15¢ Draughts for the gals
THE BALL PARK
Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Open 'til Midnight
BIKE TOUR
→ MT. OREAD BIKE CLUB ←
RO
22 mi. OVERNIGHT BIKE TOUR to LAKE PERRY
2 p.m. Sat., 6/22—Sun.
Sag wagon provided
He knows, and is known, by hundreds of Lawrence citizens. His memory of local names, addresses, dates and athletic teams is encyclopedic.
BRING MONEY AND SIGN UP Int'1 Rm. Union, Fri. 7 p.m.
$2.50 includes supper and breakfast
what is now Haskell Indian Junior College. She is a Choctaw.
Independent and well-informed, Mrs. Mzhickten subscribes to two newspapers. She has opinions on issues such as Watergate and Wounded Knee. She said she never did have any faith in President Nixon. She also described the siege of Wounded Knee.
---
Eligio Winn was born in Lawrence and had bested his for entire 84 years. He looks wise.
WOODY RETIRED in 1954 after 35 years with Railway Express. He said he started to work for businessmen on Massachusetts Street when he was 19 years old.
Involved for many years in community sports, Woody used to coach and sponsor
Woody was named the local Kiwanis Club's Substantial Citizen in 1656. His wife died 10 years before. She was noted for her work with young persons.
Woody's income comes from a pension, social security and a part-time job with the Sanders Motor Co. He said the checks don't pay very much.
"THAT'S ALL RIGHT," he said. "I've got my health."
2na kansas Shakespeare Festival Institute
1973
Present
"JULIUS CAESAR"
June 21, 22, 23
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
Curtain: 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices: $2.00 - Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 864-3982
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
MONDAY JUNE 25,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE,KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
28 Found Stacked in Stairwell After Fire in New Orleans Bar
NEW ORLEANS—a Flash fire raced through a second story bar in the French Quarter Sunday night, killing 28 persons in what the coroner called "a mass of death." Coroner Carl Rabin said he counted 28 bodies stacked near a stairwell and that there may be more. The cause of the fire was unknown, but witnesses said an angry bar patron had set a fire in the washroom.
Fire Supt. William McCrossan said the fire "could be one of the worst fires in the city's history in terms of people killed."
Rebels Blow Up Ammo Dump
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia—Communist-led sappers blew up a government ammunition dump just 6 miles from the capital in a predawn attack this morning, blowing up several tons of bombs, artillery shells and napalm. The explosions, lasting an hour, were touched off by a bomb, a bomb, a bomb. In a terrorist attack Saturday night 7 people were killed and 24 injured when a grenade was tossed outside a crowded cafe.
Astronauts Meet Soviet Leader
SAN CLEMENTE—The Skyla robot astronauts dofted their blue medical masks for a face-to-face meeting Sunday with President Richard Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, after being flown to San Clemente directly from the recovery ship. As the astronauts chatted with Brezhnev and the President, Charles "Pete" Conrad told Brezhnev that the Soviet Union had looked so beautiful from space that he would be delighted to visit it. Brezhnev promptly invited the three astronauts to the Soviet Union, and they accepted.
Arabs Sav Israel Plans Attack
BEIRUT-Represents in the Arab press continue to appear stating that Israel has massed 100,000 troops for an attack into Lebanon. The pro-Palestinian newspaper said that the force was massed along the Lebanese and Syrian borders and that the Israelis were planning to move their army to the Gaza Strip within the area. Other newspapers reported that the troop concentrations were larger than those preceding the 1967 war and included 500 tanks.
Jail Segregation Ruled Illegal
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that racial segregation in the Waylandette City jail in Kansas City, Kan., is not justified by claims that integration will cause violence. The court circuit reversed a decision from the U.S. District Court for Kansas allowing segregation in the jail. The federal government challenged the ruling because judicial practice was illegal discrimination. Jail officials admitted routinely enlisting black prisoners to an eastern section of the facility and whites to a western portion, the circuit court ruling said.
Research Links Pill to Disease
BOSTON—Women who use oral contraceptives are twice as likely to develop gallbladder disease as are those who do not, according to Boston researchers. In a major study on the effects of oral contraceptives, the researchers said the association between the contraceptives and gallbladder diseases was unexpected. "In view of its statistical significance, chance is an unlikely explanation," said investigators of the Boston Collaborative Surveillance Program of the Boston University Medical Center.
Pope Gets Decennial Greetings
VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI received hundreds of messages from all over the world on the 10th anniversary of his election to the Throne of Peter. The Pope chose the day to reaffirm the cornerstones his nominate and spell out once more his firm stand on faith and mission, be issued by the Pope's office reaffirmed chastity and poverty for bishops and stressed the Pope's concern about defections from the Church.
Demos Attempt Benefit Increase
WASHINGTON—Democratic congressional leaders are planning to push through a 5.5 per cent Social Security increase this week as Congress faces a jam-packed schedule. The House votes today on a bill to cut off all U.S. funds for military activity in Cambodia and Lesos, saying the Social Security hike, which would take effect next January, say it is essential to offset the rapid pace of inflation in the past year.
The Heat's on Today
It promises to be a mild scorcher today, with rather high temperatures even if we don't have a blistering sun. Even an expected 20 m.p.h. southwesterly wind isn't going to cool things further. The temperature is expected to reach as high as the 90s. The night should be mild and Tuesday will be cooler.
Hot Potato
Brezhnev Flies Off Today
Talks End on Happy Note
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP)—Soviet leader Leonid I. Breznev told the American people Sunday that his summit talks with President Nixon "really put Soviet-American relations on a new track" that could lead to world peace.
"Mankind has outgrown the rigid Cold War armor which it was once forced to wear," Briznez said in a radio-telевision program. "It wants to breathe and peacefully."
The Soviet leader, looking past the "poisoned relations" of the Cold War and back to World War II, said, "We jointly wont today our joint efforts must help mankind to a durable peace. The possibility of a new war must be eliminated."
BREZHNEY'S WEEK at the summit with Nixon ended Sunday when the President bade him farewell at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Nixon and Breznev spent more than 40 hours in talks during the week—first at the White House, then at Camp David and finally at the President's villa here. During their agreements were signed—three by the leader themselves and six by lower level officials.
Both leaders singled out a compact they signed Friday as the most important. The document is intended to reduce the risks of nuclear war by regulating U.S.-Soviet relations and relations the two super powers have with other countries.
"When the two strongest nations of the world agree not to use force or threats of force in their relations with each other . . . and in their relations with other nations, they have given profound hope to those throughout the world who want peace." Nixon said.
NIXON, IN HIS farewell remarks, said it
*was 'truly a landmark agreement'*
*for the future.*
Breznev, at times clutching the microphone before him, told Nixon, "I am leaving the United States with very good feelings" and with the conviction that the agreements would be welcomed throughout the world.
HE VOICED solemn gratitude "to all Americans who support what we have done and should be doing."
American people broadcast Sunday evening.
C. S. MAYNES
A spectator looks at jewelry on display in the Union Gallery during the Jewelry and Silversmithing Exhibit showing
Kansan Photo by A.B. SOLSKY
Viewing the Silversmith's Art
Soviet relations. He said he trusted "that the peaceful policies pursued by the President and by the U.S. government under him will be supported by the people."
Before leaving California Brezhnet naped a 50-minute television address to the
He then went on to the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md., for an overnight stay behind the border.
ALONG THE WAY Brezhnev will stop in
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate Watergate committee braced Sunday for its longest week yet, with explosive and riotous reports from John Dean III and John Mitchell.
work by Robert Willis and Lewis
worked by Lawrence graduate students
Watergate Investigators Anticipate Long Week of Dean vs. Mitchell
Dean, the ousted White House counsel who has vowed he wouldn't be a scapegoat in the wirettapping affair, is scheduled to witness chair 9 a.m. Lawrence time today.
Mitchell, former attorney general, will be moved to the committee's ever-changing schedule.
several times after the break-in that he knew about the cover-up. Dean has said in news interviews that he had documents to back up his testimony.
The New York Times said Sunday that Dean would testify that this past March the Senate approved a bill to impose
cussed an office of offer clementy for E. Howard Hunt, one of the Watergate con-
THE PORTIONS OF Dean's testimony made public so far implicate Mitchell in early discussions of wiretapping and in the subsequent cover-up.
Paris for three days of talks with French President Georges Pompidou.
ABANDONING ITS leisurely Tuesday Thursday schedule, the panel now tentatively plans to hold five straight days of meetings in its break over the Fourth of July holiday.
With all three major television networks providing live coverage, Dean is expected to repeat in public the accusations against Mr. Bush over his handling of the issue was made in private to Senate investigators.
Dean also may give new details that even Senate panel members have not heard yet. Dean broke off his private interviews with those who were asking him to be told about an embarrassing admission Dean made. Dean admitted borrowing campaign money to finance his honeymoon, and was immediately called an "embellishment" Republican Leader Hugh Scott (R-Pa.).
THERE WERE SCANT weekend developments in the scandal. A new Gallpoll Poll showed President Nixon's popularity had not budged from its record lace reached last week, when it fell short of the June of week 10, 44 per cent approved of the way Nixon was handling his job, and 45 per cent disapproved. At Nixon's peak of popularity last January, 68 per cent approved.
The trial ended a seven-month drama that produced the first convictions of Israeli settlers in occupied Palestine.
In his speech, broadcast to the Soviet Union and other countries as well as the United States, Brehzey saluteed Nixon for helping turn the corner toward detente and satisfied with the way the talks went and with the results already achieved."
According to official summaries of his earlier private testimony, Dean has said he met with the president at two meetings in Mitchell's office last year and that he told presidential chief of staff H. R. Halderman what was going on. Dean said he was not directly involved and that the President indicated to him
HAIFA, Israel (AP)—A Haifa court sentenced the Jewish son of a Communist parliamentarian to 10 years imprisonment Sunday for aiding the Arab-Israil woo rin.
Herbert G. Klein, the President's outgoing communications director, predicted that Nixon would hold a news conference soon. But he said Nixon would decline to answer some questions about his administration and keep from preducing their legal rights.
Some of the members also were convicted of plotting to blow up military installations.
The court president said Sunday, "I hurt us to hear these things, but we find compensation in the fact that such statements may be made without fear of punishment."
Livinhe, 27, shouted at the three-man court when judgment was passed Wednesday that Israel's "will pay for the crimes they have committed under the laws they have made."
Rami Livelm, son of parliament member Avraham Leavenbraum of the Rakah Communist party, and another Jew, Mali Lehrmann, were convicted of having contact agent of the Al Fatgha guerrilla organization and concealing a security offense.
Five Arabs received sentences ranging from six months to six years.
Lehrham was sentenced to seven years in prison.
All together, six Jews and 27 Arabs have been convicted in four trials as members of the spy and sabotage ring working for Syria with the aim of generating a violent revolution to overthrow the Israeli government.
Israel police broke the network last December.
Among its leaders was a 25-year-old former paratrooper who fought in the 1987 battle for Jerusalem. He was raised on a kibbutz or collective farm.
Another was a 28-year-old Jewish mathematics teacher who studied in the
KLEIN SPOKE SUNDAY on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Both openly admitted going to Syria, meeting with Arab intelligence agents and
The Jewish defendants reflected youthful malcontents who criticize the government for what they call intrinsigence on the Middle East conflict.
Some Stores Expected Freeze
Consumers
By CONNIE PARISH
Kansan Staff Writer
Did large corporations have prior knowledge of President Nixon's recent priority?
Some observers seem to think so. Even before the freeze was announced, Kansas State University's Consumer Affairs Office in Huntsville and Manhattan and Junction City of hiking prices 10 to 20 per cent in anticipation of a price freeze. The office said major stores stayed open late the night of June 8, for the raise price. The stores denied the charges.
Pat Weiss, director of the Lawrence Consumer Protection Association, said she had been alerted by persons from K-State to look-out for such activities in Lawrence.
ON JUNE 13, President Nixon did order an immediate freeze on retail prices for a maximum of 60 days. The price lid forbids consumers from buying the effect during the period from June 1 to 8.
She said she didn't think the price freeze was a big surprise to corporations. Most corporations have expected it, she said, especially after John Connally's return to the White House as an adviser. She called it "corporate speculation."
Weiss said she had noted substantial increases in Lawrence store prices prior to the freeze in the last part of May and the beginning of September by several store employees.
Are Left Out In the Cold
Gene Peck, assistant manager of Duckwalls, said he had been working in Lawrence for only three weeks so he really didn't know if corporations had prior
LAWRENCE DEPARTMENT store executives appeared to agree, at least in part, though they denied that their stores have any prior knowledge of the freeze.
knowledge of the freeze. But it is the job of big business to anticipate such things, be
Chuck Lloyd, co-manager of T.G.&Y,
said that anyone who reads the paper
probably realized that some controls were forthcoming.
STEVE SHAW, assistant manager of Woolworths knowledge stores STORIES Back Book
See STORES, Back Page
Farmers Slaughter Hens To Battle Freeze Costs
By CRAIG AMMERMAN Associated Press Writer
Many meat-and egg-producing farmers across the country are cutting production in the face of a 60-day price freeze, which they are forcing to operate in the red.
In east Texas, some farmers have already killed hundreds of thousands of chickens. Industry spokesmen in the South and West say the latest economic controls of the Nixon administration have created a food crisis that has sent four cents on exogeny they produce.
While many producers of broiler chickens were reported to be significantly cutting production, other farmers were reported to be selling animals normally used for
Spokesmen throughout the food-producing industry say the problem is the same: retail prices are frozen and unable to be sold. The government's agricultural products, which are not frozen,
Some industry spokesmen predicted $1-a-dozen prices for eggs in the foreseeable future and shortages of meat if the situation is not reversed.
THE COST OF Living Council said Saturday it had begun an investigation into whether the 60-day price freeze was causing food shortages. The action came two days before a committee report said "drastic shortages" of foods were threatened by the price freeze.
breeding because they claimed they could not afford to feed them.
ROBERT J. WILLIAMS, director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture, said farmers appeared to be selling hogs and chickens that had been raised for breeding as a method of cutting herd sizes.
In Texas, officials said the number of gats set for catching was down 14 per cent.
In Atlanta, a spokesman for Unified Egg Producers aid the slaughter of hens that were used to produce boilers is up "significantly." He said 823,000 of the hens were slaughtered two weeks ago, an increase of 185,000 over the previous week.
SPOKESMEN FOR EGG producers and for the Los Angeles Grain Exchange said farmers were losing four cents for every dozen eggs sold. They also estimated losses of six cents per pound on broiler chickens to feed millets of $ for every ton of feed sold.
The squeeze cited by spokesman in almost every case is the skyrocketing cost of grain and the current inability to pass those inundations to the public because of the retail price freeze.
Bruce Hettle, assistant manager of the Poultrymen's Cooperative Association in Riverside, California his industry "will be cared for before the end of period expires if no action was taken.
2
Monday, June 25, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Folk Dancing Is Exuberance Unleashed to Music
It's Fun Even If You Don't Know How
Music and Dance Fill Evening Air
COLLEGE PLAYERS
Strains of exotic music and joyous laughter can be heard each Friday evening in the vicinity of the Potter Lake pavilion. Curious passers-by, drawn by the sounds, are urged to join in the fun and dancing, organized by KU's Funk Dance Club. An informal atmosphere prevails, with members requesting their favorite dances. The club's weekly three-hour concert series is a Newcomers—even those with no knowledge of folk dancing—are welcome.
Kansan Staff Photos by Pris Brandsted
WARNING
IT MAY BE
HABIT
FORMING
A Warning That's A Lure
A
Wheel to the Left, Then to the Right . . .
Fifth Preview to Aid Incoming Freshmen
The fifth of six previews for incoming University of Kansas freshmen begins today with an opening session in the Kansas Union.
About 100 students will listen to speeches by John Myers, director of student relations, Don Alderson, dean of men, and Cary Smith, associate dean of women.
After the meeting the students will return to Grudrie Sellars Pearson Hall, where they are going to work.
Group gatherings Monday evening will center on the academic side of student life. Students will complete registration data sheets, get information regarding fall courses and have an opportunity to ask questions about courses and academic programs.
JEANNIE GORMAN, assistant director of school relations, said recently that the groups were formulated to personalize the preview. Gorman said students could use this time to get to know another and to discuss any questions about KIU social life.
Tuesday morning the students will take care of physical examination and RU-ID preparation.
THE REST OF the afternoon will be open. During this time students can visit the offices of schools they plan to enter. The schools of Business, Education, Social Welfare, Journalism and Pharmacy will be open to students through the afternoon.
Pannhelian Association, ROTC, and religious advisors will also open open bureaus.
The dean's meeting will take place Tuesday afternoon. The students will receive information about curriculum, courses and requirements. The students will also complete a tentative course selection for next fall.
EVAN JORNE, ONE of the group leaders during last week's previews, said he thought the students had been helped by the preview. He said students had a great deal
"SHUT UP, JERPY," I told him. "It's all very well for you to act so superior--you probably knew somehow that nothing would happen to us. But I must confess my love for storms and thunderstorms is waning fast."
Jerry Opens Up, Tells Who 'They' Are
"That," said Jerry, "is a common human failing. The minute you find that something might blow the roof off your head you begin to dislike it. Before that, you're on the sidelines cheering. Human nature. Hummph."
Jerry was quite tolerant; however, "Come on," he told me, "you've lived the hardest days and other such—but you'a a little old. Kansas wind bends you'a that much."
Bv ZAHID IQBAL
The storm subsided as suddenly as it had come, but I kept staying out of the window and staring at the sun which had taken roofs off other houses, could very well have taken our roof off too.
I sat on the edge of my bed and glared at arry, hoping he'd get off the subject. But Jeny came back.
of free time to do whatwe interested them,
and this had been good for the program.
Canterbury House the Episcopal campus ministry, is open Monday nights for preview students. Jorn said Canterbury offered the classes, which are free and evening talking with others and singing songs.
baseball standings
New York 90 30 52 W. L. Pct. G.B.
Milwaukee 37 31 541 Wallace 51 31 Baltimore 62 31 Boston 33 33 500 5
Cleveland 32 36 491 62 482 111
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City 10 33 538 14
Chicago 40 33 548 1
Boston 25 39 108 1
Minnesota 35 31 530 1
California 35 31 530 1
Texas 27 39 764
Alex Carduff, a preview freshman from Kansas City, Kan., and Steve Dunning, a preview student from Plainville, said that they thought the previews had helped them.
New York 3, Detroit 2, 1st New York 2, Detroit 1, 2nd Minneapolis 5, California 1, 1st California 3, Minnesota 0, 2nd Chicago 5, Oakland 1, 2nd Kansas City 10, Texas 6, 2nd
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Los Angeles 46 26 639 5
San Francisco 42 26 639 5
Miami 41 32 648 5
Cincinnati 37 33 529 8
Atlanta 30 42 417 16
Dallas 31 24 417 16
Chicago W. 11 L. Pct. G.B.
Montréal 49 30 20 58
St. Louis 32 34 39 49
New York 33 34 49 6
Philadelphia 31 36 46 6
Pittsburgh 31 36 46 6
"But why are They to get him in the first place?"
New York 3, Pittsburgh
Miami 4, Philadelphia
Chicago 8, Los Angeles
Houston 5, San Francisco 6, 1st
Tampa Bay 7, Atlanta 6, San Diego
Philadelphia 9, Boston 2
Reserves
"You're smart," Jerry said, patting me on the head. "No one can get him; there just isn't enough room than all of them put together—just wait and see how he outrems Them. But the good old gang at the White House is broken up—such as they are—and only Moby and I have escaped."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters and Monday through Thursday during the winter semester. Subscription periods, mail subscription rates are $5 per semester or 10% per period. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised are offered to all students without regard to their status. Admissions are necessary for the University of Kansas or the State University of Missouri.
**New staff:** Morne Dodar, doctor; Zaid Islam, associate psychiatrist; Nina Ackerman, clinical psychologist; Kenna Campbell, nurse; Kira Hassan, chief nurse; Dr. Bret McKenzie, director of the Maternal and Child Health Department; Goodwill Hill, classified manager;乔琳, executive manager; Michael Turner, assistant business manager; Jack Mitch, supervisor.
33rd Year, No. 155
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"So you think you're safe, too."
"BUT YOU ALSO said They wouldn't get him," I pointed out.
"Now, if you were the President of the United States there is something you could do to stop the storms," he said.
"You bet I do. When I heard the President was getting one of his best men to be new FBI chief, I decided if I ever wanted to hide it the choice area this guy came from. That way, if he looked for me, he'd look here except near his own state. See?"
"How's that again?"
"They're跌 down like ninepins—all of his aides—and none will escape except the President."
"Haven't you heard of Executive Privilege?"
"Oh, some silly concept of privacy tied in with what they call political espionage. Little do the people know that the President is the People. He is the beginning and end of everything: if it does anything, it for the people; if it does nothing, but Do they realize that? No. The People has been infiltrated by Commies and the Commies are out to get him."
"To stop a storm?"
"EXECUTIVE PRIVILEGE can stop anything, my friend," Jerry answered.
Jerry had taxed my patience to about its limit. I stood up.
Jerry came very close to me before he answered.
one of them. Who are They—and why are you so terrified of these people?"
"They, my friend," he said in a hoarse whisper, "are the American People."
"Jerry," I said, "you've been talking circles round me for God knowing how long
Although Dunning had visited the campus many times before, he said that the preview helped him to become familiar with the University's structure.
"But Jerry," I said, giggling nervously (were Jerry a nut eating from some establishment?), "why should the People have anything against you?"
Jerry's voice was breaking. He was obviously both very devoted to his master and Jerry's own.
I law. There was no doubt about it; Jerry
about the smart cat. I sat ever knew
that.
He leaned back to observe the effect of stained stone. I must confess I was quashed. I hesitated.
nocent pets like myself who sleep by day and worked by night for the Chief Executive."
"IT'S NOT ME alone: I am expendable. I don't care very much about him. But it's the President they're after. They want to put a better man in the White House—a liberal Republican. The President they have to attack and destroy all of his syphilis-capers down to poor in-
comment
and I've had enough. Half the time I get the feeling you're laughing at me. The rest of the time I get the feeling you know things I don't. Now, unless you open up—here, now, it's not that bad; the things I've been wanting to know, you aren't going to get any more cat-food.
"That's blackmail," Jerry protested.
"But that's unfair," he wailed.
"I shall not be blackmailed or intimidated into revealing that which I would have told you in the course of time anyway. You can learn from me, you can carve me on the street, you can..."
"ALL'S FIR in the U.S.A.", I told him. Jy鞋 stood up, arched his back, and in a row he looked down.
"Hey, hey—lake it easy." I said, as my mind raced ahead, trying to figure out some rules.
Suddenly, I had it—the good old meat- and eggs formula.
"Tell you what, Jerry," I said placatingly. "I give you an extra ration of cat food tonight if you'll answer some of the questions I've been asking you."
Jerry appeared to mull this over in his mind for a moment before he smoke.
"Mind you, I cannot be bought or bribed," he said. "I think 'I'll tell you after all.' And I will also accept your very kind offer of the extra food."
Sunday marked the opening of the Boydell Collection of Shakespeare Prints Exhibit in the Union Gallery. The Boydell Exhibit depicts epicuring scenes from Shakespeare's plays.
Exhibition of Prints Opens at Gallery
I KNEW I HAD Jerry where I wanted him, so I led with my first question.
When the Boydell Exhibit was first put together in England it was not a success. One of the reasons for this was according to Randy Youle, a Ph.D. candidate in art history, that the prints were not collected with an eye for consistency of style.
"Jerry, the last time you clammer up, you were scared to death about my being
Junior High Art, Music Camps End
By KATHY HODAK
Kansan Staff Writer
Animated cans, blocks and people flickered and jerked abruptly across a movie screen in Bailey Auditorium before approximately 100 spectators.
An art show and a concert marked the closing hours of the junior high division of the Art Department.
The movies were part of the student projects on display for parents so that they could see what had been accomplished during the ten days of the art camp.
ONE OF THE MORE popular classes during the camp was animated filmmaking. Students were divided into groups. One group animated objects; another animated drawings. Still another group used themselves for actors and actresses.
"The Most Animated Person," "The Squinted Eye Award," "The Golden Trigger Award" and "The Best Sound Effects for Silent Movies" were names of awards given to four students who had participated in characteristics throughout the workshop.
"MOST PEOPLE come in and think that art is all painting and drawing and perhaps they can't see what is being done that painting and drawing are parts of the curriculum in our field, but we don't think they're the whole part. So we're trying to expose the students to what is commonly called digital art."
Students learned the properties of light sensitive materials by making photographs. A photogram is made by laying objects on a paper and covering it, exposing the paper and developing it.
Frank Young, director of the junior high art camp, opened the art show by ad-
According to Michael Breeding, instructor of the photography section, no skill is required to make a photograph. Emphasis is placed on "gram."
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Program Gets Federal Aid
this can be good." Breeding said, "it does put some limitations on students who are not as skilled with their hands, but do have a lot of skill and ability to teach the elements that are in a piece of work."
Some of the photograms that were on display were designs directly from nature; some were inspired by art.
Since its beginning 13 years ago, the high main division of the music camp has expanded.
Once the students developed a sense of design, they made their own cameras from cigar boxes with a pinoleo knife. Breeding a new breed of identification rather than just taking a snapshot.
Young's teaching experience in the public schools of Chicago showed him that junior high students were interested in paper folding. Therefore, the light and shadow modulation class made use of paper-folding techniques to effect of light on three-dimensional forms.
IN THE LIGHT-MEDIA class, the students were introduced to light as an art medium. Each student made transparencies and saw the effect of polarized light upon their compositions when projected on a screen.
The senior high division of the music and art camp began Sunday.
As director of the art camp for the last
three years, Young said he wanted to give the students something different from what they had been receiving in their regular schools.
Sixty-five students from 15 states participated in the art camp this summer.
MORE THAN 1,100 people applauded Concert Band, Symphonic Band, Orchestra, Concert Choir and A Capella Choir as each night of the Friday afternoon in University Theatre.
The various choirs and bands were composed of the students who made up the junior high music camp. Each group played or sang four to six selections.
Selectionss Norwegian folk songs, nursery rhymes, highlights from "Fiddler on the Roof," Handel's "Overture to the Works" and a Neil Diamond medley.
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A
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I am not a fan of this picture. I'll just provide the text as it appears.
The image shows a person posing with their hand on their hip. They are wearing a patterned shirt and have dark hair. The background is plain black, making the person the focal point of the image.
P
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, June 25. 1977
2
Trailers Offer Investment Return
By LIZ EVERITT
Kansas Staf Writer
Mobile homes can be an inexpensive, comfortable and convenient form of student housing.
Mobile homes are becoming a common sight across the country and in Lawrence, but little has been said about their potential as housing for college students.
There are many reasons a student might consider buying a mobile home. It can be cheaper than renting an apartment. In a dorm room, you don't have to downstairs neighbors to worry about.
ONE FACTOR is mentioned by almost everyone who owns a mobile home. When the student is out of school he would have something tangible besides a pile of rent receipts. A mobile home can be sold or moved if the student wants to take it with
A new mobile home may be purchased in than $10,000, Jerry Baze of Ridgeview Mobile Home Sales, said Wednesday. Used homes may be purchased for almost any price, depending upon the year and the condition.
It may be difficult for a student to establish credit for a loan, but, if he can, the student should have from $0 to $150 per month, over a 5-10 year period. Baza said, Banks, dealers and loan companies ask for some indication of credit that would enable the student to pay off the loan.
LOT RENTALS vary, depending upon the extras provided by the mobile home park. Some parks include up to two utilities in the rental, some have swimming pools and clubhouses, some have fenced-in yards and simply provide the space for the home.
The lot rental ranges from around $30 to as much as $65 in Lawrence.
If a student wishes to rent a mobile home he may do so through a private rental or through one park in Lawrence that is in the business of renting mobile homes. Terry Ladage of Country View Mobile Home Estates said he rents 2- and 3-bedroom
mobile homes for under $150, including lot rental.
Lawrence has 13 mobile home parks, with total space for approximately 1,500 homes. The majority of the student mobile home owners are married, but the homes are becoming more popular with single parents. W, Belshe, manager of Mobile Village.
Other parks do not have as many students but said that they had no complaints about the schools.
Most park managers ask to see prospective tenants and spend some time with them before agreeing to a lease. The managers said that they did this to get to know the tenant, rather than having just a nodding acquaintance.
STUDENTS LIVE in about 35 per cent of the mobile homes in parks. Gaillight Village, Mobile Home Estates and Mobile Acres seem to be particularly popular with students, each having a student population of 40 per cent, according to the managers.
MOST MOBILE home parks do not require a security deposit. Belsa said that they could do this because most mobile stores do not offer the security they knew the owner owed the park money.
Several mobile homes were severely damaged June 16 in the windstorm that was clocked in Lawrence at ninety miles an hour. Bill Webster, part owner of Mobile Acres South and owner of Webster's Mobile Network, were not tied down or "anchored."
None of the parks in Lawrence require tie-innets. Webb said that he had mixed gauge systems.
"SOMETIMES PEOPLE can't afford the extra payments," he said. He said that they tried to sell tie-downs to everyone buying a car, and that he didn't think he could force them to.
Webster said that he did think Lawrence would consider requiring tie-downs more closely because of the damage from the windstorm.
"Eventually, whether the law is put into effect or not, I'm sure that the insurance
Odysseus took 10 years in his attempt to return home to Ithaca after the Trojan War. Students, staff and friends of Pearson were present in this peace fall after only a year's absence.
Arrangements for the second annual Pearson Odyssey are progressing with a similar sense of adventure and far less travail than Ulysses experienced, James Brooks, assistant director of Pearson College, said Friday.
Plans have been expanded this year to include a trip to Italy for some of the 175 EU members.
Pearson Organizes Greek, Italian Tours
BOTH GROUPS will fly by charter, departing DC 27, 1793, from Kansas City
Painting, Repair Of Chancellor's Home Finished
By DON ASHTON
Kansan Staff Writer
International Airport and returning Jan. 11, 1974, during semester break. Costs for the 16-day trip have been estimated at $450 to $500 per person.
Several trees and bushes have been planted on the grounds around the house, and some of the overgrowth taken out. The trim on the outside of the house has been painted. Nichols said that Building and Grounds did the painting and planting.
"We hope it is in good condition for the Dykes family," she said.
Renovation of the KU chancellor's residence has been completed, according to Clyte Nichols, the chancellor's wife. She was commencement activities were held there.
The house has been redecorated in gold. On the first floor, the carpet is a soft gold, with the walls painted in a soft gold. The first floor is the only floor of the house that is furnished by the state, she said. The furniture has been cleaned, as well as the wardrobes and third floors have also been recarpated, painted and thoroughly cleaned.
The redecorating began last fall and Nichols said that this was the first time the three-story house has been renovated there. She had always been people living in it.
Brooks said the plane was filled a month before departure last year and referred to it as "a bit of a mystery."
Students in the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program and their parents have priority for seats on the aircraft, but students, faculty and staff of the University are invited to join the group if space is available.
"Last year we still had a waiting list when we left," he said.
THE PEARSON Odyssey is designed as a direct educational experience, not a vacation. Regularly scheduled classes will be held at bases in Orvieto, 40 miles north of Grazia, Greece, where students may live in local homes, if current plants bear fruit.
Numerous and frequent excursions are on the itinerary for both groups, including journeys to Athens, Delphi, Hacia and Izmir, the ancient museum, Florence, Assisi and Perugia in Italy.
companies will enforce a tie-down requirement." he said.
"It's (anchoring) something that's worth-
while," Webster said. He said that frame
anchoring did not do any good, but that it
only held the frame while the body of the
home was blown off. Hurricane bands, or
the-theop straps, do the most good, or
Students who participated last year were granted two independent study credit hours.
HE SAID MANY insurance companies
pleased ask that a mobile home be tied-
down.
"WE BELIEVE in the direct experience of things," he said. "To see the character of places and experience a foreign culture is very illuminating to students."
Dennis Quinn, director of the humanities program, said the trip "simply confirms and extends the knowledge students get in the reading of books."
Pearson faculty members will accompany both groups.
During the fall, several short programs will assist students in preparing for the trip. Among the programs will be sessions in Greek folk dancing, lessons in conversational Greek and Italian, and lectures in classical architecture.
Jerry Shaw, Kansas City, Mo., junior, was one of the Pearson humanities students who responded enthusiastically to Greece last fall.
Some parks do require skirting, both for the appearance value and as some protection against wind. Skirting also helps keep heating and cooling costs down, besides helping to prevent pipes freezing during the winter.
it was fantastic," Shaw said. "The trip brought the readings of Homer, Plato, Tirpustus and Socrates."
Mobile homes are available in a wide variety of sizes and floor plans. Bazaed that most of their sales been at 14k84 feet two-bedroom models. Most mobile homes are 20k84 feet, there are also smaller models, as well as bare-wides," which may be as wide as 28 feet
Although the civil rights story of the Truman administration is one relating mainly to blacks, "Quest and Response" focuses on the poor Indians, Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ricans, Japanese-and Chinese-Americans and Jews. The authors examine the alliances that were forged among the three races during labor, and political and religious liberals.
"Some 35 Pearson students already have
experimental interest in going to Greece."
Minority Awakening Book Topic
HEATING AND cooling costs may be higher in a mobile home than in an apartment, but few mobile home owners said that this had been any major cost factor.
The civil rights movement began during the Truman administration, according to Donald McCoy, professor of history, and Michael Quentin, professor of history at California State University. The authors of "Quest and Response: Minority Rights and the Truman Administration."
Walter Gravenstein of Todd Moll Homes said that most of the sales he made that involved students occurred when a teacher was working for his children to use while at school.
The quest of minority peoples for civil rights was a scattered, meager movement until the beginning of the World War II, McCoy and Rueten said. This situation changed to an unprecedented extent during the years between 1945 and 1953.
began to crumble, and the campaign for better housing included forward.
McCoy and Ruetten said that under President Harry S. Truman, the executive branch of the federal government listened to minority groups as never before and often responded to their entreaties and pressures. Civil rights victories were won in the courts. Education rose and employment opportunities increased. Legal segregation
McCoy was Fulbright Professor at the University of Bonn, president of the Kansas History Teachers Association and received the Byron Caldwell Smith Award for documentary work. Ru腾 was Research Associate of the Harry S Truman Library Institute during 1967-1969 and is currently a member of the editorial board of The Historian.
Copies of their book cost $12.
IN A MOBILE home a student can have more options than in an apartment. Often, with the permission of the park manager, he may plant a garden. He can decorate the house with plants.
A mobile home has another advantage for out-of-state students. If the home is registered in the student's name in the state of Kansas the student will pay property tax to Kansas on the home and may be legally classified as a resident for tuition purposes, but as a parent in another state is not providing more than half the student's income.
WEBSTER IS president of the Kansas Manufactured Housing and Recreational Vehicle organization, which he said had taken a leading role in making fire escape windows mandatory on all new mobile homes. He said that at their meeting this month they would discuss
Cheryl Ridway, Kiowa senior, has lived in a mobile home for two and a half years. "It's good as a temporary place to live. I have been able to live forever, but for now it's great," she said.
Janet Harsha, wife of a former student, said that she and her husband moved from their 1250 mobile home because their son was getting too big.
"It was fine when he was born, but after
he had gotted toys it was just getting too
hard."
"We really liked it until we ran out of room."
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Monday, June 25, 1973
University Daily Kansan
griff and the unicorn
HI UNICORN
HELLO SUSAN.
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HI, SUSAN
SIGH!
IT'S REALLY DEPRESSING WHEN YOU'VE LOST WEIGHT AND NOBODY NOTICES...
Conscience Still in Cold Storage
comment
Too often, we are inclined to dismiss happenings in remote corners of the world as being insignificant or irrelevant to our lives and our politics—which is all very well
as long as the events themselves are of the kind that can be ignored, such as the death of a dozen starving natives in some Asian country. There are times, however, when an emergency occurs, and there is some response from wherever it is that we have put conscience into cold storage.
Genocide, or the planned and organized killing of numberless other humans, is one of the most disturbing crimes in history.
Host Family Program Revamped
Kansan Staff Writers
Sibyle Barron, former chairman of the Host Family Program, and Reynolds discussed this problem and other problems last Friday.
In the past five years the Lawrence Host Family Program has been plagued with problems stemming from a breakdown in communication between the organizers and the foreign students involved. In order to address these difficulties, Bonnie Reynolds, co-coordinator, have started new programs and communicative procedures, she said last Monday.
By CATHY O'BRIEN and CONNIE DeARMOND
A few families have complained in the past that too much was expected of them in school and hosted to foreign students, Reynolds said. Another dissatisfaction because they did not have the opportunity to get acquainted with the teacher and the basic problem of the program, she said.
IN THE PAST, Reynolds said, the
program had tried to match each new foreign student with a family. Reynolds said that families were often recruited on a scale to meet the demand, even though they were not really interested. Students themselves often found that after making new friends and going to classes they no longer wanted or needed a host family.
Barron said that in dealing with hundreds of students and families it simply became a problem of book work. The committee that dealt with the issues seven members and only five of those people do the actual work, Reynolds said. She said people cannot handle this load," she added.
THE HOST FAMILY Program will also begin to assign only those foreign students
To solve the problem of keeping track of the families, Reynolds said, the committee is going to assign people who will keep in touch with a certain number of families to find out how many are still active in the program.
who are interested. Next fall new foreign students will receive letters from the host program asking them to fill out a card and send it to the Foreign Students Office if they are interested. In this way, Reynolds said, "We hope to find the most interested students and put them with the most interested families."
Barron said that by reducing the number of students and families involved in the program the committee could start to match people with common interests.
A second problem that has plagued the program is that many families feel they do not have the time. Of course, families who feel this way should not become host families, Reynolds said. But often they misunderstand what their duties would be. Reynolds stressed that families should be very casual and informal.
"I think the general complaint among the students is 'I see very little of my family,'" I said.
A third problem, language, has also made
U.S.,Israel Say Soviet Remark Does Not Reflect U.N.Council
The Washington Post
By ANTHONY ASTRACHAN
UNITED NATIONS—Israel and the United States accused Soviet Ambassador A. Malik last Thursday of putting forth Soviet views while claiming to speak for the entire Security Council as council president for June.
Maliak claimed Thursday morning to be speaking for the council in reply to questions about the council's attitudes on basic issues that were posed Monday by Egyptian foreign Minister Mohammed El-Zayyat.
He cited provisions of the U.N. charter and resolutions of the council and General Assembly that tended to support the Arab position on two subjects.
The other was the right of peoples to self-determination, which is the basis for the rule that has been established.
Malki's action took on added significance because he appeared to be expressing a fascination with Russia, few days before Soviet leader Ludwig Brezhnev came to the United States for discussions with President Nixon that will address the Middle East, among other subjects.
ONE WAS THE inadmissibility of acquiring territories by force, which the Arabs ate as requiring withdrawal by Arab forces during the Six-Day War in 1967.
THE COUNCIL TAKES the summit talks so seriously that it decided to adjourn its Middle East debate Thursday until July 16, to allow sufficient time for summit decisions to be communicated to the parties and to be analyzed by them.
U. S. Ambassador John Scall spoke as soon as Malcolm concluded and told him, "Since there have been no consultations on the three questions addressed to the council, I must assume that you have spoken in your individual capacity."
Scall later was anxious to discount the significance of Malik's ploy.
"We have firm assurances that he did not intend to slap the outstretched hand of American friendships" he told the Washington Post.
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The National Organization for Women (NOW) will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Trinity Episcopal Church, 20th and Verdi Chapel, where the agenda includes a report state coordinate with Patton on the recent NOW regional conference and plans for a state planning meeting.
"It was a cheap parliamentary trick, so I challenged him, but I didn't use a sledge hammer because I thought a flick on the wrist would suffice."
"But," Reynolds said, "people need to know that you can communicate with one another whether or not you can talk. If you don't have a language problem, you don't have a language problem."
OTHER DIPLOMATS suggested that Scall might well be right but, if so, it suggested a significant clumsiness in an ambassador, as experienced as Malki, who presided over his first Security Council meeting 25 years ago.
families hesitant to participate in the program. Reynolds describes it as the "harmful effect" of the program.
Other Security Council ambassadors who do not often side with the United States expressed shock privately at Malik's violation of U. N. conventions.
Israeli Ambassador Yosef Tekoh charged in the council that Malik had misused his office of president of the State Council and selected or distorted interpretations" of the U.N. Charter and Resolutions. He said this proved beyond any doubt that the Council "is not a forum that offers its citizens a place for discussion from its merits the situation in the Middle East."
THE MAJORITY OF speakers in the Council debate have been Arab nations and other countries sympathetic to them. They have accused the United States of Council Resolution 242, the basis for all negotiations in the Middle East since the 1967 war, for withdrawal of Israeli troops occupied Arab territories. Many, incidentally, have supported United States of partisan support of Israel.
Scaled denied these allegations and said Resolution 242 linked Israeli withdrawal to the sovereignty, territorial knowledge of the political independence of every state in the area and their right to live in peace within threats or acts of force.
He also said the resolution "mether endorses nor precludes" the transformation of the pre-1967 armistice lines into final boundaries. These boundaries, in the U.S. view, are part of the over-all agreement in which can be achieved by only an "ongering,紊结, negotiating process, either direct or indirect, which engages the parties themselves."
DESPITE THE CONTRADICTIONS apparent in Thursday's debate between the Soviet Union and the United States, Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua charged the two superpowers "were responsible for the unchanged debt in settling the Middle East area while they competed for hegemony and strategic oil resources in the area.
Two programs have been planned for the fail to answer family and student questions about the program, Reynolds said. A family orientation program will include an exploration of the program's purpose and will feature a reading of foreign student feedback.
He said that the superpowers were jointly spreading the idea that Palestinians and Israelis must fight together.
aggression” lest they provoke a confrontation between Washington and Mos-
Law Honor Society Elects 17 Students
The council adjourned its Middle East debate for a month with no indication that any viable resolution had been considered and that solutions in which the real business of the United States
Egypt, whose request started this debate—the first in nearly six years on the Middle East problem as a whole—still has not decided what kind of U.N. action it wants or how far it will try to go. Council attempts to force the United States to veto a resolution—and many doubt that Egypt wants to do so.
The Order of the Coif is a national honorary society with chapters at leading American law schools. Only law students are eligible to attend these class are eligible for election to the society.
Call or Visit Us Today.
Newly elected members are Jasper Snodgrass, Emporia; Hugh David Barr, Hutchinson; Joseph Stanley Hill, Hutchinson; Robert Jones, Hutchinson; Ronald Rodsimon, Lawrence; Michael Denny, Lawrence; worth: Robert Fairchild, Leahood; William Lynch, Leawood; Dennis Prater, Olathe; Larry Jackey, Paola; Dennis Wilbur, Pittsburg; Thomas Poos, Salina; Clifford Bartholf, Spijk; Patrick Gane, Naterville; Thomas Harmus, Mount Pleasant, Iowa; Thomas Livington, Northfield, Ohio.
Apartment Hunting?
Seventeen graduates of the School of Law have been elected to membership in the Office of the Attorney General.
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Studios to Duplexes,
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THE ORIENTATION program for the foreign students, which is held each year by the Office of Foreign Students, will be handled differently this fall. The foreign students will be divided into small groups of 15, Reynolds said, and each group will be a foreign student who is familiar with the University and the Host Family Program.
From $ ^{s}1 4 0^{0 0} $
BARRON SAID although the Host Family Program's name had confused many students about the program's purpose. She said that people in the program. She said that people in the community had become familiar with the name and that changing it would be like
A letter sent to all foreign students by the Foreign Student Bureau is also contacted and received. Req'd.
Despite its earlier shortcomings, Reynolds and Barron said it could become
Aimee Anderson, assistant to Clark Coan, dean of foreign students, said that before the student arrived at the University of Kansas he was sent a "welcome" letter that provided information on housing and a little information on the Lawrence Host Program.
Rujanweah, a Ph. D. candidate in school administration, was not confronted with the possibility of misunderstandings. Her husband, Garoon Rujanweah, also a graduate student, said a lot of the success of their family and the individual student.
Barron said that while the Host Family Program was a "community service on behalf of students," the Student Office for supplies and postage. She said that the office had been helpful in providing information about the students so that the program had looked to the office as a "support."
The letter stated, "We hope that our office can provide you with opportunities to learn about teaching and students enrolled at KU, but also with families in and around Lawrence. As you will see after being here awhile, host teachers will be in the life of many students from abroad."
"A Good Place to Live"
The orientation program for the families and students was seen as a "very good idea" by Chuancuen Rujanawech from Bangkok, Thailand.
REYNOLDS SAID the letter was confusing and should be changed.
101 T. WINDBOR PLACE 842-4200
Reynolds said, "If this program reaches student out of 800, it has been worthwhile."
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out sympathy in us, if nothing else. Unfortunately, we have become so attuned to acting only on photographic evidence of mass slaughters (remember Bangladesh), that news of a genocide alone is not enough to inspire any action.
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Yet today, such a genocide appears to be taking place in Africa, in the little state of Burundi, the microscopic country next to Tanzania. News reports indicate that the ruling Tutsi tribe is waging a war of extinction against the Hutu, following an uprising by the Hutu last year in which about 80,000 people are believed to have died.
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The killings are reportedly being carried out by men armed with automatic rifles, brought by large bands of young men of a great known as the Jeanneesse Revolutionnaire.
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An open mass grave outside Bujumbura, capital of Burundi, is testimony to the scale chosen to call 'anti-terrorist' activity. The hunt from Hutu from Tanzania has been as high as 13,000 persons in the past month, crossing the borders at the rate of 800 daily.
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people may have been killed.
Death is now unknown to Burundi. In the 11 years since its independence, there have been three coups, two prime ministers have assassinated and as many as 250,000
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That's a lot of people, but then, they've only wild savages. And if they don't die of bullet or spear wounds, they'll die of starvation or disease. Africans and Asians are always embroiled in this sort of thing anyway.
So what's new with Marlon Brando and Linda Lovelace?
Prof to Judge Piano Contest
Von Sauer is the widow of Emil von Sauer, the Austrian pianist and teacher. The winner of the piano recital competition will receive the Von Sauer prize.
Angelica Morales on Sauer, professor emerita of piano, will go to France this month to be a member of the piano jury for one of Europe's foremost musical competitions, the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud International Contest.
She retired as an active member of the KKU faculty this spring after 18 years of teaching.
On Sauer sister her husband while on a concert tour of Europe, and the couple remained close.
Following her husband's death in 1924, von Sauer took over his classes at the State University.
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Ticket Prices: $2.00 — Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 864-3982
Monday, June 25, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
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Territory Identification
THE UNIVERSITY OF REMAIA
Passport to KU
Like any other member of the University community, Charcell-designate Archie Dykes had his picture taken for his faculty identification card. The Photo and Graphic arts division, which produces all KU-ID cards, finished Dykes' card Friday.
Gym Pressed to Meet Demand
By JOHN BENDER
By JOHN BENDER
Kansan Staff Writer
A recreation fee and controlled access to Robinson Gymnasium are two proposals offered by Wayne Osnes, professor of physical education and recreation, for improving recreation services to the University community.
Oness said Wednesday that at present, the department of physical education was having trouble meeting the recreation needs of the students.
The basic problem, according to Osmess, is a lack of money. This translates into a lack of equipment, facilities and personnel.
But the real problem, by outsiders is also a problem he said.
The recreation facilities at the University of Kansas are not adequate for the student population they serve, Ossman said. Other universities have better facilities with a larger scope.
Kansas Teachers College at Emporia, Kansas State College of Pittsburg, and Fort Hays Kansas State College all have newer and larger recreation facilities than KU, but they serve smaller student populations, he said.
Osness said these facilities cost about $6 million in comparison to KU's Robinson Gymnasium, which cost $1.2 million. Also, the Robinson was smaller than it was intended to be.
Osmess said that he hoped KU would buy better facilities. The fact that other schools
are receiving the funds for such buildings in recreation needs. Ongress said
The university lacks adequate gymnastics, handball, paddleball, and tennis courts. The university has no four basketball courts, but Carmichael said there should be 16. There are only six handball courts, three of which are for basketball. Carmichael said this was entirely inadequate.
One person who is concerned by the shortage of recreational facilities is Steve Carmichael, Lawrence graduate student. Carmichael is the student supervisor for the intramurals program and has been involved in it for the last two years.
Osness said that the problem of non-University persons using the facilities of the department personnel spent 75 per cent their time checking on the persons who were using Robinson's facilities and chasing out those who were not KU students.
Carmichael said outsiders were especially a problem with the tennis courts. He blamed this on the lack of recreational facilities in Lawrence. Carmichael said that most university hotels had nice YMCA'S or similar facilities, but Lawrence did not.
At present, funds for intramurals and recreation come from the department of physical education's budget and student fees.
Production of 'Caesar' Reveals Little of Rehearsal Pressures
By CATHY O'BRIEN
According to David Cook, who portrayed
Mood, the psychological essence of life,
was skillfully created in the drama of Julius
Caesar this past week at the University
Theatre in Murphy Hall.
review
Caesar, the biggest problem was "not having enough time to allow Dr. (Jed) Brooking to get everything together as soon as he would have liked."
The play was put together in two and one half weeks with two rehearsals a day. Mike had to be prepared for the rehearsal.
that the play was technically understaffed.
If it was technically understaffed, it was not easy to see in the production itself. If the lighting, sound and staged working develop feelings of conspiracy and tension.
Particularly strong performances were given by Fred Vesper as Casius, William Kuhike as Marcus Brardin, David Cook as Julius Caesar and William Keeler as Casia.
Calpurnia, played by Kathy Hill, is seen for only short periods of time. During the little time that she is on stage, one can see her disgust; the one time she speaks, one can hear her fear. The part may be small, but the role her manely much better than did the others.
Stan Singer, in his portrayal of Mark Antony, seemed to need time to really develop to the best of his potential. In the next chapter, he learns that he seped to let down in the spider parts.
This play was the second of the theatre productions in the Shakespeare Festival.
According to the Office of the Comproller, the budget for fiscal 1973 for the physical education department was $270,260. Of this amount $254,401 was spent on salaries, wages and fringe benefits. This represents about 8 percent of other expenses incurred by the department.
The Office of Business Affairs said that $20,717 was provided for intramurals from student fees. Ossness said that the money provided for intramurals for student fees would cover the entire cost of the program because it did not cover salaries and operating costs.
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Although the $2,717 may seem like a lot of money for intramurals, Carmichael said that Kansas State University had $0,000 for its intramurial program two years ago. With $380,000 in FCU could handle a bigger intramurals program with more participants in more sports.
Osness said that the assessment of a recreation fee would be one way of raising the money to provide adequate services for the students. Other Big 8 schools assess such a fee, and their students are benefiting from it, Osness said.
1973-Year of the Taco
Nichols said Wednesday that there was a possibility that an announcement could be made by July 1 but neither he nor Chancellor-designate Archie Dykes had yet answered any written recommendations from the Athletic Director Search Committee.
Although the search for the University of Kansas' new athletic director is still underway, an announcement could be made as soon as according to Chancellor Raymond Nichols.
By GERALD EWING
Kansan Staff Writer
KU Athletic Director Still Sought
The position has been vacant since the resignation of Wade Stinson last November 15. The interim director is A. C. "Dutch" Lonborg.
NICHOLS SAID that when the search committee did make its recommendations, a joint decision would be made by Chancellor-designate Dykes and himself.
Although the county attorney's office has not been officially notified, negotiations for the sale of the apartment complex are being held, according to Malone. The establishment of an escrow fund is necessary to allow the title to clear in the event of a sale.
"It happens we both interviewed all the persons under consideration right now,"
Under terms of the judgment, the Kitzingers must supply the state with a complete list of tenants at the apartment complex since May 1, 1972. The list must include forwarding addresses, deposit amounts, the amounts returned to tenants and reasons for the deposits not being returned.
Court Tells Ridglea To Repay Deposits
Last Tuesday, another $2,500 judgment was entered against the Intone Corp., the former owner of Ridgida in a suit filed by the county attorney. Assistant County Attorney Mike Malone said Thursday he had been unable to find the registration of the Intone Corp. There is some question as to whether the company ever existed.
A law suit concerning rental practices at Ridgley Apartments, 524 Frontier Road, resulted in a consent judgment last Thursday in Division II of Douglas County District Court, Attorney General Vern Miller filed the law suit last March against David and LaVerna Kitzinger of Albuquerque, N. M.
The judgment calls for the establishment of a $5,000 escrow account to be used to repay security deposits made by individuals. If this amount is not sufficient to the amount owed to former residents, an added arm will be added to the escrow account.
Dykes Wants IBM Typewriter; Registrar Has Similar Model
Chancellor-designate Archie Dykes has asked the State Department of Administration to approve the rental of what he calls "the common, IBM automatic typewriter."
the three vice-chancellors. Its greatest value would be as a secretarial time swer, with the machine being able to type 180 words per minute.
The automatic typewriter, which rents for $175 a month, is already in use on the campus, with identical machines in the Alumni Association office, the office of the registrar and the office of the director of admissions.
Dykes said that he carried a rather heavy load of correspondence, but that it would be a very unusual day when he would have as many as 400 to 500 letters out.
The typewriter would be used by everyone in the chancellor's suite, including
Dykes said that one of the machines was in use in the chancellor's office at the University of Tennessee and that use of them would reduce its secretarial staff by one person.
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Nichols said, "Dykes has done a lot of checking or investigating on his own to make sure of the background and com- ments of this case." We are working very closely together."
Their joint decision has to be approved by the athletic committee of the Board of Regents.
"What we want is the best man in the country who is available for the job," Nichols said. "I should think it would not be difficult for the committee to recommend two or more persons, each of whom they thought was qualified for the job."
NCHOLS this would be an intermediate step, which would be more or less
Dykes, in a telephone interview Wednesday, said that the committee was still active and that several people were still being interviewed.
"I just talked to some of the people out there, asking them if they would be willing to interview two or three candidates in addition to the ones they have interviewed," he said. "They will be doing that, and if so, that would mean an additional two or three weeks."
DYKES SAID that he hoped KU could get a person with strong leadership capabilities, especially in the area of finances. He also said that the person would help to develop the athletics and the academic world as well as having experience at a major university.
"It's my wish that we reach agreement on the individual we wish to recommend for the athletic directorship as quickly as possible, but at the same time, not be so precipitous as to overlook qualified candidates," Dykes said.
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A communications team, services and employment specialists provide technical support for Mining Engagement Actions. Provide professional training on mining technologies including BORING.
NORTH SIDEN COSTORY Shop—3 blks. No. of the
furniture, cellulose, gas heating and cooking
furniture, furniture, gas heating and cooking
furniture, monkey bars, 20 gal drayman draw,
monkey bars, 10 gal drayman draw, fireplace
Fireplace wood large log 12, used. 10-3 for
coord price, baked almond, brownie and wheat
bread. Fireplace Open 9 in x 9 in. 7 days. 842-3139
AllenBurden.
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
2. If you don't,
You're at a disadvantage
Either way it comes to the same thing—
Now it's available at Campus Mall, Town Hall,
Available now at Campus Mall, Town Hall
PIZZA HI SMOGASGASOND. All the pizza you
want! 12:30 - 1:45 w/1:30 - 1:45 Monday-
11:30 - 1:49
Saint Bernard nursery - ACK Registered Children's Nursery. Nursery for babies, toddlers, popup puppies and older dogs. Available 3/15. 20% off first book purchase.
G.E. Color portable TV, excellent condition. Conn
Constellation trumpet. A bargain; make effec-
tive sound.
Wine and beer making is applies to the Mercrem,
Forestry Company, Company. 9-14-3460 - 9-14-3460
82-750 - 82-750
Rack, jacket 1729, 6200 carriage, Long
rack, Jacket 800, Call 843-8644.
For male: 37 Chevy, 1800. Runge, good
machines. 37 Chevy, 1800. Runge, good
5 and weekends or 844-7525 during the day. 6-28
Motorbikes: 1800-1954 90 cm. won't cease.
Motorbikes: 1800-1954 90 cm. won't cease.
For Sale -1971 Toyota City SC-A/C radio,
fuel pump, ac condenser, black vinyl top,
with black vinyl top, must sell, going to Ger-
man. Please contact us at (212) 658-3000.
Mortcrylee-1865 Bridgestone 90 cc won't start.
McCormack-Call-Way Mountaineer 628
or 629 leave you难忘. 6-28
1971 Volkwagen Camper-Mitcheln steel radial camper with hydraulic pump Call after 5 p.m. or any time午 9 a.m. Call after 8 p.m.
1965 CADILAC, 2 Dr. for sale, Call 841-0522
1965 Cadillac, in aid, for Job will talk; will sell
1965 Cadillac, in aid, for Job will talk; will sell
Guitar, F-20, Conn, like a must-hawk best sell takes. Call K-413, 2588, for check. K-416
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension. 3
bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially
furnished. Carpeted, A/C; Shrink. Fenced lot.
Aedd, shed, garden. Aking $256. 7-4
$209.
AIR PROGRAM magazine, 39-46 issue, mint.
33-24 throw 36-37, complete, 4 issues, all fair.
37-38 throw Oct. 45, complete, 14 issues, all fair.
Best Offer; Charlie Hardt
42 Minnesota
6-27
Ford, 1982 Galesburg 250XL, auto. Pieng, Eagleton
FOR RENT
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
RENTAL SERVICES
RENTAL SERVICES
For the latest in rental
in rentals call Lawrence Rental Exchange 212-507-6348
for more information.
SAVE GASOLINE. Walk to campus and classes.
Walk with all appliances. No pets. 823-1141
(212) 567-8090.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? OF STEREPING
COLUMN! PARKING IN FAR-FLURN LOTS!
to campus! Easy parking from stadium. Easy walking distance of major campus buildings, paved parking lot. Free: Carriage rates. Buses. Rates available. rate tables. furniture room. ideal roommates. Sanitize Apts. 123 Ind. Apartment #84-231-616.
Apartments. Furnished, clean, quiet, some air.
North side. East side. North and rear downstairs. No pets. 853-767-767
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cook-
ing, private KU and near downtown.
nets. 843-575-3177
Farmed room in older house near campus
Quintet area, nice house, utilities included.
No phone or Internet access.
Bairn-Rowan-Fall living in a friendly group. Unique
private room with private bath. Private rooms from $35. Call 844-9241 for Cars.
Vacation Rentals
Apt. for rent for summer. Excellent location
in the heart of Montreal.
1150 m². Welcome. Call 641-8380, 6-26
*
NOTICE
**PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH** - Small Pizza and
slices for $10 at 834 to 754
toward, Monday, Feb. 11, 1-2.
Soybeans now in stock at the Mercantile Grocery Company 7390 Mass. 843-9746 6-28
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION, 721 N. River St., Norwalk, CT 06854. Saturday, 10:09-6:30 and by appointment. Mail resume to THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION, 721 N. River St., Norwalk, CT 06854. Responding technicians sharing an efficient service will assist you with your repair spirals we are able to offer quality service in our shop. Please call (850) 225-1777 for details of our REPAIR 18 A LIFESTYLE Manual and sleeve cover kits. Small appliances and clocks, small appliances and dressers.
515 Michigan State. B-B-Que, We B-B-Que in
B-Que, $275. A seat here over 84.5' rib ride
plate. A room set up here over 96' x 106'
x 138' and sandwich table. Sandwich table,
sandwich table, Sandwich table, 11:00
and sun, and Tue, 11:00
V 2-9109 515 Mih. St.
7-20
RAY AUDIO-have you heard the new H-759
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the room? You can at RAY AUDIO, where low
prices are our thing. 738 Rhode Island St. 842-
608-230-1700.
Five Days
25 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $0.33
"NANGER IN TOWNS" As an Anv, representat-
ents of the church in the town make good money by
into the home homes and make good money go.
They will be able to give them all.
TYPING
You may not be able to believe all you read.
You should refrain from reading the fragments in the CANDLES at WAXMEX CANDLES at WAXMEX.
DANCE WITH SANCTUARY, Friday, June 28
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Meeting Monday, 7:30 Union; COUNSELING/
HAP, 84-364 for referral; SOCIALIZING,
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Hard crafted handmade candles start as low as $20. These are the ones that make them WAXKO, CANDLES, and CANDLE LIGHTS.
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
4984. Myra. also minor editor and/or proffessor.
Typing-my home IBM SelectPlex -Ptea type
Experienced experienced
Call Katie: 841-256-9248 7-924
For accurate typing of thesis, dissemination and papers for clearty. *Beatson after* 5-424-6461. Wake Forest University.
Experienced in typing these, dissertation, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter skills. Accurate and prompt service. Proof reading, spelling corrected. Phraser 84-954. Ms. Wright
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NOW UNTIL JU
KAW VALLEY SCHOOL, OF CRAFTS AND PERFORMING ARTS
17 West 14th, Lawrence, Kansas
summer session
JUNE 20TH TO JUNE 23RD
843-700m
Glasses meet one or more standards and fulfil a range from $69.00 to $129.00 of the cost materials.
KU KARATE CLUB club assembling a summer
Catholic choir. Wednesday for 25 minutes for
night. Wed. night. $20.
A unique educational experience offering highly structured classes in music, visual arts, crafts and other creative disciplines. An entire community for creative involvement. Work with children, young adults, recorder, balking, drawing, painting, marame, creative writing, children's theatre, and theater workshops. Of courses available, you are invited to attend the
from $60.00 to $15.00 plus the cost of materials. 7-ATTENTION GIRLS! U.S. Cond Guard Ancillary
Any interested girls 18-24 years of age contact
CMDN Mararium at 542-282 for further details
Wanted: Photographer to take slides of jewelry
Matt have professional results. Need Immer
knowledge.
WANTED
Female wanted to share a house. Own bedroom.
*nn: Call Cathy or Toulia, 841-6231. 6-25
Fernan wanted to share a house. Own her bedroom.
He needed a teacher for junior high student,
Need German instructor for junior high student.
MISCELLANEOUS
PIPZZA HUT DELIVERS: A hot plaza right to
Saturday 12 p.m. and Saturday 12 p.m. p. 834-708-7248
or student or pilot-flying club membership
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monthly Phone 943-1214 61-28
SERVICES OFFERED
Attractive single girls with good personalities and interest in reading, writing and writing to them. Not aptly trained. Call for more information. 800-293-1544.
Tenns lessons! given by two experienced teachers, one a former club professional. Individual, individual.
Employment Opportunities
FOUND
Four watch in Hawthorn park lot Tuesday
found morning. Yours on description. Call 641-4229
www.hawthornpark.com
ENTERTAINMENT
Opening--THE PREMONITION--Light show and
guests. Every Sunday night shows at 7 P.M. and
every Saturday evening shows at 10 P.M.
good conversationals Admission: Advance tickets,
$25 each, to CAMILION THE PREMONITION
CAMILION THE PREMONITION
GIRLS' NIGHT
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
10th DRAWS
at
THE HARBOUR
1021 Mass.
6
Mondav. June 25,1973
University Daily Kansan
Stores May Have Made Last-Minute Price Hikes
From Page One
nobody really knew when a freeze was coming though many had anticipated it.
Gibson's assistant manager, Charley Crabtree, said that it wouldn't have been Gibson's policy to hurryly raise prices at the plant; instead, they would cordering to Phase 3, price increases were to come only at the same per cent that the manufacturers' and suppliers' prices rose.
Some of the department store heads agreed that prices had increased during the year.
But Shaw said that for the thirteen years he had been in retailing, there had usually been a big gap between his earnings.
LLOYD AGREED that prices had been going up. He said there had been many increases and virtually no decreases for a long time. The reason, he said, was that retailers were under pressure to increase value of the products. When suppliers raised prices, the retailers also had to, he said.
Shaw said he thought Woolworths actually received more orders for price than she did.
"Certainly we haven't raised prices just to raise prices," he said.
Peck said that Duckwall's prices had gone up, but he attributed it to inflation. In some of the alleged cases of price hiking, people may have been adjusting prices that were set against unjustified before he said, not to exhortient bishops, but simply to reasonable levels.
DUCKWALL HAD been receiving new price change lists weekly, according to Peck. Since these were sometimes 20 pages long, in the flurry of business employees didn't always have time to make the appropriate changes right away, he said.
The Alco store in Junction City, the discount branch of Duckwalls, was one of the stores that had been closed by Feeck said that the Junction City manager was new there, and had been in the Lawrence until about a month ago. He probably did have price changes to make it more attractive.
While there is a possibility that an individual Duckwalls manager may have prices prior to the freeze, Peck said, the chain as a whole had not. If an individual had raised prices on his own, however, he would get fired, Peck said.
SHAW AGREED that if an individual Woolworths manager made increases, the disciplinary action the company would impose would be fairly severe.
Lloyd said that in T.G.&Y. stores, individual managers could raise prices, subject to the discretion of the buying department.
Crabtree said that individual Gibson managers could not raise prices unless the manufacturers did. But such an individual, he added, would cost $10 in ice with the Internal Revenue Service.
Weasl was concerned that the consumer should have some easy way to check earlier prices to detect any possible violations of the freeze. She said that Nixon had left it up to him to keep watch, but he made it almost impossible to keep up with price increases.
WEISS, WHO will teach a consumer education course at the University of Kansas next fall, she said planned to find out how consumers could easily file comp
According to a spokesman of the Internal Revenue Service, stores should have freeze their stock at least once every same convenient point. He said if a retailer changed prices on an item during the week of June 1-8, at least 10 per cent of his sales had to have been at the higher price before the change took effect.
IF A STORE HAD not sold a particular item during June 1-8, according to the IRS, it would have to go back to the price charged during the last seven-day period that the item was sold. If it was on sale at least once in the week, the freeze price would be the sale price.
For example, the IRS spokesman explained, if he sold ten of a certain item, and one of the 10 was sold at the higher price, he would have to go back to the items, and only one of the 12 was sold at the higher price, the retailer would have to go back to the lower price.
None of the Lawrence stores contacted had free price lists available, but all said consumers could ask to see any invoices, letters and requisitions they wished.
Shaw said Woolworths had a meeting scheduled when this probably would be appropriate.
retail price, though not the cost price, of any item.
Peck said that Duckwalls had no price freeze list available yet because the freeze was so recent, but he would be glad to show anyone letters or invoices. Lloyd also said that requisitions were available upon request at T.G.&Y.
GIBSONS HAS stock control records in their offices that individuals can check, according to Crabbren. Gibsones carries so many GIBSONS products that it may be impossible to make a master list of all. Under Phase 3 guidelines, be said, each department had to select a certain number of best-selling items and had posted these numbers on the computer so no indication this should be done now.
According to the IRS, the freeze actually went into effect at 9 p.m. June 13. Spokeness for Lawrence stores said they don't make any necessary changes immediately.
Since the President announced the price freeze, the two local Duckwall stores have been lowering many prices in accordance with new legislation. The orders from the main office to lower prices and to disregard the price list sent out prior to the President's speech, he said.
correction
Members of the tenure committee entitled "Rights and responsibilities of individuals, departments and schools" were listed incorrectly in Thursday's Kansan.
The members are: Howard Boyajian, professor of music; Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education; William Lucas, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design; Joan Handley, interim director of architecture; Lawrence senior, and Hobart Jackson, assistant professor of architecture and urban design.
LLOYD SAID T.G.E & Y, didn't have many changes to make, "because we haven't received that much merchandise since June 8."
Shaw stated that Woolworths hadn't received much merchandise since June 8, either, but he said anything they received after June 8 or dated June 8 would be changed in accordance with the ruling. He said that this took some time and hoped "the public will bear us for three or four weeks."
The President should set down some definite guidelines during the freeze, Crabtree said, because it was somewhat confusing.
According to the IRS spokesman, if a consumer spots what he thinks is a violation of the price freeze, he should call the IRS and give the name and address of the store, where it was purchased. If the price charged, the date purchased and other pertinent data, so the office can check it.
Senior High Camp, 36th,Began Sunday
Senior high school students arrived Sunday for the 36th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp at KU. Thirty-five to be represented. The United States will be represented.
The music camp includes three bands, two orchestras, two choirs and three stage bands. Each of these groups will rehearse three to four hours daily and will perform on their own instruments. Potential college credits are offered to students who enroll in the harmony course.
The camp will run through July 29.
If the IRS finds there is a violation, they will warn the store to roll back the price to the previous level. If the store does not comply, penalties could be invoked. The spokesman said civil penalties of $5,000 per violation could be assessed.
The senior high school division of art camp will offer classes for beginning and advanced students. Courses will be offered in design, drawing, art history and caricature. Students will use the Art Museum, the Natural History Museum and the campus as resources.
Weasl said if a Lawrence consumer or store employee noted a violation, he could contact the local consumer protection association. The association would contact him if IRS and the name of the individual who made the complaint would never be involved.
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Shakespeare, Artists Combine in 'Sublime'
Shakespeare and the romantic painters worked together to develop a "sublime" quality in the arts, said Randy Youle, teaching assistant in art history, in a lecture Sunday titled "Shakespeare and the Romantic Painter."
Voyale had trouble with the use of the word romantic when it pertained to the art of the period. He found the word sublime more than the word beautiful and his influence upon the romantic painter.
Henry Tussel, William Blake and Eugene Delacorte were the three painters whom Vladimir Krasnyak studied.
Tusell's paintings evidenced a direct link with the theatre. He used a simple backdrop for his scenes and highlighted the area of his concentration.
His choices of scenes were moments of terror and fantasy. He drew muscular figures and exaggerated gestures and rendered them with poise to Yoile, were taken from Michelangelo.
Youle said that Tusell's style changed with what the artist wanted to convey. He was the first painter to really deal with Shakespeare's plays in depth.
William Blake, a student of Tuseli, went
from the more direct and concrete approach to one of personal vision, Youle said. He would paint whatever he felt personally, adopting a single phrase or word and developing a painting from the feeling he got from the phrase.
Youle said Blake was a painter of visions, not of plays who would leave a fragmented expression, but never a complete statement.
Delacoxia avoided relief scenes, according to Youle. He concentrated on terror and emotional scenes, but avoided that were strongly expressional, scenes such as the scene from Hamlet where the dog loved Ophelia's father through a curtain.
Voyle said that the Augustan Age in England (1702-14) was offended by Shakespeare's work and therefore by the work of the painters he influenced. The works reflect the need and reason and the romantics' emphasis was on irregularity and emotions.
Delaicrosa was disturbed by Shakespeare's irregularity and thought that reason had to prevail. For this reason, he painted Shakspur's scenes as written, for stage in the theater.
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FOREIGN AFFECTS
The image shows a scene with a large body of water, likely a lake or river. The water is calm and reflective, suggesting a peaceful environment. There are no visible signs of human activity or movement.
In the background, there are two buildings. One building has a flat roof and windows that appear to be made of glass. The other building has a slanted roof and large windows. Both buildings are relatively tall compared to the water.
The sky is clear and blue, indicating a sunny day. There are no clouds visible in the sky.
The overall color palette of the image is dominated by shades of blue, green, and white, which give it a serene and calming atmosphere.
Brantley Lake
Brantley Lake National Wildlife Refuge
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
TUESDAY JUNE 26,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules / the associated press
Russian-Built Cambodian Missiles Turn Back American Aircraft
PHINOM PENH, Cambodia—Rebel forces fired Russian-built-heat-seeking missiles Monday against American jets flying in support of government troops south of Phnom Penh, though none of the U.S. planes was hit. It was the first reported instance of SAF Strella missiles being used in Cambodia against American planes since the Communist-led insurgency began last year. The U.S. Navy has been using the planes as Khmer Rouge insurgents advanced against government positions. The U.S. fighter-bombers broke off their mission in the face of the Strelta threat.
Bill Halting Bombing Passed
WASHINGTON — The House all but completed a cutoff by Congress of all funds for the U.S. bombing in Cambodia. It should approve of the Senate-passed cutoff after dramatically rejecting on a tie a proposal to delay the cutoff until Sept. 1. President Nikon will have 10 days after he receives the bill containing the cutoff to either approve or deny it. At 11 a.m., spokesman Gerald L. Warren noted the administration had strongly opposed the legislation but said he would "withhold comment on what the President may do."
Black Calls Kelley 'Insensitive'
WASHINGTON—The Senate Judiciary Committee heard conflicting testimony about Kansas City Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley, nominated to be FBI Director. Bruce R. Watkins, a black civil rights leader, pictured Kelley as insistent to the rights of blacks and the poor. But Everett P. O'Neal, another Kansas City black, predicted Kelley would make an excellent director of the FBI Watkins called him to investigate cases of homicide in the deaths of 6 blacks in the 1968 Kansas City riots following Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination.
A decision on Kelley's nomination is expected today.
Wichita Wants School of Law
WICHTA-The Wichita Area Chamber of Commerce announced today it would urge the Kansas Board of Regents to consider establishing a law school at Wichita State University. "The Wichita chamber believes the Board of Regents may find that the KU School of Law does not present satisfy all of the legitimate demands for legal education," said Robert Laing, chairman of the chamber's education committee. The University of Kansas accepts less than 200 out of approximately 1,500 applicants each year, he said.
Med Center to Get $1 Million
WASHINGTON—Grants of about $1.5 million to medical facilities in Kansas were announced through the state's Congressional delegation. The University of Kansas School of Medicine will receive $1,191,507. The School of Pharmacy will receive $79,835. The College of Kentucky State University will receive $623,980. The money comes from a grant program established to improve the quality of such schools.
Protestant Becomes Irish Head
DUBLIN—Erskeil Childs, an English-born Protestant with an American mother, has taken office as Ireland's president and has been a member of the United Nations politician, is committed to reconciliation with British-rules Northern Ireland. He has suggested calling an all-Ireland conference to promote understanding. But much of the north's Protestant majority remains Catholic, mainly Catholic Irish republic, even with a Protestant as president.
Market Gets Watergate Blues
NEW YORK—The stock market took a steady downhill ride in light trading as the resumption of Senate hearings apparently rekindled Wall Street's waries over Watergate. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks slumped 10.69 to 869.13, its lowest since mid-Member 1971. Some analysts said the Watergate hearings testimony of John W. Dean III, the ousted White House counsel, appeared to be dominating the market. Other observers, however, cited persistent economic worries as well.
Brezhnev Begins French Talks
PARIS–Leonid B. Ibrezneh and President Georges Pompidou of France start a round of discussions today in which the Soviet leader is expected to assure the French the U.S.-Soviet cooperation does not mean U.S.-Soviet domination. It is expected that beyond explaining how the Soviet leadership is asked to reaffirm that France will not be eased aside because of the better atmosphere between Moscow and Washington and Bonn.
And Now the Heat's Off
DREARY
A partly cloudy day is forecast for Lawrence and it's going to cool down quite a bit through the spring. The thundershowers may send people scutting for shelter, but there seems no indication of really good weather. Another cool night, with better weather expected tomorrow,
Watergate Takes Dramatic Turn
Dean Implicates President
WASHINGTON (AP)—John W. Dean III testified Monday that President Nikon was involved in the Watergate affair and ignored or failed to understand his repeated warnings about "a cancer growing on the presidency" that could destroy Nikon.
"When the facts come out," Dean said as he read a day-long, uninterrupted recitation of his own complicity, "I hope the President is forgiven."
Thus began the first testimony at the Senate Watergate hearings to point directly to presidential involvement in the cover-up of the Democratic Party breakin', the incident that touched off the explosive White House scandal.
LAST SEIT. 15, when 7 men were indicted for the Watergate break-in, Dean said he received congratulations from the press after G. Gordon Liddy, the former legal counsel to G. Gordon Liddy, the former legal
★ ★ ★
Dean's Story Is Told Amid Quiet Tones
WASHINGTON (AP)—There were, to be sure, a few special touches-of, affirmation, of loyalty yet lingering; and of sorrow-in, when it happened. Wesley Dean III solicited no sympathy.
Shattered as his life may be, the former White House counsel kept his voice as dispassionate to that of the proper servant, and he is one of the few Americans mansion had betrayed the nation's trust.
He told the truth—"So help me God," he said—and that was about the only spontaneity in his day of revelation by recitation.
Even his initial comment that "I hope the President will be forgiven" for his involvement in the Watergate affair was one he had scribbled on the cover of a prepared
Dean entered the Caucus Room accompanied by three bodyguards, two of whom had been with him.
They sat together one row back of the witness table, waiting for what surely was the most interminal quarter-hour of their lives as the standing-room audience gawked, pointed and whispered. But John Dean did not flinch.
Finally, Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. rapped his gaval and major counsel Sam Dash took the microphone to say "Mr. Dean, I understand you have a statement."
And Mr. Dean certainly did.
counsel to the President's re-election and finance committees.
"I left the meeting with the impression that the President was well aware of what had been joined on regarding the success of the mission," he said. "The Watergate scandal, Watergate scandal," Dean said. "I also had expressed to him my concern that I was not confident that the cover-up could be completed."
until he was fired April 30, said, however:
"IT'S MY HONEST belief that while the President was involved, that he did not realize or appreciate at any time the importance of this."
Dean, who was Nixon's official lawyer until he was fired April 30, said, however:
Others had pointed to Dean as a key member of the conspiracy to hide official involvement, as the convoy of executive officials was known to keep the Watergate defendants silent.
Dean's version, essentially, was that he did not know about the June 17 Watergate attack, which he said was the center of cover-up activities but did nothing with inconvenience of H.R. Holderman, the President's chief of staff, and John D. Erlichman, his principal aide for domestic intelligence.
DEAN'S STORY was one of trying to get the White House to admit the truth and that attackers were real.
"I thought it was time for surgery on the cancer itself and that all those involved must stand up and account for themselves in front of him, himself get out in front on this matter."
But, he said, Nixon did not understand. Eventually, said Dean, Halderman and Ehrlichman realized "I... could present a serious problem to them." He saw they were interested most in protecting themselves.
He said the two presidential aides
evolved a plan to have John Mitchell take the blame and by mid-April "the theory that had been discussed . . . was becoming the policy; if Mitchell takes the rap the public will have a high level person and be satisfied and the matter will end."
It took Dean nearly 6 hours to read his statement and questioning by the senators when he arrived.
DEAN SAID THAT Nixon told him on Feb. 27 that his chief aides, H. R. Haleman and John Ehrlichman, "were principals in the matter."
Dean quoted the President as saying of a clemency offer to one of the Watergate defendants that it would be no problem to raise up to $1 million in hash money.
That was six weeks before the President
Not until April 30 did Nixon announce the resignations of Halderman and Ehrlichman.
announced "major developments in the case."
THE FORMER WHITE House lawyer said vigorous efforts were undertaken to hide White House ties to the break-in and named the chief participants as:
Haldeman, Ehrlichman, former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, former Asst. Atty. Gen. Robert Mardian, campaign deputy director Jeb Stant Mardian and former White
He said he also briefed att. Terry, Gen.
Richard Kleindienst and Asst. Atty, Gen.
Robert H. Smith and Asst. Atty, Gen.
See DEAN, Back Page
U.S., Soviets Pledge Real Peace Efforts
SAN CLEMENTE (AP) -- President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev pledged in a summit-ending communique Monday to press for rapid settlement of issues that have divided Europe along cold war lines for nearly three decades.
The 3,400-word document, issued as Brezhnev left the United States, raised the possibility of a supersummit of American, Soviet and European leaders, perhaps within a year, to conclude a major East-West settlement.
The communique also contained Nixon-birehnev promises to step up work on the war effort.
encourage peace in Cambodia and to expand U.S.-Soviet trade.
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger also called the summit a success. At a news conference, Kissinger said extensive advance preparations insured its success.
NIXON SAID his week of talks with the general secretary of the Soviet Communist party held the promise of "peace for all the people of the world." Brezhnev agreed, saying their sessions meant "political beating" being backed up by military detente.
Retailers Review Freeze, Predict A Few Shortages
Center, "Shakespeare's Women," which opens at 8 ontight in the Experimental Theatre, draws from several plays to present women in love and in power.
Rv DEAN FORD
Kansan Staff Writer
Kansas Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTEC
Area grocery store managers said Saturday they expected some products to fall off the market if President Nixon's newest price freeze continued.
Celery, potatoes, coffee, milk, cheese and Celery, poultry were among products mentioned as being used in the recipe.
The KU Summer Shakespeare Festival and Institute goes on the road Thursday with performances of scenes from "Women" at Kansas City's Crown Women" at Kansas City's Crown
James Meyer, tow manager of Rusty's
Food Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets
1401 W. 22nd St. Brooklyn, NY 11236
Women in Love and in Power
CAROLINA BORGEL
Kroger Family Center manager Mike Dillon thought that potatoes would become scarce.
were not frozen and the wholesaler's were,
there was already a shortage of celery, and
they hadn't stocked it.
Milk, cheese and poultry markets have not shown any indications of future shortages as yet, but they may follow a pattern similar to that of potatoes. Doss said.
"If there is going to be a major shortage, the consumer will not find out for six months." Doss said. "At that time, the present cycle of canned and packed products that may be affected by the ice freeze will be delivered to the stores."
Using coffee prices as an example,
Delmas Windholz, store manager of
Dillon's, 1312 W. 6th, explained the
wholesaler's predicament.
"The wholesaler couldn't sell at a loss. Therefore, he would be to stop buying coffee, and the stores would be unable to receive the product."
"If the wholesaler had the price of coffee frozen at $1.07 and the store was frozen at $1.12, Windside said, "what would happen if I bought a cheaper charge more than $1.07 for their coffee?"
Most of the Lawrence store managers agree on the following aspects of the present
The present price freeze is not extremely different from the last price freeze
The present price freeze was overdue and seems to be necessary
—Areas other than food should also be frozen.
According to Windholz, the government should have kept the last price freeze going until the end of 2014.
As example of the rapid changes in food prices, Bruce Oppenlander, grocery department manager of Dillon's, 1740 Massachusetts, said over 180 changes had occurred in price listings from June 1 to June 13.
Tom Motmas, acting manager of Safeway, 711 W. 23rd, said that food prices may be going up, but by comparing figures of food prices to other prices, one would see that one was getting a relatively good price on foods.
Mouts said eggs would be $1.65 per dozen.
If the price increased the same percentage
over time, would it increase or decrease?
"I cannot understand why people are against price freezing," Windholz said. The lower-wage earners are the ones that work the worst when the price freezes are lifted.
Kissinger said, however, that the two leaders spent three hours Saturday night discussing the "unfinished agenda" of a summit in Oslo and a reunion summit next year in Moscow.
Store manager Jack Leckerman at Falley's Gibson Discount Foods, 2525 Iowa, said that if the President was going to freeze the price of foods, he should freeze everything, "right straight across the board."
Ceiling prices have been listed at each of the stores and are available for examination by customers at the stores' offices or courtesy booths.
As he left California Sunday, Breshnym indicates that he expected the new Moscow airport to be ready by mid-October.
HE SAID those issues included the Middle East, arms limitation agreements and mutual balanced force reductions in Europe.
Kissinger said such an early meeting was unlikely, although he acknowledged one might be held if an interim agreement on arms limitations was worked out.
KU Pathologist Exasperated; AMA Gets Bill
Dr. Nichols said he had spent 650 hours in the past six years handling trash mail that he said he received as the result of being listed in the association's directory.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP)—Dr. John M. Nichols, a pathologist at the University of Chicago, says he was trying for 18 years to get the American Medical Association to remove his name from its directory. Finally, on Monday, he sued the AMA for $40 million.
At $50 an hour, he figures the AMA owes him $32,500. He also asked for a $100,000 penalty from the AMA, plus court costs and attorney's fees.
last year, Dr. Nichols was refused access to federally-held evidence in President John F. Kennedy's death. Dr. Nichols sought authority to determine whether a bullet that passed through Kennedy's neck and the bullet casings were from his governor, was composed of the same metal as three tiny metal fragments removed from Connally's wrist.
He proposed to submit the materials to a neutron activation test in the University of Kansas nuclear reactor. He contended that if the bullet and the fragments were not completely destroyed, it would Report and the government's single-assassin theory would be disproved.
on campus
"I LIVE IN FEAR" will be shown at 7 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium. "I Live in Fear," starring Toshiro Mifune and abducted by Aikura Kurasawa, is the story of an elderly Japanese man who is obsessed by the fear of atomic war and wants to move his family to Brazil where he thinks they will be safe.
2
Tuesday, June 26.1973
University Dally Kansan
Apathy for Pets Angers Animal Shelter Managers
By CAROL GWINN and CONNIE DeARMOND
Garrett R. WILLIAMS
Kansan Staff Writers
The Humane Society is being used as a slaughterhouse by people who don't take care of their animals Vie and Helen Melton, and Lawrence Humane Society, said Friday.
The Melons said that of the 200 to 300 stray animals—mostly dogs and cats—that they took in every month at the shelter at 19th St, perhaps only 30 would be claimed.
They try to keep the rest of the animals as long as possible, but simply don't have the facilities to keep very many at one time, they said.
THE SHELTER HAS only 16 runs with a limit of two large dogs or three or four small
The animals are picked up by the
Lawrence Canine Control, otherwise known as the gatcatcher, who delivers them to the ablest.
If not claimed within three days, the animals become the property of the shelter. If the shelter can't find the owner, then the animal is put up for adoption.
June has been a slow month, however,
Mrs. Melton said, and not very many people
have gone.
SHE SAID THE SHELTER usually took in a lot of animals at the end-of-spring semester when students went home for the summer and couldn't take their pets with them. Animals breed during this time, she and people have more pets than they want.
That just isn't fair to the animals, she said. People should be willing to take the animal for its entire life span, not for just a year or two.
She said that owners often thought they were being humane by taking care of an animal for a year or two. But since puppies are just as young as humans, 1- or 2-year-old dogs and cats, a person wasn't doing an animal a favor by raising it until it's grown and almost unadoptable. Younger animals are more likely to be kept, which allows the shelter since they are more easily placed.
SHE SAID that many parents today thought that it was educational for their children to watch a dog or cat have a litter and then brought the offspring to the Humane Shelter. She said that she told those people that they should also have their children see
Mellon's husband said that a dog became more protective as it grew older, and thus, his dog would be more protected.
Melon estimated that only 10 per cent of the dogs placed in the shelter were healthy. In most cases, the animals are at any length of time is likely to have distemper, mange (a parasite) or worms. In most cases the diseases are incurable, but some animals are already in a weakened condition.
is another reason that younger animals have a better chance of adoption.
He said that there were two kinds of mange, one of which was fatal. He said that it was almost impossible to distinguish between them, and that doses of medicine potent enough to kill mange would probably also kill the dog.
HE SAID THAT once a dog had hookworms, it might as well be put to sleep. Even if the worms are eliminated, the worms are likely to bleed to death from its intestines.
Animals kept at the shelter are automatically given rabies and distemper-hepatitis shots by a veterinarian, who comes to the shelter every Wednesday.
The shelter also has taken in raccoons, hawks, falcons, an owl and now has a squirrel affectionately called "Nutless," but the owner says that Mrs. Melton said she wouldn't part with.
Most of these wild animals had been raised in captivity, but became wilder and mean" as they grew older, so that the family could survive. Most wild animals couldn't really survive in the wild.
IT'S MORE HUMANE not to raise it in captivity, Mrs. Melton said.
Social Welfare Recruits Minorities
The Melons are strong advocates of animal population control. As part of the Humane Society of the United States, the shelter spares all female animals.
The Meltons said that the idea that spayed animals often grew fat was not true. The Meltons said that a spayed female was no longer pregnant female; both would grow fat if overfed.
By KATHY HODAK
Karen Scott Writer
Encouraging minority group members to enter the field of social work is becoming increasingly important because so many individuals who now receive social services are of a minority group, Arthur Katz, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said Friday.
Jobs in social work are not hard to find for graduates who are minority group members, Katz said. In fact, these graduates are highly sought after, he said, because of the widely-accepted notion that minority group members have a disadvantage in working with minority groups.
"Obviously, the graduates don't have to go through the process of understanding what it feels like to be black or to be American Indian or Chicano," he said. "It's a complicated task; these ethnic populations are desperately eager to get our students." Katz said.
POVERTY AND RACISM have been identified by the National Association of Social Workers as the two most significant social problems in this country.
The two problems are closely related, Katz said.
Katz said that the school of Social Welfare was also committed to teaching its students about poverty and racism as the major problems in American society.
"We think that are solutions for these problems," Katz said. "Part of what social workers have to do essentially is to participate in the change processes that are necessary in our society so that these problems can be eliminated.
Mrs. Melton said that the Livestock Inspector, who had just checked the shelter for sanitation, proper drainage and other humane society requirements, asked her how many dogs an unspayed female could produce in seven years.
"TOWARD THAT EXTENT we feel that it is extremely important that we at KU add minority people to the manpower pool within professional social work."
Most of the minority students of the school have a history of marginal income. As a result, Katz said, they have not had much experience in learning how to negotiate jobs and find employment. It is difficult for them to feel comfortable enough to aggressively seek out higher
Blacks, Chicanos and American Indians are the largest minority groups in this part of the country. Katz has found that it was necessary to encourage people from these groups to become interested in pursuing a career in social welfare.
education in the same way as the majority of the white population.
"IF WE LEFT it to the natural selection process," Katz said, "it would be very difficult or impossible for us to get adequate numbers of minority group students. So the 'recruitment process' and I put that in quotes because no state university is supported as one of our encouraging, in the way of educational public relations service."
Katz said that the graduate program in social welfare provided an environment which was conducive to minority group people.
KU'S CHAPTER OF the Association of Black Social Workers, a national student
A spirit of welcome, the presence of ethnic minority members on the faculty, the ability to help students help minority students in their transition to higher education, financial aid wherever possible and a chapter of the Association of Indian Students such an environment in the school. Katz is
In addition to these faculty members, about 25 per cent of the field instructors in the graduate program were of ethnic minority backgrounds. Field instructors are paid by their members whose salaries are paid by their university agencies rather than by the University.
LAST YEAR THE School of Social Welfare employed 28 full-time faculty equivalents. Of the 28, six were black, one Chicago and one American Indian. Three of these were employed on a part-time basis and one was a teaching assistant.
42 minority group students out of a total 160 students received graduate degrees last year. 31 were black, six Chiango, two American, two Asian-American and one Puerto Rican.
organization, is funded by the Student Senate. Its primary goal is to help black social workers to deal with the problems of black recipients of social welfare services
The association also represents black students in the school to the faculty and to the administration and works toward improving the school more receptive of black students.
Katz said that the administration regularly talked with the officers and gave instructions to the staff.
"OFTEN THEY ARE critical and many times justifiably so," Katz said. "We allow for this criticism in term of openness to the program, we want it to be a program ideas that have been developed by the black students. If we can get the money to implement them, the ideas could be very
Curriculum policy is determined by a school council, which has a student composition of 50 per cent. The decision to induct minority groups came from this council.
The school now has two courses relating specifically to minority groups. One of these courses, "The Black Experience and Its Relevance to Social Welfare," is a required course for American Indian Experience and Its Relevance to Social Welfare," is an elective.
BOTH COURSES deal with the history of minority group people and how the American society has set itself up to deal with racial problems.
Katz admitted that the School of Social Welfare didn't have all the answers to developing an educational program that was highly successful for ethnic students.
Katz said that the content of these classes was very relevant to the students because some time during the two-year graduate program all the students had contact with at least one, if not two or three, minority populations.
"our concern is that we offer these courses not because it's a nice thing to do or a popular thing to do." Matz said. "We give them because we think the content is a valuable preparation for our students in helping them to work most effectively with
SHE HAD FIGURED, she said, about 10 pups in a litter, twice a year, would produce three pups.
minority group people whom they will come across."
Prof Says Atomic Waste Already Kansas Problem
Zeller said that not more than 10 pounds of solid nuclear waste would be generated in a month's time. But he noted that it would be white-hot and would emit radiation.
"We can't do this now with high level waste material. We need an international solution to this problem because we're all in here that gets into the ocean or air," Zeller said.
"There needs to be some policy so that equipment is replaced and there is a standardization of ordering equipment," Linton said.
that government statistics showed that an unspayed female would produce 4,400 dogs, because half the litters would be females who could bear puppies, too.
Group Says A-V Equipment Here Dated
If a person walked up within 100 feet of the radiation, it would be a welded shell, Zeller said. It would require a 30-ton lead shield to protect an individual at that distance, but there would still be a chance that the shield would melt.
He said that Japan did not have bedded salt and that they had been dumping a lot of low level waste into the ocean. Zeller said it was "the worst" thing he'd ever done this, but not to the same extent.
He added that the needs for communication equipment varied fantastically from one department to another, and that there needed to be a group established to stabilize the situation and to stay current with the equipment need.
MANY PEOPLE who want equipment do not know what they want to buy and they are fair game for the salesmen, according to Linton.
People interested in having a pet are encouraged to come to the shelter from 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday, they said. The shot put animal is an isis for a rabies shot picture of $3 to $4 for the care of the animal. A female costs $20 more because of the spaying.
Zeller said that he approved of the nuclear energy power plant that Kansas Power and Light Co. wanted to build if it was owned by people in a safe and cautious manner.
Mrs. Melton said that it cost $1 a day for the upkeep of an animal. Yet the city charges only $5 for the first day and $2 a day for a dog that is claimed by its owner.
Zeller said that if the United States chose to stop using nuclear power, it would not guarantee that other countries would also ston.
Zeller, who was the featured guest on the television show "Perspective," said that the deposits of nuclear waste had already been released from a nearby mine. Commission buried some nuclear waste 1000 feet below the land surface but the area in Kansas that it chose happened to have oil, gas, and water.
The task force comprised Bruce A Linton, chairman of the force and professor of journalism; Ross Copeland, associate director of child research; John Conard, director of university relations and development; Alex Lazarino, director of education; Phil McKnight, associate professor of education; Sundermeyer, Raytown senior; and Howard Walker, dean of continuing education.
The task force was established last September and report in April on the second report.
Edward Zeller, professor of geology and director of the radiation physics laboratory, said Sunday that he was not against the use of nuclear power in Kansas, although there were still many problems to be solved before it could be used effectively.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
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The Communications Task Force, appointed by Chancellor Raymond Nichols last fall to study the need for various forms of audio-visual communications at the university, reported that most of the equipment now being used is either deficient or obsolete.
Zeller said that the deposited nuclear waste remained radioactive for a quarter of a million years and was still deadly if it surfaced.
About 50 per cent of the shelter operations are paid by the city. The rest of the money is collected from individuals.
Kansan Staff Writer
He said that areas either to the north or west of Lyons or in Mexico would be appropriate for the deposits of nuclear material.
By JOHN KING
CURRENTLY THE shelter has 10 to 15 kittens, the squirrel, some small terrier pups and furry pooies. Bundle mix pup sacks of dogs including a white Sammy dusky.
The report lists several basic ways in which technology is used in higher education.
Zeller said another problem involved was the time factor. He said that in dealing with nuclear material, we were dealing with a quarter of a million years.
The equipment is used to support the instructor's efforts in the classroom and to extend the classroom to students and the public on and off camus.
generating this problem to our children and to future generations." Zeller said.
Melton said, "If everybody took care of their pets properly, we have a joyful day. We are wonderful."
The communications equipment that is now available at KU was listed in five divisions: audio, which is recorders, recorders with video and television, which includes cameras, video recorders, and monitors; still photo- 35 millimeter and polaroids, enlargers, and dark rooms; film-8 and 16 camera cameras, projectors and editing equipment.
THE REPORT ALSO said that some professors would not use any gadgets in their classrooms, rejecting them as valid and so be used to achieve their educational goals.
Another reason some professors do not employ machines in their classrooms, said the report, was fear that their role would be subordinated to the machines.
"We are generating this material now because we need energy, but we are still
LINTON SAID that the task force did not want to see the campus become a mass of wires and electronics, but there were many projects that would be improved with the use of machines.
The task force suggested in its report that for 1973-74 and 1974-75 a total of $83,000 would be needed to make better use of communications equipment at KU.
The task force recommended, "Every effort should be made to increase the level of training."
To be eligible for the program a handicapped child must come from a low-income family. Federal guidelines have been raised to permit more low-income families to participate. For example, formerly a family consisting of a mother and son could not earn more than $2,500 per year. Now such a family can earn up to $4,320.
Most of the equipment, said Linton, is obsolete and unsuitable. Some equipment is unophisticated, and there is very little use of television and cassette.
Plans have been made to mix both handicapped children and nonhandicapped children in the teaching program.
"There should be some way of rewarding faculty members for innovating teaching methods," said Linton. "Research is rewarded."
The University of Kansas became involved in Head Start last year when the School of Education began offering credit to students for work in area Head Start programs.
"Head Start has a new rule that 10 per cent of all children enrolled in the Head Start Program must be handicapped in order to headstart center to receive funding." she said.
Nancy Peterson, assistant professor of education, will coordinate the program for the handicapped. She will also train area teachers to work with handicapped children.
Fretag said that the current Health, Education and Welfare grant provides for aid to handicapped children and that in order for a community Head Start Program to survive, the program must include handicapped children in its enrollment.
Project Head Start Continues, Will Aid Handicapped Children
Hearing and sight deficiencies and cerebral palsy were cited as examples of the types of handicaps that will be dealt with under the new Head Start program.
Head Start's Community Children's Center is accepting applications for children in grades K-12.
" our new grant will expire in March 1974," said Frettag, "but I feel very strongly that the program will continue for an additional two years beyond March because we have received an option for additional time under the new grant."
H
A special program for handicapped children will enable Project Head Start to continue in Lawrence for at least one more year. The program will be directed by the director of Community Center Head Start;
Head Start is for preschool three-to-five-year-old children. Free medical and dental services are among the benefits for children enrolled in the program.
Earlier this spring, Lawrence Head Start workers feared their funds would be eliminated because of threatened cutbacks in core programs by the Nixon Administration.
For children to be eligible, mothers must be in school, in school or in a job training program.
Further information is available at the center.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 26.1973
3
BROOKLYN'S WORLD FOOTBALL CLUB
Kansan Staff Photo by PRIS BRANDSTED
The Tiny Gourmet
Waiting for her watermelon treat while piening at Broken Arrow Park on Monday, Cindy Duerksen anxiously follows the slicing operation. The picnic was organized by the KU School of Education faculty.
Gas Shortage Drains Dealer Wallet
Rv PRISCILLA KAUFMAN
BECAUSE COLLINS HAD already sold 15,000 gallons of the month's allotment, the backfucked him to limit his customers to five gallons. Collins said he made a marry-bent cent per gallon. The 10,000 gallon cutback cost him $500 in March, he estimated.
A conversation such as this one would have been a surprise in Lawrence a year ago. However, it has become a not untraditional occurrence for many of today's motorists.
"IF INDUCTION authority is not extended, only those men who have had their liability extended until age 35 still could be induced," the leaflet said.
"Sorry, sir. I can give you only 10 calls."
The inconvenience has also hit gas station operators, often right in the pocketbook.
THE GASOLINE SHORTAGE has obviously inconvenienced drivers who have been forced to stop more frequently for fuel than before, and now have been having hinder prices for what they get.
Jerry Collins, who manages a Texaco station at 2206 Iowa St., was receiving a monthly allotment of 30,000 gallons from his bulk distributor until March of this year. He was notified March 15 that his allotment had been cut to 20,000 gallons.
HOWEVER, COLLINS SAID most of his customers tried to understand and said they would give him their business whenever possible.
"I really had to talk to him and explain in situation," Collin said. "From some people."
Bob Gosvenner, manager of a Champlin station at N90. 2N st, received similar reactions from his customers when he limited them to 10 gallons. Gosvenner said most of his customers accepted the inconvenience without getting mad.
The president cannot extend the draft induction authority on his own, but he must ask Congress. The draft boards will not be allowed to draft law, or draft law requires that Selective Service
National headquarters is starting a campaign to inform the public on draft status. Cordell said. The campaign will send letters to accounts continue to exist and men must register.
The opinion that "it always happens to the other guy" has been discarded as people find themselves driving into closed stations and denied the amount of gas they request.
At Gosventer's station, customers can buy a full tank of gasoline during the morning. At 10 gallons at 10 gallons a customer. He said that when he ran out of this month's gas allocation, he would probably have to close his station and move to a new shipment of gasoline would arrive.
Almost all station managers have
The cutback hurt his business tremendously. Collins said. He served regular customers who had depended upon him for gas and service. According to Collins, many customers could not limit their purchases when they could buy unlimited amounts from other dealers.
Kansan Staff Writer
"FILL 'on up, please'"
A leaflet available from Cordell explains the status of the selective service and rights and responsibilities following the end of draft inductions.
Secretary of Defense Laird announced the end of the draft on Jan. 27, 1973.
Even though there is no draft, men 18 years and older must register with the selective service board, Edith Cordell, who administers of local boards 18, 24 and 2, Sunday.
In the past year, total real, personal and utility property valuation for Douglas County has increased by more than $6 million to $145,111,000.
CORDELL SAID THAT there was a sixty-
day time period in which an individual
might come in to register: thirty days
before his birthday and thirty days after.
Kansan Staff Writer
Higher Valuations May Reduce Taxes In Douglas County
Cordell said that there were a few men who had been coming in late to register because they didn't think that it was necessary to register any longer.
Bv JOHN KING
Higher valuation represents good news for taxpayers, because indications are that leases levies for financing various governmental operations will result from the increase.
According to Walter Cragan, county commission chairman, it appears that the county-wide mill levy for real estate may decline somewhat because of the increased valuation, meaning a possible decrease in the individual property owner's tax bill.
Real estate taxes account for more than $86,453,000 of the valuation; personal property taxes amount to over $22,296,000; more than $92,900 of the total.
Cragan said that the commission had no idea how large the decline would be.
"There is a law," Cordell said, "but it is not enforced. If you are late just come in and register. Then all I ask is that they pass me on to their friends to come in and register."
Darlene Hill, budget director, released the valuation abstract Monday. The abstract shows that the county valuation has increased $6,211,000 over the 1922 figures.
Draft Gone But Not Registration
Price hikes have been kept to a minimum,
dealers have assured the public. Dale
Foltwell, manager of a Standard station at
1300 Massachusetts St., said he raised his price for regular gasoline one cent in the last month.
The price jump was not because of the shortage, but because of the price hike from bulk distributors, said Richard Craigman, manager of a Fina station at 1819 W. 23rd St.
Ivan Percival, a Phillips dealer at 1843
Massachusetts, was valued his price once
the last two.
Claude Elms, who operates a Sinclair station at 521 W. 23rd St., said he charged his customers four cents more than he did two months ago.
had to cut back their operating hours by two to four hours per day. Many stations have
Other dealers agreed with Craig, saying that they had to pay more for their gas supply now than several months ago. Most dealers said, however, that they had to compensate for the amount of gas they could not sell because of the shortage.
The gas shortage has been studied by energy experts, legislators and the public. Some say that there is a critical shortage. Others assert that the crisis is the result of a power play by the major oil companies, citing as evidence reports such as one by the company itself. The major oil company earnings were up 37 percent in the first quarter of 1973.
A petition was filed for by City Attorney Milton Allen for "declaratory judgment" on the validity of the party's claims. The case was filed by Fire Fighters Ecalc Union 1966.
Allen maintained in a statement filed in court, that the subject of the petition is improper, calling it an administrative rather than a legislative tonic.
Petition Validity Ruling Asked
Prices would probably have to be raised soon, however, according to some dealers who have been warned.
"As far as the dealer is concerned, there
The case will be assigned to a district court judge Friday and a hearing date will be set later. The union now has 20 days to reply to the city petition.
The petition, which has 3,400 signatures,
was presented June 12 to the Lawrence City
Commission. It calls for equal pay between
the two employees in categories in which the pay would be equal.
Union officials have said in the past that they had lawyers prepared to contest the claims.
In a vote June 19, the commission unanimously decided to seek a court clarification of the state statute under which the union circulated its petition.
Application for regular permits will be subject to approval by representatives of the University Parking Board during enrolment. Special cases in need of the more highly restricted zones will file their applications with the five-member Parking Board.
The August regulation change will provide a color-coded permit system that allows members access to parking lots close to the buildings that they frequent. The lots around the campus will be color-coded differently for each of several different lots having the same color.
He now pumps gas to an average of 1,000 fewer cars a month. Collins traced the shortage to a growing population with more than a quarter of its vehicles being model cars. Because of these devices, gas mileage has been cut by one to three miles a gallon in some cars, according to Collins. He said a 1972 full-sized air conditioned car had a mileage of about 1973 models get only eight miles a gallon.
Goavener service trucks used by a company working at the Clinton Dam. Cannon buys 36,000 gallons of diesel fuel a month. His allocation is 10,000 gallons, less than 28 per unit.
COLLINS, WHO SAID he had built up a good business in his 1½ years of Lawrence dealership, pointed out that Texaco spent a large amount of money to build his new and modern station. According to Collins, he surpassed the estimated potential for his business by making money for Texaco when he was able to sell 30,000 gallons of gas a month.
VISITORS WILL still be exempt from
PERSONS WHO OBTAIN a specific color parking permit will be able to park in any zone designated under that color. This process will allow greater mobility for permit holders and a greater potential usage of the lots. he said.
a shortage," said Bob Nitsch, a Gulf
dealer at W 12, 3rd St. "If we can't get
it."
GOVENSEY SAID HE did not know if there was an actual gas shortage. However, Govensey, who said that he was one of the few people in the city to use a diesel fuel (fus), has run into a serious problem.
"Permits will no longer be restricted to any specific loc. "Fenestera maker said, "except on special conditions and for special or emergency parking permits."
Texaco dealer Collins said it made no sense for Texaco to supply him with less fuel.
New KU Traffic Rules Detailed
New parking and traffic regulations will become effective August 26, 1973. Major changes in the new regulations will deal with the restrictions on a new color-coded system of permits rather than specific zone permits and a new policy that will treat students and faculty of the school.
Lawrence dealers said they did not know any solution to the problem.
According to E. W. Fenstemaker, lieutenant in charge of parking for the traffic and security department, it has been a long standing theory of the University that an automobile is not a necessity in the educational process.
Because the use of an automobile is viewed as a special privilege, the state of Kansas will not provide funds for parking on its own funds for maintenance of the lots.
There are still problems arising with many employees about parking registration. Because of the inflationary cost of maintenance material and labor, it is necessary for the price of the parking permits to go up. Fenstemaker said.
"It IS A FEELING throughout the institution that persons who use the parking lots should for them," said Lillian Feldman, who applied to both students and faculty.
parking violation fees if they were legally parked at the time they received the ticket.
However, visitors who park in an illegal or hazardous manner will be subject to the same regulations that apply to students and faculty.
Violations in Group I are parking in wrong zones, non-designed parking areas, guest areas, restricted areas or unmarked areas. This group also includes fines for legally parked vehicles that do not have permits.
Parking violation fees are organized under four groups.
AFTER THE AUGUST change, fees for Group I volsitions will be $5.
Group II parking violations are displaying a mutilated permit, not displaying a KU registration sticker. Group III parking violations are displaying a stickers and displaying obsolete stickers.
There will be no fee assessed for Group II
violations if they are corrected within seven days, the warning is ignored, however a failure may occur.
GROUP III WILL consist of violations that are hazardous. These are blocking a drive or roadway, restricting normal flow of traffic, parking in a designated fire lane, parking adjacent to a fire hydrant or storing water in a University premises without authorization.
Group IIi violations will entail a $10 fine plus an automatic tow. Violators will be subject to pay all previous unpaid violations and tow charges.
Forged or altered parking stickers or permits will constitute a Group IV violation. Persons receiving Group IV fines will have to pay a $25 fine and to be required to pay a $2 fine and toow them.
Any parking violation fee that remains unpaid after 14 days of receipt of the ticket may be charged to the individual.
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After an individual registers he is classified I-H and his file is placed in a holding category until his nineteenth birthday, there is a national lottery for
AFTER THE DRAWING, Selective Service will announce a 1-H cutoff number. If the number assigned is at the cutoff number or below, processing for possible induction begins and the individual will receive an invitation to apply for the calendar year until his twentieth birthday.
After finishing a year of vulnerability the
After reaching age 26 a man has no chance of being daffed, unless he is a medic.
“Current regulations do not permit the induction of any registrant beyond his house, a holiday unless he is a violator, a parachuter an unsatisfactory reservoir,” says the leaflet.
Play Highlights Female Roles Using Shakespearean Scenes
individual will be placed in a lower category of draft vulnerability and be returned to Class 1-H. Each succeeding year, until he turns 26 or, if he has had a deferment, age 35, he will be placed one rung lower on the ladder of draft vulnerability.
Shakespearean drama presents a problem to actresses. Shakespeare wrote
"Sakabease's Women" will open at the
Kansas Theater at 8 p.m.
Shakespeare was forced to limit female roles to those his actors could handle. No women were allowed on the stage during Shakespeare's time.
The presentation, which was organized by William Keeler, professor of theatre, is a collection of 16 scenes that concentrate on women's roles.
The show is directed by three graduate students, Piet Knetsch of Amsterdam, Ronald Shull of Haven and Gerald Shinder of Overland Park. They have the respon-
tibility to pull together their individually-directed scenes into a cohesive production.
"To structure the production we have centered on two major themes," Shul said. "Act I shows women in relation to love; act II shows them in relation to power."
"We have attempted to provide the assistance and evidence of Shakespeare's women in diversity."
Many of the actors play more than one part in "Sharespeare's Women" and are required to change into a number of varied roles in diverse styles.
Performances will be preceded by musical presentations of Meade Hall Players in the theatre lobby. Cookies, tarts, punch, postcards and books will be sold. The play will run through June 30 and on July 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7.
The scenes in "Shakespeare's Women"
are taken from the plays "Two Gentlemen
From Verona," "Much Ado About
Nothing," "Merry Wives of Windsor",
"Macbeth," "Coriolans," "Richard III"
and "Henry IV" parts II and III.
Breakfast in Park, Volleyball Planned
SUA will sponsor volleyball games at 7 tonight at South Park.
A breakfast in the park will be held at 7 a.m. Wednesday in the South Park. The breakfast is also sponsored by the SUA.
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Tuesday, June 26, 1973
University Dally Kansan
Pornography Supreme Court's Obscenity Ruling Arouses Widespread Dismav
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—Predictions of what could happen to America's books, movies and television were made by Supreme Court decision on obceancy, ranged from "no effect" to "chaos" Thursday as spokesmen for the publishing and motion picture industries reacted to the ruling.
Some predicted a reactionary return to the "dark ages" of Prohibition (with sexual matter widely banned instead of alcohol) as a result of the Court's 5-4 decision returning many responsibility for defining obscene matter to individual states and municipalities.
The decision set a new standard that could give state and local law enforcement agencies more leeway in prosecuting allegedly obscene material. A work need no longer be found "utterly without redeeming social values," a 1967 guideline of the court, but would only have to be shown to lack "serious literary, artistic, political, or
scientific value" to be judged obscene.
According to the decision, a book or movie could be found not obscene in one city, while being banned in another. The court ruled that "community standards" used to determine obscenity will be those of the local, not the national, community.
Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, which represents the major film companies, said Thursday evening that the ruling would have no effect on the responsible motion picture industry.
"The (the Court) are talking about the obviously, patently and gratuously pornographic material that comes out; the films that make a feeble attempt to redeem themselves by ininserting 'art,''enlivening and植入 an obviously pornographic context.
"Of course, the real problem is this: what happens if you send what you think is a serious work of art into the marketplace or local law enforcement officials harass it?"
"The only picture from a major studio I can think of that people might wonder about 'Is Last Tangy in Paris' because of its so-called 'fourth wave.' It isn't tittatul. It's a work of art. I think the
"You may win in court, but then you may have to spend so much money that you've doomed your picture to economic disaster. And a jury may say 'You think that's serious but we think that's obscene.' We're sure we have to examine this very carefully."
saving thing in the Supreme Court decision is that Serious works of art are not within reach.
comment
CENSORSHIE BURGER COURT
LAST TANGO IN AMERICA
Adventures Dominate New Paperbacks
It is the "community standards" aspect of the decision that will most affect film.
Some interesting fiction is on the racks for summer paperback reading. One of the new titles is a Japanese novel by Yukihisa Mishima, SPRING SNOW (Pocket, $1.50). The book, a love story set in 1912, is about Kiyoaki and Satoko, the latter betrothed to the violence of the imperial family, and the tragic violence in which they become involved.
Harry Crews' THE GOSPEL SINGER
(Pocket, 59 cents) is on the trashy side. It's about a southern singer—handsome, virile, and treasly. Much more and more chickens.
Lloyd Zimperl's MEETING THE BEAR:
JOURNAL OF THE BLACK WARS (1984)
fiction though it superficially reads like
nonfiction. It is a prophetic and scary tale
that offers the reader terrorism in Chicago,
through the brainwashing, and concentration cannies.
Donald E. Westlake's BANK SHOT (Pocket, 95 cents) will recall the author's earlier "The Hot Rock." The people from that book are reunited in this one-a-criminal now selling encyclopedias, an exon who steals cars with doctors' license who lives with his caby mother. The thieves in this suburban their target a suburban bank, using a mobile trailer home as temporary headquarters.
NDSL Fund Boost Could Benefit Many In Upcoming Year
"This estimation is based on the average of individual loans of $800." Roegs said.
KU will receive **782,742** for its program. This represents an increase over the 1972-73 budget of $500 million.
Jerry Rogers, director of student financial aid at the University of Kansas, said Monday that from 1,700 to 1,800 students could benefit from the recently increased National Direct Student Loan Program in the 1973-74 academic year.
Rogers said the maximum amount a graduate student could receive was $2,500 and the maximum amount for undergraduate students was $1,000.
Rogers said that he was not certain why the graduate students had a higher maximum amount than undergraduates, and that this made it difficult to graduate students had families to support.
Rogers said that to be eligible for a loan, students must have good academic financial need based on the College Scholarship Need Analysis, be progressing toward graduation and be enrolled at least two years before taking the loan.
Rogers noted, however, that there were provisions for students to receive more credit.
When the demand for funds exceeded the supply, Rogers said that academic criteria were important. He said that a 2.0 grade point average was generally expected.
Fletcher Knebel's TRESPASS (Pocket, $1.50) is a reprint of a successful novel that tells what happens when militant blacks take over suburban homes, which they demand as retribution for all the past blacks have undergone. This is a good one.
Jack Pearl's VICTIMS (Pocket, 95 cents), a book that is headed for the movies, is available in both print and e-book formats.
Of some interest are two new volumes that may be described, briefly, as "relevant." R. A. Lafferty's OKLA HAN-ANLI (Pocket, $1.25) is about an American Indian, a Chook giant, who is farmer, blacksmith, boatbuilder, ferryman, distiller, tanner, and founder of a town. Phil D. Ortego's WE ARE CHICANOS (Pocket, $1.25) is about an American literature, with a historical introduction, background material and photographs. Ortego is director of Chicoa affairs at the University of Texas, El Paso.
review
war against the early establishment and a war police officer who is out to arrest him.
Max Brand's AMBUSH AT TORTURE CANYON (Pocket, 75 cents) is one by the late great western story writer. An ex-Texas Ranger pursues a cold and cunning woman, and she learns that John Whitchatz, whose formula is adventure, sex, and assortedillness. These are wild ones—STUNTMAN'S HOLIDAY, CORYS' LOSEERS (Pocket, 98 cents each), GANNON'S VENETTA and LAFTITE'S SAGACY (Pocket, 75 cents each).
There are two timey biographies—Peggy Maun's *GOLJA* (Washington Square, $1.25) and *NANCY* (Stanford, $1.75) on ASSISK! *HIS LIFE AND LOVES* (*Pocket*, $1.25). "Golda" is about Golda Meir, of
Russell D'O'Neil's "THE ALCATRAZ INC. Young Americans who occupy the famous island as a protest against their society, who threaten to blow themselves up, and who then establish shapes up, and who then begin to attack them, they themselves have created on Alcatraz.
Two new mystery thrillers are Don Tracy's A CORPSE CAN SURE LOUSE UP A WEEKEND! (Pocket, 95 cents) and Chris DUNN'S COMING (Pocket, 75 cents). Both are originals. The hero of the first of these is a painter who comes home and finds a dead body sprawled on his living room floor. His wife is in danger from many complications. Chase is a writer whose books are very popular in Europe. The guy in his new book is an ex-ploit who has a plan for hijacking a plane and hestling it into disaster. But his big plan turns into disaster.
course, from the Russian Ukraine, to Milwaukee, to Denver, and to Israel, where she became premier. Remarkable woman. The Onassis book has been featured already in several magazines. The author, once man Friday to Onassis, describes the long affair between her and the courthouse of Jacket the marriage, the marriage contract. Breathless gossip.
Marco Vass's THE STONED APOCALYPSE (Pocket, $1.25) is a recollection of Vass's years among the spiritual avant-garde, where he was a head, scientistologist, pornographer, mystic, psychotherapist, experimental artist. Hans Holzer's BORN AGAIN: THE TRUTH BEHIND REINCARNATION (Pocket, 95 cents) will reach a similar audience. Holzer also has written about Gothic ghosts and witchcraft. A parapsychologist, he says he has discovered and several "authentic" cases of reincarnation.
There's a new, relevant volume edited by Laura Chester and Sharon Barba, RISING TIDES: 20TH CENTURY AMERICAN WOMEN POETS. It includes people like Edna St. Vincent Millay and Marianne Moore, as well as lesser-knowns, and it's quite attuned to feminine consciousness movements.
makers, according to producer-director Stanley Khaner, now in Houston to promote the movie.
"On the surface, this has very tragic overtones," he said. "I can't imagine 50 different places to stand judgment on whatever."
Kramer said the decision could be "chaotic" to movie companies.
—Calder M. Pickett
No major motion picture companies would comment. Some observers theorized that the heavy financial stake the company held in its production accounted for their silence. But some industry spokesman said they were simply unclear as to what the implications of the new decision were; "Our legal department was fine," said a spokesman for United Artists.
Members of the porno film subculture predicted doom for themselves.
"The hard-core industry is going to dry up," said Dave Friedman, president of the Adult Film Association of America, an organization of the makers of so-called X-rated films. "The court rulings is a lot more far-reaching than any of us expected."
But Stanley Fleischman, a California lawyer who has defended numerous free-running prosecutions, said
"There will initially be a lot of cases on these things," he said. "But now the American people accept them (sexual films), so we're going to take these cases to local legislature and locally legal legislation will be passed that will limit the amount of prosecution that's done."
Producer-director Otto Preminger said from his New York office that obscenity would be "worse than ever" under the new decision.
"It will open the doors to real porn—but in secret. It will be like a Prohibition. We'll have speakeasies where people can get porn. The quick buck people who make porno will not give up, and the more you forbid it, the worse it will be."
Spokesmen for the book industry said the decision would lead to, at the least, complications over what could and could not be printed and sold.
"It makes the job of a bookslayer much more difficult," said G. Royce Smith, executive director of the American Bookslayers Association, the industry's largest publisher, in a definition of what is legally obscene is more of an emotional than a legal basis."
Irwkarp, an attorney for the Authors League of America, said that the Court's emphasis on state standards would lead to "real restraints" and "real restraints" on publishers.
Publisher Ralph Ginzburg, whose appeal of a three-year obscurity sentence conviction was rejected last year by the Supreme Court, called the decision a "supreme blunder" and said it would be a "bonanza" for pornographers.
"These people aren't 'creative, they're businessman,' said Ginzburg, who served eight months of the sentence last year. He said he would be the aura of forbidden fruit that their business depends on. The decision will achieve exactly the opposite of what those pathetic old men on the Court want; it will allow very publications they want to sunnées."
Author Henry Miller, who wrote "Tropic o. Cancer" and other once-banned novels, expressed surprise at the decision when reached at his California home.
"The tenor of the times is totally against it," said Miller. "Never have we had such freedom of expression; I don't see how we are unwieldy. The Court is being very unrealistic."
Barnary Rosset, of Grove Press, which has been a pioneer in publishing such erotic literature as the first American novel by James Patterson, "Insecure," denounced the decision as "insane."
"The American people aren't shocked by sex and politics as the Supreme Court is," he said. "This idea that a closed group at the top should tell people what they can see and read is purely in line with the whole Watergate syndrome. It doesn't represent thinking today. As for me, this decision won't stop me. The whole thing is a pitiful
attempt to turn the clock backward."
When was the last time you stood up and applauded a movie?
When was the last time you stood up and applauded a movie?
WALKING TALL
"Might just turn out to be this year's...'
'BILLY JACK!'
—Kevin Thomas, L.A. Times
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Sat & Sun at 1:00, 4:45, 7:30, & 9:45
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Sol Stein, president of Stein and Day Publishers, called the decision "reckless" and "nearderthal" and said that "instead of settling this issue, the Court has made it more incendiary. Local jurisdiction is equivalent to abandoning federal law. It
Despite the far-reaching aspects of the new Supreme Court ruling on pornography, there was little initial local reaction among those potentially affected.
"I think it's too early to comment, said Eldon Herman, manager of Granada Theatre. "It depends on how the local police can in a county attorney, the Attorney General."
Mild Local Reaction To Supreme Court Pornography Ruling
"We don't plan any radical changes in our bookings. We haven't run any hard-core pornography, so we shouldn't have any trouble."
THE RULING
PETER O'TOOLE
CLASS
Weekdays—2:00, 7:10, 9:45
Sat & Sun 6:30, 8:30, 7:00, 9:45
Twilight Prices—4.35
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MARKETS & MUSEUMS
READER'S DIGEST
Tom Sawyer
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biggest and the best. THE MACK
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Tom Sawyer
John Shepard, police community relations director, did not foresee any local
Granada
HEAIR CITY phone W3-5785
THE
RULING
PETER O'TOOLE
CLASS
"A court test case is necessary to determine the standard for obscenity." Shephard said. "The Supreme Court left open what would be defined as obscenity."
He said that enforcement, once the standard had been determined, would provide a better chance.
Hillcrest
A spokesman for the Attorney General's office in Topeka said, the office had not yet filed a complaint.
R the biggest and the best.
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Varsity
THEATRE ... Tynecastle W1J08
Barbara Streisand in
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"The opinion was only handed down last week," he said. "We have no copy of the ruling and haven't seen the darn thing, except in the press."
Varsity
THILORE ... Telephone 915-2655
LARVEST ALICTIONS
in
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Anron Aher, a vice president of Holt, Rinehart and Winston, label the decision iteratively regressive" but John Willey, a former New York attorney, said the decision wasn't restricting.
means returning certain parts of the country to the dark ages" (Stain didn't specify which parts of the country he was referring to.)
Fringed chided the Supreme Court for seeming to retreat from the issue of objection.
He pledged to devote all his energies toward getting the decision reversed.
"The Court does not give you any guidance on what you can do and what you cannot do," he said. "This is the most detestable thing. How will we know what is obscene? Someone could go into the woods and maybe half of the haintings on the walls."
Although the decision did not directly touch on the broadcasting industry, alleged obscurity has been an issue there as well. The FCC has been investigating "topless radio" broadcasts and the "blue movie" stations; that is, stations where the broadcasters stations. What the implications, if any, are for broadcasting as a result of the decision, remain a mystery.
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2nd
kansas
Shakespeare
Festival & Institute
1973
Present
"Shakespeare's Women"
A Collage of Scenes
by
William Shakespeare
June 26, 27, 28, 29, 30 July 2, 3, 5, 6, 7
Experimental Theatre
Murphy Hall Curtain 8:00 p.m.
Refreshments and Entertainment
in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m.
Ticket Prices: $2.00 — Students $1.00
Reservations: Telephone: 864-3982
Tuesday, June 26, 1973
5
University Daily Kansan
Kansan Photo by RAYNA LANCASTER
Hot Fudge Sundae
The abstract painting "Chrome Foam 2" by Gary Pruner is open to many interpretations. The painting is a new work of art in which the museum currently on display at the museum are a
By C. S. GROOM
Kansan Staff Writer
Senate Plans Agenda For Education Week
Planning Higher Education Week (Nov. 4-11) activities at the University of Kansas is one of the Student Senate's tasks this summer.
Nancy Archer, Anamosa senior and Senate vice president, said she thought that it would be a good time for the Higher Education Week. It is scheduled at the same time as Senior Week, a home football game and the selection of a Hone Award recipient.
ARCHER ATTENDED A meeting of the council of Student Body Presidents to try to improve our school's physical health.
The senate hopes to talk with Gov. Robert Docking about the project and also plans to invite several legislators to the campus to promote it, Archer said.
Pearson Program Gets National Notice
Because the senate lacks funds for any promotion, it will have to rely on other organizations to fund the project. Archer plans to devise an outline by August 1.
The communications committee is producing the Lawrence Yellow Pages, which will include every office and business district. John Beisser, Salina junior, is chairman.
Mert Buckley, Wichita senior and president of the senate, has appointed Blake Biles to the Kansas Student Lobby Association. This group is associated with students at StudentLoby, which attempts to get federal legislation passed to benefit students.
At least two articles have appeared recently—a story by Solveig Egger in the Washington, D.C., Roll Call and a syndicated column by Allan C. Brownfield.
THE PEARSON PROGRAM was started as an experiment three years ago by Quinn, Frank Nelick, professor of English, and Frank Foster, professor of comparative literature.
The controversial University of Kansas Pearson Integrated Humanities Program is beginning to receive attention from national education writers.
ARCHER IS ALSO working with organizations throughout the state to try to get students to participate in college students. She said that the University did not have communications with several organizations that could provide jobs and help them, but that she was writing to the organizations.
Russell Kirk, another national columnist, is writing an article on the Pearson Program in the National Review and in his syndicated column in the near future, according to Dennis Quinn, professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania program. Kirk's column appears in more than 100 papers, including the Los Angeles Times.
CONTROVERSY AROSUE over the program this spring when the College Assembly began to consider whether the program should be given permanent appraisal. Then the program said the teachers practiced dogmatism and advocacy teaching.
In the four 6-hour classes, students study Greek works, including those of Homer, Plato and Herodotus, Roman works, the Old and New Testaments, medieval works and modern works including those of Cervantes, Goethe, Freud and Marx.
The week will feature speakers, panels and luncheons. The Student Senate is trying to recruit all other state-supported universities and colleges working together to provide the same speakers, thus attracting speakers from these institutions to be available to an individual university.
At that time, the program was given temporary approval by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Assembly for fulfillment of freshman-sophomore requirements in Western Civilization, speech, humanities and English 1, 2 and 3.
After a series of five meetings, the assembly voted by mail ballot to discom-
tinue the use of the program as fulfillment of any distribution requirements.
An excerpt from Eggerz's article, dated May 17, said.
"IN A FITT of zealous jealousy the College Assembly abolished the Pearson program. What makes a university plunk out a popular program in the classies?"
'Part of the reason seemed to be the none to low profile cast by the professors, two of whom were called 'arrogant' and 'authoritarian.' One publicly denounced abortion. All were non-radicality and medieval in outlook as the critics said.
"'The professors do state their opinions,' said one student. 'But rather than ramming them down your throat, they make you work out your own convictions and philosophy.'
"Pearson students, though, felt the course content valuable enough to make an occasional dose of '14th century Catholicism' palatable.
'Student outtry was to no avail.' Advocacy teaching shouted a group of people. The market place must be a free market where customers can name the of 'pluralism' they abolished a
AND BROWNFELD criticizes the
assembly's action in his June 1 column:
"Recent events at Kansas University, however, tend to expose the intolerance of those who urge 'tolerance', and the real hostility to any 'innovation' which differs from traditional self-proclaimed" of behavioral science and self-proclaimed "relevant" courses of study.
popular alternative to the mass university."
"It is interesting to note that Kansas University is the center of the 'human development' movement, many of whose members are followers of psychologist B.F. Skinner, who seeks to control Americans in a Pavilion manner and believes man has no moved, to quote the title of his recent book, 'The Evolution of Reason' to vote in the College Assembly indicated that the kind of 'human development' desired was certainly not intellectual.
"Perhaps the advocates of 'innovation' at Kansas should consider the words of black psychologist Kenneth Clark who told a graduating class at Amherst College that what was really important was 'non-commissioned' on college to recognize the needs of those did seek immediate relevance in their studies—students whom he called 'the forgotten men of the present ferment of campus confrontation.'"
RICH PAXSON, Baxter Springs senior, is compiling a housing committee handbook of off-campus living situations, which he said was much thorough than any of the current handbooks.
Mike Biggs, Wichita senior, acts as research director for the senate.
The senate executive committee, of which Rich Lauter, Evanston, III., senior, is student chairman, will meet within the next month to discuss faculty promotion and tenure.
As a new group of student senators takes over the senate office, there is refilling and compiling of information and books with the aid of Dottie Knetsch, assistant to the treasurer, and Susan Cashin, Creve Coeur junior and full-time secretary.
Ain Dillon, Hutchinson senior and chairman of the student executive committee of the university, last Sunday to discuss line item changes, supplementary allocations to the budget and Wesley Building allocations, along with committee reports.
Ammonium nitrate dust is the only emission not in compliance with state laws. In New York, the Chemicals Assn. plant east of Lawrence. Co-op project manager E. T. Coreau said the operation had until July 1975 to find the means of controlling the dust problem.
Chemical Plant Lacks Control For One Dust
Comeau said the plant had worked on the problem for three years and had not yet devised a system that operated efficiently. Terry Watkins, air quality engineer for the State Department of Health's environmental division, said the Co-op research program was a pioneer in dust control of this type.
The co-op plant made its first emission control report to the department of health in August 1971 and was one of the first industries in the state to do so. At the time, nitric acid emissions were within limitation of exceeding standards. The control of yellow metals in the air is done via catalytic combustors, the first of which was installed in 1963.
All six nitric acid plants had combattors installed by 1970, at the time of the first recruitment.
The Co-op plant must make quarterly reports to the Department of Health's environment division telling emissions for that period. At present, the department makes no plans in terms of such incineration but plants are out on an annual basis beginning in 1974.
Allowable pollution levels for the state are in accordance with guidelines set up by the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington, D.C.
In addition to pollution control, Co-op, a Farmland Industries subsidiary, may face a shortage of natural gas in the future. The plant uses about 40 million cubic feet per year.
Corneau said, "This year it hasn't been a major problem, but what's coming up is too much."
Study Abroad Needs Well-Laid Plans
By KRISTA POSTAI
Kansan Staff Writer
Advance planning, both academic and financial, is a necessity for those considering application to KU-sponsored colleges. The University of Hull foreign study counselor, said Friday.
Starlight Theatre Trip Planned To Roy Clark Show Thursday
A bus trip to the Kansas City Starlight Theatre to see the Roy Clark Show Thursday will be sponsored by the department of health, physical education and genetics.
The Roy Clark Show will include special guest star Jerry Van Dyke and Skip DeVoil
Graduate Student Awarded $1,000
Lawrence Heeb, associate professor in
Eric Anderson, McPherson graduate student, has been awarded a $1,000 Dramatist Guild scholarship in memory of playwright William Inge.
Anderson, an actor and a playwright, has had two of his plays produced at the University of Kansas, "Just Good Friends," in 1972, and "Politics III," seen here this year. A third, "Their Ghost," is being considered for presentation here in the future.
Iugene died June 20 in Los Angeles. A KU alumnus and a native of Independence, Ingenew was a Pulitzer Prize and the New York Diana Critics Award for his hit play, *The Mole*. In 1982 he won an Academy Award for his screen play of "Splendor in the Grass."
Anderson appeared as Edmund in the University Theatre's spring presentation of *The Labyrinth*.
physical education and recreation consultant for the state of Kansas, said Monday, there were only nine signed up to attend a program signed up in order to make the trip possible.
The same arrangements provided for the Roy Clark Show also will apply to the Doc Severinen and Pearl Bailey Shows. Each of them will be shown and show tickets will be bought at the door.
The cost for the round-trip bus transportation is $2.75 in advance. Tickets for the show itself will be purchased individually at the door.
Three other trips are planned this summer. They are Doc Severinsen show on July 5, and the Pearl Bailey show on July 11, with special appearances to Kansas City's Worlds of Fun on July 7.
The trip to Worlds of Fun will last from approximately 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Package price is $10.50 for adults and $9.50 for children. This includes transportation and admission.
The buses will depart at 6 p.m. Thursday and return around midnight. Heeb said.
Ticket prices are $1, $2, $3, $4 and $5.
The price for the rides, live shows and other attractions is paid with the admission. Heb said that there must be at least 25 participants up 24 hours in advance for each trip.
For reservations and further information,
Heeb may be contacted at 864-4790
Several year-long programs, with an average cost of $3,000, are available to University of Kansas students who desire to study in a foreign university. A junior year, studying at a foreign university.
Hull said it was best to have money to cover the total expected cost before departing because "here most people work part-time and you can't over there. You need a work permit to get a job, and they're almost impossible to get."
Programs in Costa Rica, Germany and Scotland are offered, as well as opportunities to participate in the University of Brasília's programs in France and England.
THOUGH REQUIREMENTS FOR the programs vary, a minimum of 50 hours and a B average are usually necessary for application.
Though entrance requirements are strict, most of the people who apply are accepted, according to Hull, because there's a certain amount of self-selection involved.
16 HOURS OF college study in the country's language or the equivalent is required, except in programs offered in English-speaking countries.
"I believe most students don't apply
them they feel fairly confident about being
accepted."
Court Hearing Set For Former Student
Eugene Nichols Jr., 25, of 929 Ky, has been charged with aiding in June 1 armed robbery at the Taco Grande Restaurant at Ninth and Indiana.
A preliminary hearing has been set in Douglas County Court for a former KU employee.
Also charged in the robery was Joseph Revell, 20, also of 929 Ky.
The bulk of general education courses should be completed before applying for study abroad. Hull said, because the university's certificates offer very few introductory courses.
A committee consisting of persons who have conducted foreign programs and the foreign study staff review applications and hold interviews for those applying.
Questions are asked in the particular language of the program and language deficiency is cited as the basis for the reelections of most applicants.
"European universities are crowded and enrolments restricted," she said, emphasizing that if someone was interested in study abroad, applying through a university-sponsored program would probably be more successful than applying individually.
The two remain in jail with bond set at $2,500.
A LIMITED NUMBER of scholarships are available to exceptionally qualified students. Those who already hold a loan or scholarship usually are able to apply them
A minimum of 30 and a maximum of 36 hours is expected of those participating in study abroad. Hours are transferred as required. No credit option available to participants.
The deadline for application is mid-
January for University of Colorado
Boulder.
PRIOR TO DEPARTURE, one or two-day orientation sessions are conducted. The sessions normally involve people who have just returned from abroad to "tell it like it" on the job.
In a desire to integrate the student into the foreign atmosphere, KU programs try to avoid the creation of "little America." Students are normally required to live with host families or in campus dormitories. An adviser from the sponsoring university will provide advice and handle any problems, academic or non-academic that arise according to Hull.
Those who go aboard and return are much more aware of what's going on. Hull said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanran are offered to all students in regard to the following: PLENY BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $1.00
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
Three Days
15 words or fewer: $1.00
each additional word: $0.02
Deadline: 1:00 p.m. 3 days before publication
FOR SALE
NORTH SIDGE COUNTRY Shop—3 baskets. No. of the items sold include: gas cookware and cooking furniture, cables including a gas pot, old pot and muntains, includes 1 basket, glass pot, 2 baskets bath & wood creations, FirePipes, 4 baskets bamboo & wooden creations, Price hotel Alfa salida, bronze and wheat flour, Open 9 x 7, 6 days. Baskets Herb Afterschool.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at H!
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
It's a disadvantage.
Either it comes to the same thing—
New Analysis of Ames's
New Analysis of Western Civilian Life at
available now at campus Madhouse, Town Crier,
514-786-9200.
PIZZA HUT SMOCCASSORD. All the pizza you
need to have for dinner. Monday-Friday-
11:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m. W 23rd st. W 32nd st.
5th floor. 747-628-3291
St. Bernard病院-AKC Registered Children's Hospital in Chicago, IL.
Older babies, young impaired and older dogs available. Stop by at St. Bernard to see us.
HONDA, 400 Scrambling 1972, 6500 miles. Luggage
racked. Just tucked 800. Call 842-6844. 6-27
Wine and beer making supplies at the Merican-
little Grocery Store 750b Main. Mass 843-616-526
Motorcycle=1965 Bridgestone 90 cc, won't start
Make offer on all parts or Call Wang at Arex
804-720-3420
for sale - 37 Chevy, $100. Runs good, body bad,
worn during weekend, or 848-7250 during the day, 6/25
and weekends or 848-7250 during the day, 6/25
1971 Volkwagen Camper—Midtürkish steel radiator, 3.5 inch aluminum frame, call 8 p.m. or any Saturday call. Call 8 p.m. or any Saturday call.
Guitar, F-20. Conn. like a new must sell best offers. Take C-81324, 1386. ask Chase. 7-2
GABILAC, 2; Dr. Forn, will call Call 841-6523
or GABILAC, will talk take价. Also have
camera to sell.
AIR PROGRESS magazines, "39-10 format, mint,
33-24 than 36-57, complete, all faills, all fair-
till over Oct. 6, complete, 24 faills, excellent,
excelent Best Offer; Charlotte excels,
427 Minnesota
6-27
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, 3 bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially furnished. Carpeted, A/C; Skiated. Patient carport, carpet, shed. Garden. Asking $350. 842-728-8796
Pord, 1985, 1200. 200XL, auto. Ph, Engr.engine
and transmission. Phone: 630-242-7366.
Phone: 812-405-2100 or M-P or come in
the office.
Also sale. Guitar, Yamaha PC75 and case, $50.
Also 12-speed Spedo Guitar $98. Chusl: 185-86.
$24.
FOR RENT
**RENTAL SERVICE***
For the latest rentals in rental
in the Lawrence Landing.
7-26, 2000. 981 Rentals
7-26, 2000. 981 Rentals
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TIRED OF STEEP
PARKING IN FAR-CLOSER LOTS?
from stadium; Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, paved parking lot; Free Cable
phone; Wi-Fi; secure rate rates; furniture allowe-
r rates; furniture allowe-rs Ideal roommates:
843-211-6911; Santa Apts, 1123 Ibn. 7-20
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air
conversion. 200 sq ft. 2 bed/1 bath. near downtown,
and near downtown. No pets. B53-7567
115 West 84th Street
200 W. 84th St.
200 W. 84th St.
200 W. 84th St.
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cook-
ing facilities. Rooms are RU and near downstairs.
843. 937-5071
Firmlined room in older house near campus. Wheelchair-accessible. Quarter area, rooms infillies included No. 12906.
Summer-Fall Living in a friendly group. Unique
private rooms from $35 Call 842-9421 for Cars
Apt. for rent for summer. Excellent location
with pool, tennis court, bar.
8125 rms. Will work. Calluate 614-3890. -6-28
NOTICE
**'PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH'* Small Pizza or
**'PIZZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH'* $15.90 Icero town
Pizza only, Mon-Fri, 1-8, 12
THE RIVER CITY REPAIR ASSOCIATION. 731 W. Mason Street, River City, NY 11504. Saturday, Saturdays 6-06 and 2-06 by appointment. We are an organization of progressive repair technicians who we are independent repair specialists we use to offer our efficiency WHAT US REPAIR IS A LIFESTYLE FOR YOUR KYBERNETS, antique and modern watches, handcrafted jewelry, and more.
STRANGEAN IN TOWN As an Avon representative, he must humble and make good money too. The most humbling and make good money too.
RAY AUDIO-have you heard the new H-750 Speakers Have You spoken when you could listen to them? You can at RAY AUDIO, where low noise are our thing 785 Rhode Island St. 7-26 2047
515 Michigan St. Bar-H-Baque. We Bar-B-Qe in
Michigan and Bar-Baque. A slab to bake here $450, large rib
plate with steak on it. 8-12 lb. chicken platter $165. Found of beef $125. Beef
chicken platter $165. Found of Crescent Sun, and Tube. Phone
V-2-510-3970. Crescent Sun, and Tube. Phone
V-2-510-3970.
842-2500
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
Remodeling 842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
Five Days
15 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $0.33
10C DRAWS
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
THE
HARBOUR 1021 Mass.
Soybean now in stock at the Mercantile Grocery Company, 7203 Mass. 843-9746. 6-28
You may not be able to believe all you read. You cannot program in CANDLES at WAAMS! You cannot program in CANDLES at WAAMS! You cannot program in CANDLES at WAAMS!
DANCE WITH SANCTUARY, Friday June 16
DANCE WITH SANCTUARY, Friday June 16
Meeting: Monday 7-30. Union: COUNSELING/
RAP: 841-3580 for referrals; SOCIALIZING: 842-
1984 for referrals; Union: Box 42, Lawrence
GAY LIBERATION
HHLJ - We are out of fire by construction on MAHA-
d service facilities in Baskett, Norton, and Jawahri,
and will continue to repair.
TYPING
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
6980. Myra. Also minor editing and/or proofing.
Will type thesis dissertations, etc. with speed and memory. Murray S. Corona electron. Call Phyllis M. Hickman.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KAW VALLEY SCHOOL OF CRAFTS AND PERFORMING ARTS
17 West 4th, Lawrence, Kansas
summer session
HAWKSBACK ACADEMY
Experienced in typing themes, dissertations, term papers, other mixed typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and precise typing. Have spelled corrected. Phone: 7-264.ms44. Mrs. Wright
For accurate typing of typhus, dissections and palatal caries after treatment 3—422-6416 Wash 2-8 from cases. From cases.
*Typing-my home*. IBM SelectPica *Pica type*
*experienced* *experienced* *work*
*Call Kit*, 841-252-1968, *7-24*
NOW UNTIL JUNE 30
Q48, B200
Classes meet one weekly and tuition ranges from $6.00 to $15.00 plus the cost of materials-2.
A unique educational experience offering loosely connected classrooms, arts and theatre, a relaxed environment open to the entire community for creative involvement. Among the 43 classes offered are beginning guiding courses in children's art, macrane, creative writing, children's theatre, and theatre dance. For those of course of classes available, you are invited to attend the classes.
ATTENTION GIRLS! U.S. Court Guard Auxiliary is sponsoring Mika Kanaa Sate Safety Content. Any interested girls 18-24 years of age contact us at 812-3827, for information and interview.
6-27
HIEP, "We are cut off by construction on Mass; but we are still open offering the finest in parts of the country." K.A.T. Surkut, 634. Mass. 842-699. P.S. Don't mis-cure our cycle out at Gibson's Ten Vert Sanitary.
WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
Need German instructor for junior high student
Please call 842-6411 after 5 P.M.
6-28
WANTED: Mature Respondent woman to babyst with infant, and 2 year old for RU foetus.
Flute-Sau Play员 wants musicians interested in starters jazz rock group. For more information visit http://www.flat-sau.com/players/.
Employment Opportunities
Pilot or student pilot-flying club membership
Dues 6-80 per month
Dues 8-60 per month
Phone 8-124-124
6-28
PIZZA HIT DELIVERS A hot pizza hight for
8:30 a.m. and Saturday 12:35 p.m. 943-784-7486
7-84
Affordable single grade with good personalisation
Must have:
• UK address and postcode (0123456789)
• not payable to call for appointment 00-00-00
• not paid in advance
ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR OF CONSUMER PROTECTION ASSOCIATION (CAP)
191/72, beginning 191/72.
Administrative abilities/experience required.
Community advises desirable. Submit resume by July 16 to Box W. Student Union, Lawrence, Kansas.
6044 questions. Call 864-3564. leave name and contact information.
Found watch in Hawthorne park for Tuesday
found morning. Yours on description. Call 841-4229
or call 370-652-4229.
ENTERTAINMENT
Opening - THE PREMONITION - Light show and activities.
Every Sunday night shows at 7 P.M. and 10:30 A.M.
good concessions. Admission: Advance tickets, hostess meals, a complimentary food bag, brownie toppers.
CAMILION - THE PREMONITION -
THE HLL in the WALL
DELICATESSEM & SANDWICH SHOP
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-7855 - We Deliver - 9th & 11th
sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
Finest Eating Place
Delicious Food and Superb Service with Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp, to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been
There is no substitute for quality
in the restaurant.
11:00 North of Mead
11 : Miles North of the Kaw River Bridge
Phone
843.1431
95
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
Use Kansan Classifieds
6
Tuesday, June 26, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Dean Implicates President Nixon
role in the wiretapping, almost three months before Lidv was indicted.
From Page One
LIDDY EVENTUALLY was one of the seven men convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the June 17, 1972, entry at the Watergate office building.
"It's a very difficult thing for me to testify about other people," Dean told senators as they spoke.
“It’s far more easy for me to explain my own involvement of this matter, the fact that I was involved in the obstruction of justice, I assisted another in perjured testimony, the fact that I made personal use of funds that were in my custody.”
DEAN SAID he borrowed $4,850 from
$13,200 entrusted to him, to finance his
expenses.
He insisted he did not know specifically about the Watergate break-in before it
happened, but that he sat in on meetings with Mitchell, Magruder and Liddy when bizarre forms of political espionage were discussed.
Dean said Haldeman and Ehrlichman directed the extensive cover-up activities, including efforts to sidetrack a congressional investigation, destroy evidence, tailor the testimony of principals in cases, and increase intelligence Agency for all that had happened.
AT A MEETING March 13, Dean said, Nixon told him that Colson had discussed an offer of executive clemency for E. Howard Hunt, another of the Watergate defendants.
Dean said he told Nixon about money demands being made by the Watergate defendants and that there was no money to pay.
"He asked me how much it would cost." Dean said. I told him that I could only
"HE TOLD ME that was no problem he also looked over at Haldeman and reported to the police."
make an estimate, that it might be as high as a million dollars or more.
But on April 15, said Dean, at another meeting the President said "that he had, of course, only been joking when he made that comment . . . the most interesting thing that happened during the conversation was, very near the end, he get up out of his chair, went behind his chair to the corner of the room, and there, just barely audible tone said to me he was probably foolish to have discussed Hunt's clemency with Colson."
Dean said he decided that he was "being set up" to take the heat for the cover-up and that he went to federal prosecutors to tell them his story.
NOW Chapter Debates Structure
The central issue at the recent regional conference of the National Organization for Women (NOW), according to State Coordinator Bonnie Patton, was whether NOW should have state organizations or whether troopers should remain the most powerful.
Patton attended the three-day regional conference at Rockford, III., and reported the results to the local NOW chapter at a meeting Monday night.
Patton said she thought a state organization with a state of state officers should be able to respond.
too much bureaucracy." National rules now state that all policy come from local sources.
A state coordinator was not elected at the regional conference, she said, and according to a national rule, the coordinator must be an official at or at a state conference within 6 months.
A meeting will be held at Manhattan Saturday to select a temporary state coordinator who will preside until a state conference is held in the fall. Patton said.
Each NOW group, whether or not an actual chapter, is eligible to send one or two
delegates to select a temporary coordinator, she said. The central duties of the state coordinator are to assist in the for-mer administration and to encourage liaison between chanters.
The local chapter plans to shorten a slide show entitled "The Beginnings of a Long and Real Revolution" and rent it to interested groups. The show, made in New York, now consists of 200 slides and a tape or script to be used with it.
ON APRIL 15, Dean said he was summoned into the President's office. Nixon asked him to submit a request either a letter of resignation or a request for indefinite leave of absence.
THE SAME AFTERNOON, Dean said he was called into the President's office again, and at that time "told him I would not resign unless Haldenman and Ehrlichman resigned. I told him that I was not willing to house House scapegoat for the Watergate.
"He said that he understood my position and he wasn't asking to me be a capacegoat." The hearings were adjourned until 9 a.m. Lawrence time today.
In other Watergate-related events, Rep. Paul N. McCloskey called Monday night for immediate inquiry on whether the President should be impached.
MCLOSKEY, D-CALIF., said that the President violated his oath to uphold the Constitution by, according to the President's May 22 statement, authorizing a 1970 plan for burglary of foreign high priority secrets.
Dean said he refused.
"The President was directly granting to the intelligence agencies of the U.S. government and particularly the FBL, the authority and implicit direction to conduct acts which were not only illegal but were unconstitutional." McCleasky asserted.
He said the plan violated the Constitution's 4th Amendment guarantee against unreasonable searches and seizures.
MCLOSKEY SAID in a floor speech he agreed the House should not even discuss impeachment of the President until investigation of whether it was warranted is completed by the House Judiciary Committee.
"But let us get that investigation under wav," he said.
The Western White House said Monday that President Nixon "is fully aware of what is taking place" at the Senate Watergate hearings but will have no comment this week on the testimony by his ousted counsel, Dean.
Refreshing Charm In Kids' Definitions
Vicki Landman of Lawrence, NOW vice president, said that Mayor Nancy Hampton had recently expressed a concern about the public's comments on commissions and boards in Lawrence. Landman said of the 96 appointees, 16 were women. The group plans to prepare a statement to be presented at a City Commission meeting. The women will be appointed when vacancies arise.
By JACK SMITH
The Los Angeles Times
Among the obvious gifts that my family were unable to give me for Father's Day was a dictionary. I price dictionary theses at 10 dollars, goldfish, but I now have more than I need.
The latest addition to my small but adequate collection was the compact edition of **The Book of Mysteries**, which that great landmark work is reduced to only two volumes. Each one weighs nine pounds, though, and the print is so small that it's almost impossible to magnifying glass comes with every set.
I could have used, however, one of the iDocuments put together by pupils out at the Sharman Gaks Presbyterian Nursery school as gifts for their fathers on Father's Day.
Drink RED WHITE & BLUE SHAKES and get a taste of history, too!
One of the teachers, Mary Dimaglio,
teaches her pupils how to use dictionary.
"We discuss what a dictionary is," she ex-
tends. "We teach them give me words, and we look them up."
Then Dimaggio gives the children words, and asks them to define them. "For the most part," I was told, she tries to use words they're familiar with or at least may have heard. Even if a youngster doesn't know the word, he'll usually bluff it out.
Naturally, children's definitions are likely to be cutey. But sometimes they glow with insights into the adult world, and at times they are really hard it is to define anything at all.
W. L. Pct G.B.
42 30 38
Chicago 49 30 492
Monteul 33 35 485
St. Louis 33 35 485
Philadelphia 33 35 485
New York 31 36 463
Pittsburgh 31 36 463
EMBARRASSING: When you're un-
undressed and somebody's almost there.
When somebody loves you. . . You do
something wrong at a party.
ACCIDENT: Whenever you did something that your mother doesn't like what you did.
CHEAP: It's like when you’re a millionaire. A bird. You don't have to give the store man all your money. It goes baaa.
Hillcrest Shopping Center ★★ Carryout Available
West
Los Angeles 47 26 644 --- 51
Houston 42 32 644 --- 59
San Francisco 42 32 644 --- 59
Cincinnati 30 34 521 9 --- 1
Atlanta 30 42 521 9 --- 1
San Diego 23 23 335 24 --- 1
FREE COPY OF DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE WITH PURCHASE OF SHAKE!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. PET G.B.
New York 40 36 128
Milwaukee 57 36 128
Baltimore 37 32 128
Boston 34 32 128
Detroit 34 32 97 4
Cleveland 34 32 128 (21)
baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
| State | Won | Lost | Draw |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 36 | 30 | 545 |
| Kansas City | 40 | 34 | 543 |
| California | 30 | 24 | 543 |
| Oakland | 38 | 34 | 528 |
| Minnesota | 38 | 34 | 528 |
| Tennessee | 35 | 32 | 528 |
| Texas | 35 | 32 | 528 |
Results
Cleveland 4, New York 2
Boston 2, Detroit 1
Chicago 3, Cleveland 1
Baltimore 4, Milwaukee 3, 12 innings
Atlanta 5, Chicago 3, California 3, Kansas City 2
Pittsburgh 8, Montreal 6, 1st
Montreal 8, Montreal 1, 2nd
Chicago 7, Cleveland 4,
Chicago 3, New York 2
Houston 13, Cincinnati 4
Philadelphia 10, Baltimore 5
The group also discussed the possibility of having consciousness-raising groups next
McDonald's red, white and blue shakes are just about as patriotic as the Declaration of Independence! And right now, we're giving a copy of this historical document to every customer who buys a patriotic shake now through March 25th. We're offering McDonald's red and blue's for blueberry, our new fun flavor! Get a taste of history **and** a great shake at McDonald's today!
THE BALL PARK
FREE Sausage Night buy 2 hot or mild smoked sausage sandwiches get 1 FREE Tuesday only 6 p.m. - midnight
ANALOGY: You sneeze and stuff.
ATTACK: A thing you hang on.
BLINDER: It knocks your brakes out.
ATTACK: A ting you hang on.
BLUNDER: It makes your house wet.
EXTINCT: When something's not working.
FOSSIAL! It makes hot water come out of it . . . The wet sand and top on top of it like a dead fish or a dead man it turns into a fire that rises up and the man doesn't even know it.
FRIEND: A girl or boy friend and when you get near them you do stuff.
comment
FLORIST: Puts the floor on.
FUN: Is walking up a slide in tennis shoes.
FAMILY A thing you love win... where animals and people live together.
GERM: Like someone breathes at you.
MOISTURE: My sister found a moisture in her hair.
The tour will follow 18th Street east to Kentucky Street, north to 17th Street, west to 16th Street, south to Iowa Street and across Iowa Street to Peterson Road then west to Martin Park.
Lunch or refreshments may be brought by the participants. A rest period is scheduled for the park and the tour should return to the high school about 4 p.m.
NATURE: God takes care of all things.
PHARMACIST: Someone who works at a pharmacy.
PROBLEM: Someone wants you to do what you don't want to do.
Children must be 10 years old or accompanied by their parents.
TROUBLE: When you get into your father's grease. . . You go to your room and stay for a year. . . It rains and you can't go out and your sister can.
A second tour is being planned to Lakeview on July 15.
In case of rain, postponement of the tour will be announced.
McDonald's
TERMINATE: Someone comes and
sprays around your house.
A bike tour to Martin Park sponsored by the parks and recreation department and the M. Oread Bicycle Club, will leave at Lawrence High path parking lot.
SURELY only letting yourself know.
USE PHRASE! If you and you don't
know what it is but you want it.
Tour guides, provided by the Mt. Greed
Bicycle Club, will bale bicycles for the tour.
It would be a world full of dangers, like when you stepped on an attack or somebody breathed at you or the bug man came to terminate the house. It would be a world of machines, where the pharmacist's with apples or you found a Pearl in the moisture. And it would be a happy world in a house where people and animals lived together, and there would be no reason to worry about the TV going out, and the people were safe, because God takes care of all thins.
For further information call the Parks and Recreation Dent, at 843-4600
From the results of these early encounters with the lures, illusions and pitfalls of the English language, we get a glimpse into the world and wonderfully distorted children's world.
Park Dept. to Hold Bike Tour Sunday
RIDICULOUS: All the people at the hotel where we went on vacation,
Anyway, the children's definitions make as much sense as love means never having
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
WEDNESDAY JUNE 27,1973
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news the capsules associated press
Court Decision Forces Nixon To Halt Effort to Destroy OEO
SAN CLEMENTE—Bowing to court decisions, President Nixon named a new director of the Office of Economic Opportunity on Tuesday and suspended his efforts to dismantle the poverty-fighting agency by executive action. Presidential spokesman Gerald L. Warren said the White House would await congressional action on Nixon's proposals to break up OEO by transferring its operations to other agencies. Warren said Nixon's position remained unchanged—he was expected to return to his role in department. Earlier, a federal court prohibited implementation of Nixon's plan to dismantle the agency by executive order without congressional approval.
U.S. Planes Pound Cambodians
Miners' Wives Talk to Allende
PHNOM PENH–U.S. tactical air strikes killed Cambodian insurgents force the rebels and their Communist Vietnamese allies closed in on an important bridge and road junction nine miles south of Phnom Penh, forcing government troops to pull in their defense lines. The military forces were attacked by Mekong Delta and intensified all across the country. South Vietnam's peacekeeping commissions did nothing to stop the bloodshed. Spokesmen in both Sagon and Phnom Penh warned that the U.S. would not be able to hold Cambodia would create problems for both countries if it became law.
SANTIAGO, Chile.-While wires of striking copper miners marched on the capital and met with President Salvador Allende, police and thousands of demonstrators fought with rocks and teargas in the streets of downtown Santiago. One of the women, Maria Cuella, said later that the government promised to issue a statement within 48 hours regarding demands by the miners. Two weeks ago, the miners themselves attempted to march on the capital from the giant underground mine, El Tieniente, and clashed with riot police on the way.
Beame Wins N.Y. Demo Runoff
NEW YORK—Compriller Abraham D. Beahe has won the runoff election for the Democratic nomination for mayor of New York, piling up a margin of nearly 2 to 1 over U.S. Rep. Herman Badillo. He could be the city's first Jewish mayor. With 73 per cent of the votes counted, Beahe had 415,347 to Badillo's 240,673. The winner will be the favorite in November against at least three opponents representing the Republican, Conservative and Liberal parties. Registered Democrats outnumber the combined opposition by more than 3 to 1.
Brezhnev Reassures Pompidou
PARIS-Leonid B. Breznehvad has reassured President Georges Pompidou of France that he and President Nixon concluded no secret deal on Europe during their summit talks last week. At the same time, the Soviet Communist boss hinted to Pompidou that France could scarcely hope to continue its maverick policy in Europe now that cold war tensions were diminishing. French officials indicated Pompidou was flattered that Breznehvad had asked to see him right after his talks with Nixon.
Bingo Resolution Filed for '74
TOPEKA-A resolution calling for a vote of the people in November 1974 on a constitutional amendment to legalize gambling bingo in Kansas has been prefitted with the secretary of state's office. The resolution, which will be considered by the 74 legislature and must win endorsement by two-thirds of both houses to put the issue on the ballot, did not pass. In 1975, the 1971 legislature had passed a law legalizing gambling bingo when played by nonprofit organizations, but the state Supreme Court struck it down last fall.
Highway to Connect 2 Oceans
NAIROBI-A transcontinental highway is to be built across Africa to link the Indian and Atlantic oceans and will run 4,000 miles from Kenya, on the east coast, to Nigeria on the west. It will form the backbone of a major transport system joining 19 African countries. The $25 million highway, which is being coordinated by the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa is expected to be operational by 1975.
Dayan Marries in Secret Rite
Cloudy Again, Showers Possible
TEL AIVI—Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, Israel's favorite war hero, has secretly married a 47-year-old divorcee 18 months after his divorce from his first wife. Dayan, 58, and his bride, Rachel Korem, were wed in a 30-minute ceremony by the chief military chaplain, deuterah Piron. The only persons were those required to make up the 10-man quorum required by Jewish custom to witness a wedding.
The weather should be more cheering than it was yesterday, even though it might be a bit wet after noon. Thundershows are severe and rainy. Passes over Lawrence and temperatures will be in the high 80s.
Happy Day!
CLOUDY
Dean Says List of Detractors Was Kept
IRS Audits Nixon 'Enemies'
The ousted presidential lawyer testified at the televised Watergate bugging hearings that he prepared a memorandum about means to attack persons on the list, which he said was continually being updated.
The Senate Watergate committee asked that the list be submitted later.
WASHINGTON (AP) - John W. Dean III testified Tuesday that the White House maintained an "enemies list" of people unfriendly to the administration, and that it used such agencies as the Internal Revenue Service to seek embarrassing information about them.
DEAID SAAN HE DECED to unmask use Watergate scandal after failing to persuade President Nixon to "step forward and state his involvement."
Challenged strongly by a committee member about his word against the president,
"I have been asked to come up and tell the truth. I've told it the best way I know how. You've asked me a public question about credibility. I'm telling the truth as I know it.
DEAN SAID THAT after the Long Island newspaper Newsday published an article about Nixon's friend, C. G. Bebe Rebozo, "the author of a letter to the article should have some problems."
Dean said he didn't know how to deal with the instruction and called John J. Caulfield, DipL, to help him find a detective. He said Caulfield had friends in the Internal Revenue Service.
"I think he was able to accomplish an audit on the individual." Dean said.
A NEWDAY SPOKESMAN said Robert Greene, the school's senior editor on the Rebozo article, and David Laventhal, the school's senior editor on tax audits in the spring of 1972. The
Please
NO PETS
thank you
MAKING STORIES
As the dog days of Kansas summer approach, one early sufferer peers with desire into the air-conditioned sanctuary offered by the Kansas Union. Or is he
"But Woodstock's at Home . . ."
Kansan Photo by RIC RAPP
Newday did not send another reporter on Wednesday. He said Schrub worked on the Reporter's weekly newsletter.
spokesman said the audits were done by the state and the men were told the audits were done.
simply waiting with ill-restrained gleeful anticipation for the sight of the first human he'll be blasted with steaming midday heat in leaving the Union?
DEAN ALSO TOLD the committee that he had received information in 1972 from a Secret Service official he didn't name concerning Sen. George McGovern, Nixon's opponent in the presidential election last year.
He said it concerned a fund-raising function in Philadelphia "and there were some references to the fact that either Communist money or former Communist supporters were going to attend the fundraiser."
The spokesman also said Martin Schram, Newsday's White House correspondent at the time and now its Washington bureau chief, was the only daily newspaper reporter assigned to the White House who met all the requirements, but was not in attendance of reporters accredited to accompany the President to China in February, 1972.
Dean said he took the document, an intelligence printout, to preside aides Charles W. Colson, who expressed great sadness over the loss of many arrangements to have it published."
AS ANOTHER EXAMPLE of domestic investigation initiated by the White House, Dean told the committee about an investigation conducted by the FBI into the background of CBS correspondent Daniel Schorr.
The order came from H. R. Halademan, Nikon's chief of staff, Dean said. J. Edgar Hoover, then director of the FBI, proceeded to interview Mr. Hoover and the White House, be idiot sort of a full-feld
wide-open investigation," Dean said, adding
Dean said he could probably provide more specifically if he had need accustomed to it.
WHEN QUESTIONS AROSE, Dean said,
administration official Fred Malek "what
knew nothing about this, therefore said
a post in the environmental field."
Dean said the White House had man- arrangements for him to go to his files but he wasn't sure if his files were in a deskless room and he must to them under the eye of an agent
Sen. Montoya quoted from an Aug. 29, 1972, statement by the President in which Nixon said Dean had investigated and found no White House involvement in Watergate.
"I WOULD HAVE conseled the President against that statement because of knowledge I had that documents had been destroyed that were incriminating to H. R. Haldeman, and I had suspicions about other people's involvement," Dean replied.
"Was the President telling the truth when he made that statement?" he asked.
Monteya then asked about Nixon's April 17 statement saying "I condemn any attempts to cover up in this case, no matter who is involved."
Was the president telling the truth?
Monlava asked.
"NO SIR," DEAN said, "By that time he knew the full implications of the case. Haldeman and Ehrlichman were still on the staff.
And Dean said again: "I feel the President was aware of an effort to cover up the Watergate. The first time I had first-person testimony, we met on Sept. 15, 1972, when I met with him."
WASHINGTON (AP)—Kansas City Police Chief Clarence M. Kelley won unanimous approval of the Senate Judiciary Committee to head the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Committee Approves Kelley as FBI Chief
Sen. James O. Eastland, D-Miss., the committee chairman, said he expected Senate confirmation today of Kelley's nomination.
Kolley, 61, served with the FBI 21 years before returning to his home town in 1961 to serve as a postmaster.
His nomination to be FBI director, submitted by President Nixon June 8, drew bipartisan support from the outset unlike L. Patrick Gray III and appointment of L. Patrick Gray III.
Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-WVA, in a member who fight against Gray gave
several reasons he thought Kylee gained such ready acceptance.
House Rejects Bombing Extension
He said Kelley "had no history of political activities and no connection with
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House blocked new spending for U.S. bombing in Cambodia Tuesday as the Senate took final cut off all fund applications for the bombing.
By an 81 to 11 vote, the Senate sent to President Nixon the bill passed by the House Monday to prohibit use of any bombing funds for bombing in Cambodia or Laos.
The President has 10 days after he receives the bill to halt the bombing or veto
BUT SEN. JOHN G. Tower, R-Tex., told
newsmen he is "inclined to think the President will not vote the bill, "and"will do it."
The fund cutoff was part of a $3.4 billion supplemental appropriation bill. It covers all money Congress has ever approved for the fiscal year at midnight Saturday.
The bill will not actually go to the President until after a formal engrossing and printing procedure that takes several days.
ACROSS THE CAPTOL, the house took that same denial of bombing steps a step
But first the House rejected another attempt to give the President 60 days to try to force a Cambodian cease-fire with the bombing.
further and wrote into it new spending authority for the new fiscal year beginning
An amendment by House Appropriations Committee Chairman George H. Mahon, D-Tex., to prohibit new spending for bombing was approved 232 to 181 after an amendment to knock the 60-day delay out of it was adopted 218 to 194.
Council Plans to Permit Few Freeze Exemptions
By LOUISE COOK
Associated Press Writer
By LOUISE COO
Associated Press Writer
Federal officials have put a dumper on farmers' hopes of a relaxation in the 60-day price freeze. Some poultry producers say they want to help, but they may have to kill more baby chicks.
SIR ALFRED ROBERTSON
POULTRY FARMERS said their problems were getting worse. The farmers said they were caught in a squeeze between rising feed prices and frozen retail prices. Many consumers don't like chickens are not frozen, but they said wholesalers wouldn't pay more if they
Officials of the Cost of Living Council said Tuesday that the limitations on prices would be enforced in a "fairly tight manner" with few exemptions.
THE BAN WAS written into a so-called continuing resolution authorizing the defense department and other federal agencies to continue spending after their regular appropriations expire at midnight Saturday.
The announcement came at the same time the Agriculture Department said the cost of feeding a theoretical family of 32 animals was about $40 per increase, however, was the lowest this year.
couldn't pass the increase on to the consumer.
George Allen of Lore Farms in Chattanooga, Tenn., supervised the killing of 22,000 day-old chicks at a hatchery in Georgia on Monday. As the chicks continue to hatch, Allen said, they will be destroyed: "If we don't find it Friday and the first four days of next week."
"THERE APPEAR to be some problems in your basic acids—soybeans, chickens and so forth," he said. "There are some real issues." Some may be blown out of proportion.
James W. McLane, who directs the freeze for the council, was asked about reports of food shortages because of the price limitations.
The Agriculture Department said the cost of feeding a typical American family increased in May at a rate that would add $13 to the annual *proccery* bill.
See COUNCIL, Back Page
"This language is virtually veto-proof." Long told the House. "I can't imagine it being allowed."
Clarence Kellev
☆
The Senate passed a scaled down foreign military aid authorization bill Tuesday after rejecting a mandatory four-year phase out of the program.
SEEN. BARRY GOLDWATER, R-Ariz. signaled near defeat of the measure by declaring just before the final vote: "This marks the end of the United States government in the rest of the world that we are pulling our horns and I will have no part of it."
The 770 million authorization for next year was sharply lower than the Nixon administration's $1.31-billion request. The U.S. government equipment grants and credit sales of arms to
An administration effort to reverse a $232 million slash in military grant aid failed on Thursday.
The measure now goes to the House, where the Foreign Affairs Committee is composed.
Watergate" and had a background of law enforcement experience.
In addition, he said Kelley was "forthright, honest, frank and straightforward" in responding to the committee's report on three days of hearings on his nomination.
Gray, Nixon's first choice to succeed the late J. Edgar Hover as FBI director, was a Connecticut law enforcement official who had been active in Republic party affairs. His nomination became entangled in the Watergatebug affair and he asked that it be withdrawn after it had been reported.
Under present law, Kelley will serve as FBI director for an indefinite term if confirmed.
Once-Famed FBI Tired of Nursing Its Tarnished Image
By LAURENCE STERN
WASHINGTON—Once upon a time, the FBI had the highest public relations profile in Washington—its exploits celebrated on radio, television, film and the annual appearance on capitol hill of the late J. Edgar Hoover.
The Watergate scandal has brought egg to its face and demoralization to its ranks. The bureau has been accused of leaking like a sieve, relaxing surveillance against domestic subservies and turning its back on the rest of the intelligence community.
Its former acting director, L. Patrick Gray III, was a prime casualty of Watergate. He has been heavily discredited by the press, and his subsequent White House cover operation.
See FBI. Back Page
2
Wednesday. June 27,1973
University Daily Kansan
COMPLAINT CENTER
Got a complaint?
Fill out the form
Put it in the envelope and your complaint will be investigated.
Complaints should concern only University Services.
Catch-22 Finds Summer Home
Incoming freshmen baffled by the campus bureaucracy may find this sign a reassuring, albeit kafkaeus, note of candor in its present state. The summer
Kansan editorial staff is, however,
pleased to opine that the sign does not in
fact reflect accurately the state of
"University Services."
Four committees appointed by Chancellor Raymond Nichols have begun to meet this week to consider what, if any, changes are needed in the University of Kansas's tenure policies.
By NANCY COOK
Correct Styl Writer
Four Committees Scrutinize Tenure
Several members of the committees and other persons at the University have agreed that KU's tenure policy needs to be reviewed.
Nichols has predicted that unless policy is changed, the University may soon find itself "tenured in," a situation in which a large proportion of the faculty has gained tenure.
TENURE IS GIVEN, after review, to faculty members who have been at the University five years. Those who are not with the University must leave the University within one year.
Nicolaas Willems, professor of civil engineering, said the University wouldn't have the tenure problem if this were a time of expansion.
Tenure is designed to protect faculty from being fired except for serious misconduct or incompetence as determined by formal proceedings.
"IN A TIME OF retrenchment, if we try to maintain a certain percentage (of tenured faculty) I think we are going to cut it out from an inflow of fresh blood." Willems said.
Williams is a member of committee A, which was designated by the chancellor to conduct a policy review. Williams pointed out that his opinion was not necessarily that
The chairman of committee A, T.P. Srinivasan, professor of mathematics, said the committee was in the process of information gathering to get a cross-section of points of view.
SRINASEVAN DECLINED to give his personal opinion on the controversy but said, "We certainly want to do what is best for all units of the University."
"one reason the tenure business has developed," said Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism, "is to protect the freedom to teach whatever one wishes."
ADAMS, A MEMBER of committee B,
said a faculty member should be retained as long as he produced. Committee B is studying the impact of tenure decisions.
Richard Paxson, Baxter Springs junior and student member of committee A, said he would like to have more student input on the plan. Paxson said he would grant tenure to faculty member now are based on three things: teaching competence, research and service to the community. Paxson said students are qualified to judge teaching competence.
Howard Boyajian, professor of music, said the tenure situation was particularly difficult for small departments. A teacher is just given time to "build up a nice following" when he is either granted tenure or moves to another University within a year. Boyajian said.
When a new person has to learn the same things all over, “it’s sort of like being on a train.”
"ONE REASON THIS HIS comes to pass," Boyajian said, "is that the idea of mobility has changed. People are pulling in their horns and feeling a little less secure. The crux of the problem is that there is a tighter job market."
Boyajian is on committee C, which is concerned with the rights and responsibilities of individuals, departments and schools.
Kelley Considered Best Possible Choice Despite Considerable Criticism from Blacks
By HARRY JONES Jr.
The Los Angeles Times
Clarence, M., Kelley, FBI Director Designate, looks the part. A square-jawed 6-footer, his integrity is unquestioned in Kansas City where he heads the city police.
Only in the black community are reservations expressed over his qualifications, and some black leaders concede that he has a right to be unnamed to black thinking in recent years.
Overall, Kelley's lack of vanity and his radiation of strength and warmth have earned him the solid respect of the city's 1,300-member force.
Taking over as police chief a dozen years ago--after serving the FBI in 10 cities and artfully reorganized the department, all the while shuffling him he thought he could trust into positions held by the old ones with strong political connections.
Kelley rejected improper political pressures. One former police commissioner recalled the time a powerful state senator threatened to stall an important police bill that had been promoted two officers. Kelley told him to go to hell, and the bill died in committee.
An extremely personable man, Kelley has enjoyed excellent relations with the media. He is almost a master at public relations and he often manages the formation from his department about police matters, although the police board, which he cannot control, makes most of its important decisions at secret breakfast meetings and turns its regular meetings into a big party.
Some blacks, therefore, view Kelley with hostility. But the city's weekly newspaper for blacks, the Kansas City Call, reacted ambivalently to Kelley's FELP notification.
The criticisms Kelley has received from blacks and liberal whites have been more often provoked by the conduct of some of his men than by what he has done personally.
Kansas City must draw its recruits from a basically conservative urban population, and from even more conservative and sometimes white ristrict rural communities nearby are 99 blacks on the force—7.5 per cent).
*Nearbelfresh* *i w ish Chief Kelley wll*
*Nearbelfresh* *o w ish Chief Kelley wll*
*Nearbelfresh* *o w ish Chief Kelley wll*
Watson Library will receive a $5,000 grant for the fiscal year beginning July 1 from the College Library Resources Program, Program's assistant library's assistant director said Monday.
Watson Library Receives Grant
year HEW granted over $10 million to 2,044 of the country's colleges and universities.
The money will be used to buy books, periodicals, documents, other printed and published materials, magnetic tapes, graph records and audiovisual materials.
KU has received money for the last several years from the program, which is a division of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Helyar said. This
Recipients of the grants are located in every state, the District of Columbia, New York and Washington.
The Kansas City agents say they are confident he will accomplish this because he has experience in the job.
Those Kansas Citians happiest about his nomination are the FBI agents who work in the local office. He pledged in a press conference to restore in all agents the self-esteem some say they have lost since J. Edgar Hoover's death.
grave responsibility. We hope that the encounters he has had with the black citizenry of Kansas City have made him aware of the fact that as FBI chief, he is representing and serving all the people of the nation.
"We feel that he has learned some lessons here in dealing with minority groups which should help him become an FBI director of whom we can all be proud."
Prof Says Water Study Needed for Poor Nations
A symposium on hydrology may have produced some beneficial results for underdeveloped nations, Robert L. Smith, professor of civil engineering, said Monday.
Smith attended the five-day symposium, held June 14 in Madrid. The conference was jointly sponsored by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the World Meteorological Organization.
The symposium's topic was the development of methods for making water resource studies where there is little hydrological data. Smith said that the development of water resources was critical for the economic growth of universities, but these were the countries with the least complete hydrological data.
An understanding of the water resources of an area is necessary before building reservoirs, irrigation systems or hydroelectric plants, Smith said.
Before building an irrigation system, one
needs to have some idea of the extremes, and not just the averages, of water availability to be added. The system must be equipped with sensors during low periods as well as other times.
Smith said that not much was known about stream flows and other hydrological data in underdeveloped countries because nobody had been keeping records. Even in the developed countries, records are not that complete, he said.
"Stream flow records in the United States go back about 40 years and that’s not much different from what we know today."
Smith said that precipitation data might provide some aid in analyzing water resources. He said that even in unprotected areas there were usually some rainfall statistics.
In the paper he presented to the symposium, "Utilizing Climatic Data to Apprise Measures of Water Loss," he discussed possible ways of estimating the extremes of water resources from rainfall statistics. Smith said that his paper was the first in the field of application and some studies in the Caribbean.
Revision to City Plan Proposed
The Lawrence City Commission received a proposal for an update to a comprehensive plan for Lawrence Tuesday from Richard Baldwin, who is planning for the city and Douglas County.
The comprehensive plan for Lawrence is a study of how the community can best utilize its land area for the future. McKinley is the location and injection of the growth of Lawrence to 1995.
According to Smith, the symposium was attended by about 400 scientists and researchers.
The cost of $33,800 for the update would include the study of utilities, buildings, roads and mass transit. City funding of the plan will be $14,800, McClamahan said, with state funds from the Kansas Department of Development providing the remainder.
The original plan was drawn up in 1962, he said, and has not undergone major revision
The commission also approved the use of downtown sidewalks for the annual
The symposium was part of the International Hydrological Decade, a program initiated by UNESCO in the aim to develop and study water resources.
sidewalk bazaar.
Last year's bazaar occurred in the midst of the renovation of Massachusetts Street.
Smith, who was on the U.S. committee for the Decade during 1968-71, said that he was pleased with the degree of international cooperation he had with the Communist and non-Communist nations.
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and summer semesters and Monday through Thursday during the winter semester. Examination periods, Mail subscription rates are $6 per semester at a $10 fee. Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised are offered to all students without regard to their financial need. Please contact necessary those of the University of Kansas or the State University of Missouri.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 157
Telephones
New York, NY 10020
Advertising Circulation: 844-4358
Paul Gray, chairman of the Downtown
would be July 18.
**new staff** Morrow Dodd, director; Zahid趴, associate manager; Robert Nugent, associate manager; Jamie Cunningham, junior manager; Hugh Reag, co-pilot; Mike Starr, senior manager; Steven Krasno, executive manager; Chuck Goodfellow, strategic manager; business manager; Jack Mitchell, strategic manager; assistant manager; jack Mitchell, matrimonial tutor; assistant manager
Although all but 17 of the 163 students accepted for the first year medicine class at the University of Kansas Medical Center attended, the class come from varied backgrounds.
The class includes 53 students who received degrees in biology and 51 in chemistry. Other members' undergraduate majors were pre-medicine, psychology, business administration, electrical engineering, physics and mathematics.
Downtown merchants reported having a good response from the shoppers, despite the dirt street, wooden plank walkways, road grading equipment and dump trucks.
Varied Backgrounds In Med Center Class
Free entertainment was provided by a band that roamed the downtown area.
Refreshment stands were operated by various civic groups.
Occupations of the students' parents include 29 physicians, 25 business executives, 18 business proprietors, 21 skilled tradesmen and 12 farmers.
The students, who were selected from 876 applicants, have an overall grade point average of 3.92, and they pre-medical work at KU. Ten graduated from Kansas State University, seven from Washburn University and 16 from other Kansas schools. Of the 888 applicants in this class, 44% had medical work at KU.
The students will begin classes July 9. They will have the option, now two years old, of taking an accelerated three-year course or taking the chance for 48 weeks each of the three years.
There are 21 women in the class.
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JOHN HASLAM, assistant professor of chemistry, said the University should not have tenure, at least not in the sciences. Haslam was denied tenure a year ago and will be leaving the University at the end of July.
"in my particular case I have mixed
the department with the
a difficult position at the
university."
Haslam said many factors besides the formally stated ones enter into a tenure decision. Which way the department wants to go, which way the particular person is going and how people get along are some of the considerations, he said.
"THE IDEA OF indefinite tenure is perhaps past its prime," said Carl Leban, associate professor of Oriental languages and literatures and east Asian studies.
"For certain small departments where all the faculty is tenured, the department becomes stagnant," he said. "It's hard to change, changes because the faculty can't change."
Stanley Shumway, associate professor or music theory, said the problem might be not so much a problem with tenure as with one rule.
"Tenure has been a problem in that not
setting tenure means people have only one
year of experience."
Shunway said tenure problems were more apparent now because staff and management were much busier.
Linda Constable, Salina graduate student,
said she was "pretty much against tenure"
at her job.
Solar Eclipse Draws Thousands to Africa
Mauritania, a bleak land of shifting sand dunes and tough, blue-robed nomads who roam the burning Sahara, is bracing for the shocks.
"If someone is not producing, they shouldn't have a job," she said.
NUAKCHOTT, Mauritania (AP)—Tourists, amateur astronomers and scientists are flocking into this dusty site for the eclipse, which can be c蔡ionally long eclipse of the sun June 30.
THE TIDE of visitors will overwhelm existing housing facilities, which amount to about 50,000 residents a year.
The influx of about 3,500 stargazers will amount to the biggest tourist boom this poor but hospitable desert nation has experienced.
The abandoned French Foreign Legion post at Atar, the official site for combatants in Afghanistan, is now home to the United States.
The government, already burdened by the effects of a catastrophic drought, is doing all that its meager resources will allow to welcome the visitors.
BUT STILL others will be roughing it in safari across the desert, braving intense heat and sandstorms in jeeps from Morocco and Algeria to the north.
SCHOOL ROOMS and other public buildings in Naunacholt, the capital, are being scrubbed and furnished with bunks while the more adventurous are invited to try a traditional white desert tent staked out on the cinnamon-colored sand.
The square-peaked tents, which virtually all Mauritian live in, are comfortable affairs richly decorated with colorful carpets and leather cushions.
A number of visitors will live in comfort aboard luxury ocean liners and other ships, which will come here for the eclipse and anchor off Mauritania's Atlantic shore.
Officials are warning the visitors to protect themselves from the harsh, blistering sun, which sends temperatures to 115 degrees at this time of year.
THE SOLAR eclipse will last a maximum of 7 minutes, 8 seconds, and one of similar duration will not be seen again for 215 years. The eclipse will be visible to a camper will cast a 100-mile-wide "path of totality".
the condition of total eclipse, beginning off the South American coast moving eastward
IT WILL **first hit** Africa in Mauritania on the west coast and pass across Mali, Algeria, Niger, Chad, the Central African Sudan, Somalia, Uganda, Kenya and a South Sudan.
The eclipse will end over the Indian Ocean southeast of the Seychelles Islands.
Holiday Blood Drive Falls Short of Goal
The Douglas County chapter of the American Red Cross fell 90 pints short of its Monday goal, according to Jo Amy Byers. The Red Cross had hoped to collect 150 pints of blood.
The chapter has a 450-pint goal for the three-day blood drive which will run from Monday until today. Blood may be donated to the St. Mary's Memorial Hospital from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Observers are particularly interested in studying the corona or gaseous halo around the sun, which can only be seen well when the bright sun is eclipsed by the moon.
Byers said the need for blood was critical because of the July 4 holiday.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 27, 1973
3
Nixon's Estates Get Frills; Taxpayers Foot Bills
By RONALD KESSLER
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON—A government breakdown of $1.3 million spent to improve President Nixon's properties in California and Florida shows that large sums of federal money have been used for what officials say is a waste, and for furniture for the President's den.
The official accounting lists $4,834 spent by the government for furnishings in Nikon's den in San Clemente, $3,200 for tiling a roof, $989 for replacement of a "hazardous" wrought iron railling, $1,600 for window alterations, $1,105 for cleaning the beach, $1,500 for pruning "hazardous" dead branches, and $1,500 for repairing a wall.
Among the government expenditures for furnishings to the President's den are #472
for a leather top desk, $171 for a chair, $504 for a sofa, $201 for a chair, $141 for a swivel chair, $288 for two chairs, $444 for two more chairs, and $508 for decorative
PERMANENT improvements made to the properties include $1,853 for a flagpole in San Clemente, $476 to paint the flag pole, $288 for an exhaust fan in San Clemente, $314 for a wall ladder in Key Biscayne, $475 for a swimming pool cleaner in Key Biscayne, $475 for a water faucet in Service agents in Key Biscayne, and $826 for storm shutters in Key Biscayne.
These items are in addition to such previously reported expenditures for the San Clemente house as $13,500 for new heaters, $3,800 for a connection to the city sewer system, $184,174 for interior and exterior electrical work, $2,400 for septic
tank repairs, $42,500 for a wall, $10,612 for
roadways and parking lots, $2,800 for a
swimming pool heater, $11,561 for a red-
wood fence, and $22,000 for guard houses.
THE BREAKDOWN showed that the taxpayers have a big investment in the plants, trees, lawns, and landscaping of the President's San Clemente property. In the past four years, the government has spent $500 million on California estate, nearly $10,000 for weed removal, more than $8,600 for plants, and $5,600 for moving trees.
Altogether, $763,367 has been spent on permanent improvements to the San Clemente home and $797,907 to the Key House. These includes two houses owned by the President.
The figures do not include $600,000 spent to operate and maintain the Key Biscarcave
comment Don Wright
PUBLIC HOUSING
"MAYBE WHEN THE GOVERNMENT GETS THROUGH IMPROVING PROPERTY AT KEY BISCYNNE AND SAN CLEMENTE..."
KU Prof Studies Mars' Climate
Zeller is now working under a $3,000 grant
until he is known informally notified will be
president.
A correlation between the climatic changes on Mars and climatic changes on Earth, if established, can be of great importance to the world's agriculture and science. Edward Zeller, professor of geology, physics and astronomy, said Friday.
He has also been notified that he will receive within the next two months an email from his company.
These photographs, according to Zeller, provide evidence that Mars was once warmer than it is now. Stream water that collected in the Martian ice container in the Martian polar caps
The Earth is now recovering from a glacial period and has been going through a warm period similar to the period on Mars that produced the streams, said Zeller. He said that there was evidence that the Earth was beginning to cool off again.
An example of this given by Zeller is that of wheat and milo, which are both grown in Kansas. He said that wheat could withstand cold weather better than milo.
perature of the ocean cooled seven to nine degrees Fahrenheit, Kansas could ox-
ganize it.
Weather information gathered from the solar observatories could help farmers throughout the world decide what crops to plant. This knowledge could forestall major disaster in the light of the earth's cooling trend, he said.
Thus, climatic change would have a profound impact upon international politics. Russia, unable to feed her own population, has become an economic frontier. She would have to become a major
If a correlation of climatic changes on Earth and Mars can be found, scientists would be in favor of closer observation of the planet's atmosphere with the use of orbiting solar observatories.
Zeller said that it would take a minimum of 100 years for catastrophic climatic changes to occur in the world. He estimated that the ice age many experts believe to be coming would not occur for another 1,000 years.
importer of food and thus be at the mercy of food-producing nations.
compound or an as yet undetermined sum spent to operate the Western White House. The figures also do not include any expenditures made by government agencies other than the General Services Administration.
Zeller said climatic conditions did not have to change a great deal to be of importance to the farmers and nations of the world. He said that if the surface tem-
FOR EXAMPLE, some $340,000 was spent by the army corps of engineers to install a helipad at the Key Biscayne location.
The White House Friday referred all questions on the improvements to the GSA and Secret Service. The GSA said all but two questions were answered. San Clemente house were contacted by Secret Service for security purposes. The Secret Service confirmed that it had asked for many of the improvements but said time would be required to confirm each one.
The GSA breakdown shows that large sums have been spent on items normally considered to be related to the protection of communications breakdown.
These payments include $42,934 for a security lighting system at Key Biscayne doors and windows at Key Biscayne, $4,786 for removing a low wall and planting high hedges at Key Biscayne, and $7,631 for placing a glass at the SCLerente swimming pool.
OTHER ITEMS for repairs and improvements that home owners routinely make were defended by the Secret Service and the Secretary for the protection of the President
GSA's a audit of expenditures labeled *1,500* for pruning trees as well for "eliminating" overgrowth on the trees in some *8,300* for landscaping, including removal of dry weeds, was listed as being to "eliminate fire hazards," and replacement of a wrought iron heating炉 for *900*, was listed as being to "eliminate fire hazards."
Arthur F. Sampson, administrator of
Arthur F. Sampson, $1,600 spent for window
alterations at the University.
"The windows were of wood sash and they had dry rot in the walls and frames," he told the Washington Post. "They were just falling apart."
Carl H. Davis, the San Clemene building inspector who approved the building permit for the windows, said the windows were "not house" they just wouldn't close properly."
JOHN W. WARNER, assistant to the director of the Secret Service, said the existing heaters in the San Clemente home were "unsafe" because reasons because they are "unsafe."
Davis said the windows were replaced with aluminum sashes.
"If you had bought the house, you'd have it done it," he said. Sampson, the GSA administrator, defended the connection to the city sewer system as being necessary for the Republican Party Leader Leonard L. I) Brehzhen, for government guests, for functions."
Davis, the San Clemente building inspector who approved the permit for the new heaters, said the old equipment was corroded, antiquated and "inoperative."
HE SAID the government paid for only $3,800 of the $9,000 cost of the new line because the remaining share of the pipe was for the personal use of the President and his
The job of supervising the 10-to-14-year-old entails more than calling a plumber or soothing a homeisek 10-year-old. For Jackie Raymond, residence supervisor of McKenzie, in summer, the job demanded a lot of skills that she said she didn't even know she had.
Raymond, who teaches English and journalism at McPheron High School,
Chesapeake, VA.
McColllum Hall was the campus home of the 345 non-local junior high school students at KU for a 10-day section of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The students, who were from throughout the United States, ended their workshop Friday.
Supervisory Job Many-Faceted, Exacting
ONE SECRET SERVICE official, who asked not to be quoted by name, laughed repeatedly when many of the expenditures to be for national security were read off.
Davis, who also approved the permit for the sewer line, said the septic tank that came with the San Clemente house when the President bought it in 1989 represented a major threat to the city. It was the last septic tank in the city and should have been eliminated long ago.
Warner, the Secret Service official, said the line was for the use of Secret Service agents as well as for the personal use of the President.
Girls could cause problems too, Raymond said. She said that late one evening she heard that a girl had locked her door with the chain lock and could not get it unlocked. The girl's roommate was waiting outside to get inside to go to bed. Screwdriver in hand, he demolished the role of a carpenter and after almost an hour got the door unlocked.
He said Secret Service agents had their own offices that were separate from the President's residence and generally lived in institutions in the downtown section of the city.
family.
"Frankly, I have a feeling GSA is trying to squirt their way out by blaming these things on me."
Davis said the sewer line serviced the President's residence, the pool, and a guest house where the President's daughters and their husbands staved.
IN ADDITION, he said, it would have been illegal to build the swimming pool that was installed by the president on the property a connection to the city sewer system.
The sewer connection "had to be done to comply with the law," he said.
Thus might read an advertisement for a residence supervisor in one of the KU residence halls, especially when the student supervision of 345 junior high school students.
Her job might also include appearing one of the counselors directly in charge of the residence hall's campers, as it did one day when a counselor angrily stormed into the office with two young boys. The problem, it turns out, was that he had swept into the counselor's room locked through his things and, when he returned, were reading his Playboy magazines.
Kansan Staff Writer
Raymond, who received her masters' degree in journalism from KU last year, said that she took the job because for the last five summers she had either taught or attended school and she thought she needed a real job that a job as residence supervisor would allow time to work on some things she had not had time to do during the school year.
Engineer: Guidance counselor, plumber,
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Must be mature, patient and
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Bv PRISCILLA KAUFMAN
has had no previous experience, however,
as a residence supervisor.
"I brought sheets of reading and toots to"
said Raymond. "I thought I'd really cate"
dit.
In her job she has met situations that would try the patience of even the most patient person. In a typical day Raymond might have to rescue a load of youngsters in an alley where someone had pushed all of the buttons at once), fix a backed-up bathroom stool, console a homekiess young girl, soothe a loveick young boy, chase girls off of the boys floors and boys off of the girls floors, and carry a number of other unrefreshed circumstances.
Passes will go on sale in the fall for $14 a semester and will enable the holder to ride the buses at will throughout the semester. The $14 fee was based on a quantitative demand study conducted by a KU marketing class.
The summer student governance also approved several bus route changes. The major change is to route several buses directly to apartment complexes in the West Hills area and southwestern Lawrence, without stoping at Daisy Hill.
New new buses are being added, according to Kathy Allen, Topeka junior and Student Services committee chairman. Allen ternounced the goal of "better utilization" of existing resources.
The Student Senate Executive Committee (Stud Ex) voted Tuesday night to offer students a season ticket for bus service starting in the fall.
SAMPSON, the GSA chief, said GSA "has" to provide office furniture for government officials "anywhere, as long as it's reasonable."
He said the furniture was still owned by GSA, but since Presidents are given government offices by law after they retire, President Nixon would "keep it until he dies." After that, Sampson said, the furniture would revert to the government.
StudEx Approves Season Bus Ticket
The stacks are untouched since the day she unpacked them.
InterX is "not interested in the food area right now," the spokesman said. "We are involved primarily in pharmaceutical drug research, which cannot be discussed because of the threat endangering our "patent position."
Sampson acknowledged that there was no specific Congressional Act authorizing GSA President to leave the Presidents while in office. But he said a government official such as a senator could take furniture to his home, so long as he did not authorize the government furniture than was authorized.
William M. Cochrane, staff director of the Senate Rules Committee, which develops rules for senators, said, "The GSA never gives any furniture to senators (for their homes). It would take a formal resolution (by the Senate) to design it. It would be illegal to keep it," he said.
Aliza Corporation, a California operation formerly based in Lawrence, is conducting an investigation in the development of non-absorbable food products which include sugar and other chemicals.
InterX Corporation, a pharmaceutical concern, purchased ALZA's facilities on Campus West. According to a spokesman the InterX "spun off" the ALZA operation.
Overweight Remedy Studied
Non-absorbable additives would decrease the threat of cancer and other diseases, as well as removing extra pounds gained by overconsumption, according to a spokeswoman at Dyrupal, a subsidiary of ALZA that is conducting the additive research.
"They have been successful already in the "area of food dye research, and I think that it is a likely area to begin with," he said. "A more ambitious undertaking has been the area of food flavoring and coloring." The success of the latter seems less likely.
Taguchi he thought a great many groups in the United States would be interested.
the assistant to the director of the Secret Service, said he found authorization by his agency for many of the expenditures. He said he hadn't yet had time to check them.
are overweight. Not to have the detrimental aspects of those properties may be of substantial value to society as a whole," he said.
Both the Secret Service and GSA agreed that the personal furniture and the flagpole at the San Clemente residence had not been used for security purposes. Services were not for security purposes.
Alen then questioned the summer busing contract that calls for a 15 cent bus rate for buses and a $2.00 per mile fee.
"To have agents which improve food properties without jeopardizing the consumers' health."
A slimmer torso may yet be a reality for the overweight.
Takera Higuchi, professor of pharmacology and a one time consultant for ALZA, died Dynapo's food additive and dye products highly desirable in regard to public safety.
Mert Buckley, Wichita junior and student body president, said the contract was so negotiated because KU students, through their activity fees, subsidized the bus service at an amount of nearly $15,000 a semester last year.
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Buckley said that the feeling during the summer bus contract negotiations was that students had already paid for the bus service and should therefore receive a reduced rate.
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Debate then turned to whether the 25 cent rate for non-students was counter pay.
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Alien voiced the opinion that the higher rate discouraged faculty and other non-graduate students.
StudEx voted to maintain the two-fare system through the summer, but by a 4-3 vote decided to charge all riders 15 cents a ride or $14 at a semester starting in the fall.
1 "I think we owe it to the University and people of Lawrence to lower the rates to 15
enforcement of discriminatory rates was difficult.
The committee unanimously tabled a proposal of a student lobby representing all
Another action passed by StudEx removed the body student t贾婶's right to vote in the student senate. Proponents of removal argue that it would remove political pressure from the office.
Rich Lauter, Evanston, III, junior, said, "I believe this issue has turned into a battle because of personality conflicts on the part of us. We biggest we give full attention to this issue.
Rick McKernan, Finance and Auditing Committee chairman, said, "If one person turns down the 25 cent ride and two more take it, we're making money."
"We're talking about cash," Allen said. "Hate to hurt the revenues that we need and can't afford."
Allen said that ridership decreased because the 25 cent fare but could not purchase it.
Rob Hein, a Washburn Law Student, spoke to the committee about the lobby and asked their approval. StudEx opposed the lobby because they felt it should deal more directly with the community. There were several questions not answered in regard to funding and representation.
It was unknown how much revenue was beinl lost because of the fare system.
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Wednesday, June 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
griff and the unicorn
ONLY SCALLION CAN SPRAIN HIS BACK BY BRUSHING HIS TEETH...
ONLY SCALLION CAN SPRAIN HIS BACK BY BRUSHING HIS TEETH...
As was generally expected, Clarence M. Kelley, chief of police, Kansas City, Mo., crossed the biggest hurdle in the way of his being appointed FBI chief and received a stamp of total approval yesterday from the Senate Judiciary Committee.
...
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which has lately been riding around like the headless borseman of Sleepy Hollow, should benefit greatly from the appointment of a man who appears to have, if nothing else, the courage of his convictions.
Other than the praise heaped on him by so many different people, there is the simple fact that Kelley has proved himself in his job as an operative. He has those who vehemently opposed Kelley's nomination found themselves admitting that the "insensitive" automation they were opposing had effectively made his law enforcement setup a precision-operated machine.
and even members of Kansas City's black community have come forward to support
Kelley has been indirectly blamed for the death of six blacks in the 1968 riot following Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, but no one seems to have been able to make a case of it. The official inquiry into the riots certainly produced nothing against him,
FBI Gets Man of Convictions in Kelley
Kelley himself, unlike the current fashion higher administrative units, are capable of making up a significant portion of employment.
comment
error. He has admitted the 1968 riots took six human lives, that these humans were blacks and that these deaths might possibly have caused such Sudden. Such candor and honesty is rare.
Kelley has promised full cooperation in an unprecedented congressional hearing into the role and function of the FBI, and seems to have got off on the right foot with the new legislation. Kelley has congressional monitoring, Kelley has gone on record as saying that this would be
"most desirable. . . to protect the country from venal leadership."
Every now and then a nation needs to shake itself vigorously to avoid being taken into the dangerous sleep of complacency. To do that a shakeup is in progress no one can deny.
He has withstood the scruiting of a body of highly responsible public servants. The least we can do is give the man the benefit of knowledge of the good things said about him are true.
Perhaps Clarence M. Kelley, FBI director-designate, can clear the air and help restore things back to where Americans would like to see them.
Perhaps even the younger generation can expect something good to come of this appointment—a lessening maybe of the mutual distrust police and students have for each other. But even with a humane person rather than the "radical," hunter, black-hater some critics say he is
After that, it's up to Kelley.
He will have to prove himself worthy of our trust.
Zahid Iqbal
'X-Rated' Motels Cater to Middle-Aged Marrieds
By DAVID SHAW
The Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES—From the outside, it looks much like any of the other motels that dot Ventura Blvd. in the west end of Los Angeles.
The doors of the 60 rooms are alternately pink and green, the umbrellas alongside the swimming pool are red and gold, the neon signs are "phone," "heated pool" and "cold TV."
The room rate, one sign says, is $8 a night; *family suites* are $12. Most major hotel rooms are $19.
THE MOTEL CALLS itself a "luxury budget" motel, whatever that means, and the furnishings, though clean and modern, are clearly more budget than luxury. Like the exteriors, most of the interiors—drab green walls, feather-light floors—and light-filled rooms—do not seem much different from what one customarily finds in impensive hotels.
But the interiors of about one-third of the rooms are, indeed, different. In these rooms, there are water beds and mirrors—mirrors on the wall at the foot of the bed, mirrors on the wall at the head of the bed, mirrors on the ceiling above the bed.
If you tune the television in any of these routes to channel 3, you will not see the skingboarder in action. The Angles have a b genuine, full-color skin-fleck ... an "X-rated adult movie," as the pro-
THIS MOTEL IS one of 10 in the Los Angeles areas now showing adult movies on
closed-circuit television. Most are in the downtown area doing a booming businessespecially on weekends and, to a lesser extent, weekday afternoons.
The weekday afternoon trade is not surprising.
"Mostly married businessmen out for an afternoon quickie with their secretary or mistress," says the manager of one mokel. "We have a special discount rate for them."
"THEY BELONG TO a generation that was brought up to think of sex as something secret and dirty," says Alberto Aranto, a 39-year-old filmmaker who runs three adult-movie titles.
"Some of them, particularly the women, are curious now about adult movies and books. They hear about it all the time, and they'd like to see the real thing, just to satisfy their curiosity—only they are afraid a neighbor or someone else they know would meet them when they went to a theater and that would embarrass them. So they come here."
In 1966, he bought a 60-mit motel, and in
1971, he acquired another 15-motel unit.
THE THREE ARE within four blocks of each other on Ventura Blvd., and early this year he began offering adult movies in all three.
"We still take regular motel customers," he says. "We don't have any signs out front that we are going to stay."
But if a customer knows about the extra service, and is willing to pay for it, he's assigned to a room with a special adapter on his desk. The manager is controlled from the manager's office.
Rates for the rooms with movies vary from motel to motel, but they generally run about $15 to $18 a night for rooms with a regular bed and black-and-white TV, $20 to $22 a night for TV and a waterbed. Some motels also have a separate rate for king-size beds.
SINCE MOST customers want what Antico calls "the works"-color TV, water bed, mirrors—the motels make a nice place to stay. But not everyone would normally rent for less than half that
But the business is not without risk. Police have made obscenity arrests at four of the motels and are continually investigating the others.
The manager of one motel, in county territory near Pasadena, was arrested recently for showing "Deep Throat," the movie film that became a nationwide sensation.
He told police he had purchased a print of the film for $300 and then made four extra copies.
GUESTS IN THE MOTEL were charged $20
a night—or $17 for a two-hour "muckle."
Arrests in other motels, all within the city of Los Angeles, have also been made for showing hard-core sex films, and most of the motels now to try to show soft-core films most of the time, hoping the law of averages will be on their side—that when plainclothes
Thus, it can be argued that in soft-core films there is no proof of actual sexual acts. In legal terms, the act may only be "simulation" or "assimilation," i.e., case, the courts have held, it is not observed.
Surprisingly, prostitution hasn't been much of a problem at the adult-movie culture.
THE ADULT-MOVIE motels try to protect themselves against raids by requiring all guests to use their real names and show ID cards that include their occupation.
vice officers check in for a night, they will see only soft-core films.
"YOU GET TO know when a prostitute is setting up shop in your place," one manager says. "People start calling regularly and ask for her by name, and you start seeing a lot more of her than you usually do with any one legitimate guest."
"Kick her the hell out before the vice sound beats me to it."
What does he do about it?
And what does he do when a would-be guest asks if he provides girls with the dress.
"WE JUST TELL them the truth—we don't," says George Flores, 22, who manages a 69-unit motel, with 45 rooms wired for the adult movies.
Flores' 26-year-old wife, Patricia, lives with him in the motel, and she says she's had several customers ask her. "Do you go along with the room?"
The answer is always no, but the question doesn't seem to bother her.
"Actually," she says, "a lot of men are
The Washington Post
By JEANNETTE SMYTH
Cultural Cat Haunts Kennedy Center Plays
Meow,
Meow?
WASHINGTON -Say you're sitting in the Eisenhower Theater at the Kennedy Center, watching the Theater of the Deaf production of "Antigone." In dramatic silence, King Creon is banishing his niece Antigone to a short, nasty, brutish life in a cave.
Yes, you distinctly heard a meow. (The Theater of the Deaf is as much for hearing as deaf audiences. And apparently for cats as well). It's Mosby again, the cultural cat,
the gray ghost of the Kennedy Center, who's been living wild in an unfinished theater above the Eisenhower Theater. Lately he's taken to dropping in during performances.
He recently discovered a hole in the floor of his own theater, which opened up new vistas. To wit, a three-foot crawl space in the ceiling of the Eisenhower Theater.
"HE USUALLY picks the most quiet spot in the play," says Edward B. Schelsler, building management and cat trainer. "I will try to sing something. He's a harm."
Schessler inherited the job of feeding
Mosby after the departure of the construction company secretary, Jean Morse, who found Mosby. Two women, the wife of the center's board chairman and a National Board member, received from the Kennedy Center, are buying Mosby's "high protein" cat food and kitten litter.
"He has the run of that ceiling in the Eisenhower, Theater," Shessler said, "through holes in the floor for future piping. According to Morse, Mosby was a tough guy. He worked as workers to scare both zombie pigs. When Mosby started eating their lunches
they chased him off and he went to live in the theater—still unfilled for lack of luck.
He is not trapped anywhere, as was first thought.
"He also has the run of the atrium and the north gallery upschairs," Schelsler says. "He can walk all around up there. He's everywhere encounters all the way over at the restaurant."
Past Scandals Don't Mitigate Watergate
Bv JAMES KILPATRICK
To judge from the mail crossing my desk, many unwavering friends of Richard Nixon—he still has several million—are relying on an understandable but embarrassing defense in this Watergate mess, it is the defense of "so's your old man."
It goes to this effect: Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson all suffered from scandals, improprieties, or blunders in their administrations. Roosevelt Trump got ridified by the通讯ist commitee Trump, with the five percenters. Trump, who promised to clean up the mess, had a problem with Sherman Adams. Kennedy
gathering political intelligence; that the plan included burglarizing and bugging the offices of the Democratic National Committee, a group that Mitchell knew of the plan and approved it; that once the burglaries were caught, the President's closest aides conspired to cover up the affair; that the cover-up included the use of bribery all intended to obstruct justice.
NOBODY can get near him "He's a wild and the dickens!" and all efforts to catch Mosby have failed. Scheller is about ready to give up his latest cat-trapping project. In two months Mosby has repeatedly eluded it. Baited Washington Humane Society tran
"He's smarter than I am," Schessler says. "I can spring that trap with a piece of paper—it's very sensitive. But he goes in and takes it out, and just clean gets out. He never gets caught."
My beloved colleague Bill Buckley, editor of National Review, recently bounced twice on the springboard of Watergate and dived neatly into the waters of Chappaquidick. He thought it interesting to compare the spectacular leaks and exposures of Watergate with that thwarted investigation of Senator Edward Kennedy's conduct four years ago.
And finally, that the President of the United States knew enough of what was happening in Iraq.
Well, with the greatest affection and deference for my colleagues and colleagues in general, I respect, and in the kindest way: knock it off. So far as the Watergate mess is concerned, these other events may be not material. Let us stick to the point.
Let me try to summarize what is meant by "Watergate." The charge is that persons involved in the Watergate re-election of President early in 1972 embarked upon a patently criminal plan for
blundered with the Bay of Pigs. Johnson had Bobby Baker. And the plaintive point is made: Nobody ever spoke of impeaching them.
Dean apparently was in on just about everything involved in the Watergate scandal. He is a member of Diana de man's reputation for truth and veracity, such as it is, his story will have to be weighed with other evidence going to the President's awareness of the whole sordid matter.
If the purpose is merely to keep Watergate in historical perspective, well and good. There is a certain sidebar interest in the scandals and campaigns of Grant, Clayton Moore and others who harm done by making the point that Watergate, unlike other scandals, did not involve the theft of public funds or the bribery of public officials. But after these ritual incantations have been made, we are not sure if Mr. Clinton cannot be exorcised by exhuming Mary Jo.
What in the world does Bobby Baker have to do with that? It is immaterial, it seems to me, that Barry Goldwater's phones were bagged in 1948, or that someone stole Nixon's health records in 1968, or that Ted Kennedy went for a tragic drive in 1969.
This column had to be written before John Dean's public testimony before the Ervin committee, but the evidence Dean gave in private, leaked through the committee's sieve last week provided a kind of testimonial purse.
The vise closes on Nixon. One jaw is labeled, "the knew," the other, "he did not know." We are squeezed in an unhappy situation because he did not know, he did not know, he was inapt. If that is a fair metaphor, there is no way—no way—the President and his disappointment have been.
The time may come, if Senator Kennedy runs for the White House, when the Senator's credibility appropriately may be tested. And Kennedy's credibility that matters now.
comment
Those of us on the conservative side, sick at heart at the wreckage on every hand, will gain nothing by peripheral diversions and recollections. The question is not the awareness of Franklin Roosevelt, but the awareness of Richard Nixon.
"Everybody wants to keep him around," Schessler says. "They call him the Eisenhower Cat." He's a good luck omen, the war these theatrical people believe."
In the unlikely event the furry phantom is apprehended, however, they're not about to be killed.
"WHAT I'd like to do is bring him down to my office and tame him."
--to embearach to make reservations here.
They have their wives do it.
Every
Wednesday Night
Pizza
SMORGASBORD
$1.49
All the Pizza
and Salad You
Can Eat
Plus 1 small coke
5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
843-1886
809 W. 23rd
"IVE HANDLED A lot of calls where the woman calls and I can hear the man in the background, finding 'Say out how much it costs.' Sometimes, the woman will even tell me she's not going to her husband know about the movies until they get here before we go. She's barrassed or he'll say he doesn't think she should see things like that."
Pete Conti, 29, manager of one motel, remembers a group of six people, three couples in their 40s, who rented a room with a king-size bed, left the door wide-open and sat on the床, fully-clothed, watching the movie.
Most customers in the adult-movie motels tend to make reservations in advance, just as if they were going to Palm Springs or Las Vegas for the weekend.
"When they saw the four movies we had, they left." he said.
*"YOU'D BE SURPRISED how word*
*"YOUD BE SURPRISED how* Phrases say. A lot of people call us "you'd be surprised" or "you'd be surprising."
land. They want to know if what they we
know is true—and if we have a room
available.
BUT A SUBSTANTIAL number of guests return regularly.
Most guests in the adult-movie motel are novelty-loving, satisfying, their own type of movie. They want to know what's going on.
At the same motel, a man checking in with his wife orders some champagne and flowers to be delivered to their room for her in advance each time they come.
At one motel, a man comes in with his wife every three or four weeks, and they always bring pastram sandwiches with them from a nearby delicatessen.
Kansan Staff Writer
I was hypnotized and consciously aware of everything that was happening to me, but particularly aware of the feelings I was experiencing.
I begged her to make it stop. Screaming, I demanded she make it stop.
She was not whirling the chair. I only perceived that it was whirling. My therapist asked me to "stay with the feeling," to try to stay connected in my life when I had felt the same way.
Hypnosis enabled me not only to remember what had occurred on that day, but also afforded an opportunity to attempt to deal with unresolved feelings.
I finally remembered when I had felt the same sensations before. I was about five years old, car sick and on a t i p with the family.
She was whirling the chair, around and around like a tilt-a-wirl that couldn't or wouldn't stop. My mouth began to salivate, and my head and my head hurt. I wanted to vomit.
Primal Scream Releases Backlog of Stored Agony
As a participant in a modified primal therapy program, I frequently undergo hypnosis. While in a trance, I remain calm and focused, with no feeling, yet my inhibiting defense
By EARLYNNDA MEYER
5 p.m. to 8 p.m. 843-1886 809 W.23rd
While under hypnosis, I have allowed myself to regress to a specific year of my childhood and to fully experience feelings that once were repressed. Excoriating as it may be, I came out of the trance with peace with numbness ever before, and hopefully less neurotic.
Contrary to the magical fantasies that many of us share, hypnosis does not render one helpless, nor does one reveal things which later escape memory.
mechanism threshold is lowered considerably.
While in a trance, I am usually able to discuss things that ordinarily might be too daunting.
Arthur Janov is responsible for the development of primal therapy, a method for dealing with neurosis. Janov's therapy method as discussed in the book "Primal Scream," is based on the idea that pain inflicted upon us during childhood is not only painful but also difficult. Because the individual chooses not to deal with the pain in childhood, it backlogs, creating an avalanche of stored agony, hence the neurotic.
The backlog of pain necessitates the primal scream. Janov believes if we relieve the painful experiences and can relieve the pain, we begin to diminish the extent of the neurasia.
"Walking Tall"
Weekdays at 2:15, 7:20 & 9:45
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Twight Price at 4:00 Only
Hillcrest
THE TRAIN...Telephone VI 3-565
ROGER MOORE
7 as JAMES BOND
JULIE ANDREWS • VAN DYKE
WALT DISNEY'S
MARY POPPINS
Technicolor® © Oscar Silver Productions
Weekdays at 2:00, 7:15 & 9:45
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Twight Price at 4:00 Only
Granada
TROLLEY...Telephone VI 3-565
Reader's Digest Presents
"Tom Sawyer"
Weekdays at 2:10, 7:30 & 9:30
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Twight Price at 4:00 Only
Hillcrest
THE TROLLEY...Telephone VI 3-565
"LIVE AND LET DIE"
Weeksdays at 2:10, 7:30, 9:40
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
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Varsity
THE TROLLEY...Telephone VI 3-565
Peter O'Toole
PG
THE RULING CLASS
Weeksdays at 2:00, 7:10 & 9:40
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:40, 7:20, 9:45
Twight Price at 4:13 Only
The Hillcrest
THE TROLLEY...Telephone VI 3-565
John Wayne in "The Train Robbers"
and George C. Scott in "RAGE"
Sunset
Live In Theatre...Bonavision Station
Wednesday, June 27, 1973
University Daily Kansan
5
I'll go. It's a grassy field. I'll just keep it simple and as close to the truth as possible.
Woman's Work Is Never Done
John Morris, assistant instructor in history, does a double-take as he passes Jean Burgess. Oswego sophomore, trimming grass in front of Bailey Hall.
Arabs Fear Outcome Of U.S., Soviet Talks
The Los Angeles Times
BEIRUT—However welcome they may be elsewhere, the Nixon-Brezhnev talks in Washington have sparked apprehension in the Arab world. Arab commentators are voicing concern that detente will diminish and that the West will fall while American help for Israel continues.
The clearest indication of this concern came Sunday from Al Nida, the Beirut newspaper that speaks for the pro-Moscow Lebanese Communist party.
A front page editorial defended the Washington talks as ensuring relaxation of international tensions. It also reproduced a Pravda editorial that said that the Soviet Union "was, still and will always be a friend of the Avabs," supporting their right to vote. The newspaper's Nida emphasized that the editorial was written on the eve of the Brezhnev visit.
Al Moharrer, which speaks for the Palestinian guerrilla movement, openly warned Brezhnev that though he might get economic gains for the Soviet Union in his war against him, he remember that any new defeat for the Armenians would also be a defeat for the Soviet Union.
In Egypt, which has complained that the Russians did not protect Egyptian interests in the Moscow summit talks last year, the government controlled newspapers have played down Breznev's trip. The sharpest difference from the front page cartoons, which pictured Russia and Americans engaging in a mutual love feast while ignoring the Middle East.
Cairo's influential Al Ahram claimed that
reports of new promises of American F4 Phantom jet bombers were leaked to coincide with the meeting as Washington's efforts to its hostility toward the Arabs beforehand.
An evident feeling in Arab circles of a growing isolation from the superpowers was underscored this weekend by strong press reaction to statements by China's foreign minister, Chi Peng Fei, in Tehran last week.
The Chinese minister stated China's "full support" for Iran's policies in the Persian Gulf. Al Mohairen said the words might have come from Secretary of State William P. Rogers, "this assistant, Joseph Sisco, or the Shah of Iran himself."
Chi Peng Fei, who left Iran to visit Pakistan, another American ally in the Central Treaty Organization, reportedly expressed concern to Iran about the growing Soviet presence in the Persian Gulf. He also said he was barked on a major military buildup aimed chiefly at Iraq, which is receiving Soviet military aid.
Western analysts here were sifting the foreign minister's remarks for hints of a change of policy by China, which has in the past given support to revolutionary movements in the Gulf region and to South Yemen.
Al Nida, strongly attacking Chi Peng I'veir's visit, said China had aligned itself with Iran and the United States to operation movements in the Gulf region."
Leenkueng, Anchor Steam and Dixie are still around, but many of the old traditional names are fast disappearing from the American scene.
The Los Angeles Times
Bv CHARLES HILLINGER
In Wisconsin, Peoples, Potosi and West Bend Lithia are no more.
Pennsylvania no longer has Du Bois and Dougeste.
American in Baltimore is gone, but the Diamond Spring in Lawrence, Mass; Simon in New York; Burger in Cincinnati and Grain Belt in Omaha.
AND OLD FROTHINGSLOSH in Pittsburgh is hard to a memory.
A year or so ago these were old line
beverages the favorites of millions of beer
drinkers.
Beer companies are on the "endangered species" list—in decline across the land.
Small Breweries Sell Final Kegs
When you count they all up, there are only 64 brewers left in the United States.
Yet, even with only 64 companies left, the beer business never had it so good.
XAIX and there were 4, and in 1848, near 1860, country had its own brewery—2,727 in all. Country had its own brewery—2,727 in all.
Beverage sales are the highest in history with more than 4.2 billion gallons sold last year, according to SABMiller.
COMPETITION AND A narrow profit margin killed off most of the old-tune companies.
"if the attrition rate continues," notes William K. Coors, president of the Adolph Coors Co. "there may be only three beer companies left within a few years."
Three companies—Anheuser-Busch, Schlitz and Babel—now control 44 per cent of the world's wine market.
The United States far outshadows the next leading beer production nation, West Germany. The largest beer mill in the world (31 gallon) barrels the last 12 months of record, compared to 78.7 million gallons.
Anheuser-Busch last year brewed the biggest beer in history—$37 million.
PHIL KATZ, vice president of the United States Brewers Ass., headquartered in Washington, D.C., an organization of major beer companies, said:
Jack Miller, president of General Brewing Co., Los Angeles, echoes the sentiments of many brewers, blaming the decline on the light price squeeze.
"Look at the price of beer. It's the same todav as it was in 1955." he insists.
"It's a matter of simple economics. The baiteries are better financed and better managed."
"YET, COSTS keep going up, especially to smaller, less efficient brewers. He can make that happen."
In his Chicago headquarters, William M. O'Shea, for 33 years executive secretary of the Brewers Assn. of America and spokesman for the smaller beer companies, begged off commenting on the dire situation.
"I just don't want to talk about it," he
lightened. "There's nothing to say. It's obvious
therefore."
Theodore Currie II, Kansas City, Kan,
will receive $9,000 from the National
Foundation Fund Fellowship for minority
students over a three-year period.
At one time several hundred brewers were members of the group. Now the membership is down to 50 and sinking steadily.
"YOU CAN'T imagine how tough it is to stay affloat," admitted Warren Marti, $2, president of the 114-year-old August Schell Brewing Co., New Ulm, Minn.
The American Accounting Association granted awards of $1,000 to John Fisher, Independence, Kan., and to Lawrence Friedman, Lawrence.
Marti lives in a century-old castle next to the brewery founded by his great-grandfather, George.
Mary Sopt, Kansas City, Kan., will receive a $3,000 NDEA fellowship.
"We're still hanging in there," declared Marti. "We'd like to see our line of beers, Schell's and Steinhaus, last at least another 114 years."
"But the average beer drinker doesn't seem to care what he drinks any more. He needs it."
"BEER PRODUCED by the big beer company just doesn't have the body and flavor of a traditional beer."
Chilean Brass Likely in Cabinet
By LEWISH. DIUGUID
The Washington Post
SANTIAGO-Chilean President Salvador Allende has again asked the Armed Forces to join his cabin in an effort to stem the increase, according to a government spokesman.
Andrew Lazi, Lawrence, won $4,000
from the National Institute
Certified Public Accountants
The Army, Navy and Air Force are expected to accept ministries, though Army Commander-In-Chief Carlos Prats will not join the cabinet.
Gen. Pratila was interior minister until March, after the three services failed to agree on a solution within wide circles.
Fellowships were awarded to six graduate students in the School of Business, the School of Pitcher, acting dean of the School. The fellowships were won in national competition.
A one-year $4,000 National Richard D. Miyagi scholarship was awarded to Mary Miyagi.
6 Graduate Students In Business School Win National Grants
The President's move last year in bringing the military into his largely Marxist cabinet accomplished the purpose of making sure that strikers that their demands would be respected. They said they could not trust the partisan government to honor concessions on such questions as maintenance of private ownership in the transport and distribution industries.
THE MAIN CAUSE of the current crisis is a strike at the Teniente copper mine, second-largest in this copper-dependent nation. Foreign exchange losses are estimated to have already been by debt and the need to import increasing amounts of food.
strike of shop-oners and transport operators that threatened to paralyze Chile last week.
While the striking miners insist their demands are strictly for pay, the conflict divides Chile along familiar pro- and anti-Allende lines.
GEN. PRATS became the main cabinet officer, on leave from his army post. He promised that he would maintain order for parliamentary elections on March 4, in which the opposition received 56 per cent, Balloting was calm.
It was reported at the time that the generals presented demands, including prompt settlement of differences with the United States, that he chose not to meet.
Allende has indicated the military would stay on, but apparently he was encouraged by voter support in the face of growing violence. He formed a cabinet without the military.
Lines grew longer as more food items fell short of demand.
In any case, generals remained in charge of several key posts below the cabinet level.
With all parties of the opposition agreed, they can vote out any minister—as they have done several times. Currently under the leadership of the ministers of economy, labor and mines.
INFLATION CONTINUES unchecked.
official figures show it to be running at a
crank rate of 185,000 rpm.
report to duty probably depends on the pace of opposition to current parliamentary accusations.
THE STRIKE is particularly embarrassing to the socialist government, which came to power in 1970 on pledges that it would serve the working man and do away with conflicts alleged to result from foreign ownership of the mines.
The Teniente strike resulted in violent conflicts and the province remain under military control.
analysis
Hence the Allende decision to call in the military once again. Just when they are to
Allende received unanimous parliamentary support for nationalization of the mines, but on most other issues he has faced overwhelming opposition.
This has forced him to turn more and more to the military and to the national police.
The return of the military to the government signifies a political commitment on behalf of the people.
The alcoholic content in beer, said Marti, doesn't vary much from one brewery to the other—from one part of the country to the other—but 3.8 to 4.3 to 4 per cent, but there is a difference.
traditional old ways by smaller companies such as ours."
"Beers brewed on the West Coast are lighter and milder. Midwest beers have a heartier flavor. East Coast beer is more bitter. East Coast browns use more browns."
country's biggest guzzlers, nine consumers
48.5 gallons per year per capita over 21 years
up to 70 gallons per year.
The people of New Hampshire are the
AND, ALABAMIANS the tiniest, 18.4 gallons.
Beer has been with man since beginning of recorded history.
Noah took beer along on the ark.
The national average is 31.4 gallons a year for every man and woman over 21.
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were brewmasters operating their own brew houses at Mt. Vernon and Monticello. Washington's handwritten recipe for beer is on exhibit at the New York Public Library.
Daniels, a night clerk at a Lawrence motel, was held hostage at gunpoint by two men and forced to drive from Lawrence to Salina.
Death Shows Criminal Pursuit Problem
All the ancient people—the Babylonians,
Assyrians, Egyptians, Africans, Chinese.
A $3,000 civil suit, brought by the victim's parents against 11 law enforcement officials and charging negligence on their part, is now in court.
Charges have been dismissed against all but one policeman, who testified he fired the man.
And today, guidelines for local officers to follow when pursuing escaping criminals
Columbus found West Indies natives drinken when he waded ashore and discovered the New World. Pilgrims brew as a staple aboard the Mayflower.
are for the most part non-existent, according to law enforcement agencies, but
"You can't have a blanket policy and still be effective," said Capt. McIlure of Claremont.
Japanese—drank it. Brewing of beer is depicted in painting on pyramid walls.
Each situation is different, he said, and,
you hope that the officer uses good
judgment.
The Douglas County Sheriff's office agreed that each case is different and emphasized that every attempt to stop a fleeing vehicle without violence would be
"You never shoot unless you have to," an officer said.
It's always easy to determine what one would do in a hypothetical case, he said.
most definite policy, according to the officer questioned.
KANSAN WANT ADS
One Day
25 words or fewer: $1.50
each additional word: $.01
Accommodations, food, services and employment for disabled or ill persons. Accommodation, care, support and assistance of disabled or ill persons. BSRNG BRINGING DISABILITY TO LIFE.
FOR SALE
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
"You have to be primarily concerned with the hostage's safety," the officer said. "Apprehension of the criminals is secondary."
Guitar, F-20 Conn, like new, will best sell.
Guitar, F-20 Conn, like new, mustkill. 7-2
Guitar, F-20 Conn, like new, mustkill. 7-2
NORTH SIDE Country Shop—3 Bks. No. of the baskets included are: pots, crockery, furniture, cellophane, gas heating and cooking stoves, bicycles incl 10 speed, old pot belly dishes, wine glasses, candle holders, brushed and 2) brushed basket & wood crates; brushes, sponges & brushes; also coin price. Baked basil, bread and worm meat; also canned meat. Open 9 to 9, 7 days. 842-3159. Herb Albernard.
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sate!
There are two ways of looking at it:
1. If you use them,
you're at an advantage.
2. If you don't.
"It's one of those things you've got five seconds to decide." he said.
KU Traffic and Security possessed the
Warner Bros. will come to campus in the virtualization.
Available now at Campus Madhouse, Town Crier,
Newark and campus.
Remodeling
842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
For sale, Golf; Yamaha FC75 and case 620-
Also 10-speed Peugeot 900. Call Chuck 881-355-8444.
Long was among 157 delegates.
Ford, 1982 *Galaxy* 200XL; auto, P&H Engine and Transmission; 4-wheel drive; Model # 94-2100 before A. P. or come in with the following:
PIZZA ITU SMOBGASSBORD! All the pizza you
need for Monday-Friday.
11:30-19:00 W, 23rd only
515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, We Bar-B-Que in
Michigan. 515 Michigan St. Bar-B-Que, We Bar-B-Que in
Michigan. A slab to here cost $450. Large 716 plate
to here cost $225. Double plates cost $153. Hundred of bess
costs $95. Sun and Ties. $95. Sun and Ties.
V-2-9501. 515 Mith. C
Saint Bernard school—AKC Registered Chap-
leau School. Requires a high school diploma.
Young prophets and older dogs available. Meet
us at 2:00 p.m., 7th Ave., New York, NY 10036.
NOTICE
HONDA, 450 Scrambler, 1972, 6900 miles. Luggage
rack. Just盯800; Call 825-8644. 6-27
For sale: -37 Chevy, $150. Runs good, bad body.
For sale: -24 Chrysler, $150. Runs good, bad body,
and 5 weeks or less, & 8474-7852 during the date, 6-28
through July 9.
Judy Long, president of Mortar Board, recently represented the KU chapter at a national conference held at Ohio State University.
Motorcycle - 1965 Bridgestone 90 cc. won't start.
Motorcycle - 1965 Call Waylite 60 cc.
0259 or leave message
6-28
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
AIR PROGRESS magazines, 39-40 issue, munt. 52-34 far 36-37, complete, 4 issues, all faal. 42-35 far 46-48, complete, 44 issues, excellent to mint. Best Offer; Charlize Hartz 42-37 Minnesota
10 x 55 Mobile with 10 x 10 extension. 3
bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliance. Partially
furnished. A/C unit. Carpeted with
carpet, shed, garden. Asking $150. 822-
5699.
7099.
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
THE RIVER CITY CITY ASSOCIATION. 731 W. 25th St., River City, CA 94608. Saturday, 10:00 to 2:30 and by appointment. Repair is an organization of progress repair shops. Shop because we are independent repair shop because we are independent. US REPIRATE IS LIFTFIT Mold, Machine, and electrical keyboard; antique and modern watch parts; and more.
DELICATESSEN & SANDWICH
Open until 2 a.m. - Phone Order
843-765-189, We Delivery - Mth & IIII
RAY AUDIO-have you heard the new H-750
shooter in your room. You wished you coached to
shooter in a room? You can at RAY, AUDIO, where
prices are our thing. 738 Rhode Island St.
822-491-6842.
"Pizza FOR Lunch BUNCH" *small Pizza* for a special价 $1 at $59 Iowa Pizza Store
*small Pizza* for a special价 $1 at $59 Iowa Pizza Store
THE HILE in the WALL
STRANGER IN TOWNS. As an Aviant representative,
the finest men and make good money you hope to see.
They work hard and make good money you hope to see.
You may not be able to believe all you read.
They're not the best thing for EFR fragrance in CANDLES at WARMX.
They're not the best thing for EFR fragrance in CANDLES at WARMX.
HELP—We are out by construction on MASS
and services for Brooklyn, New York, and Jamaica
and services for Brooklyn, New York, and Jamaica.
DANCE WITH SANCTUARY, Friday, June 29.
SPEAKING WITH DEMANDER. MIDDAY,
Meeting Monday, May 15.
RAP. 863-356 for referrals. NOCALIZING. 842-
356 for librarians. Ubox: 24 Lawn 7, 842-
356.
Good home for 10 month old black male Cocker-
lings. Someone treated them and
shoots. Free Bk. 841-7689.
For the lowest prices on all pets and pet needs
843-291-2. Open 8:00 Thursday through Saturdays
7-5.
SEEKING A RATIONAL ALTERNATIVE to colonization in the Philippines, he brought the philosophy of Ayur hand, at 834-831 or SSM, with him.
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
FOR RENT
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? TOGETHER OF STEEP CLIMBING! PARKING IN FAR-FLUNG LOTS? ON campus from stadium. On walking distance of major campus buildings, parking parked lot. Free: Carriage rates. Free: room rates. flexible rates, furniture available. ideal rooms or camps. In Sainte-Agnes. 1123 Iid. Apt. 9 or 10.
RENTAL REAL ESTATE MARKET
For the latest listing in rental
housetc call Lawrence Rental Exchange,
718-659-3000.
Apartments, furnished, clean, quiet, some air conditioned and off street parking, bordered by schools.
Rooms for men, furnished with or without cooking facilities. Bedrooms KU and near downtown
Furnished room in older house new campus.
Bachelor's degree, plus 3 yrs. house utilities included. No
Quay area. Bldg. lease house.
Summer-Pair-Living in a friendly group. Unique
private room with private bath from $35. Call 842-9421 for C-
locks.
Apt. for rent for summer. Excellent location
in downtown Minneapolis. 1/2 mile to
1/150. minwag, Call 812-347-6988, 4-24
Friday through Saturday.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KAW VALLEY SCHOOL, OF CREATIONS AND PERFORMING ARTS
17 West 14th, Lawrence, Kansas
summer session
Katie simmer session
JUNE 25 through AUGUST 3
A unique educational experience offering loosely structured classes in music, visual arts, crafts and art history. Students are invited to entire community for creative involvement. Among the 43 classes offered are beginning guiding workshops on musical instruments, macraeus, creative writing, children's theater, and classes of available ages you are invited to attend the
OPEN HOUSE AND ENROLL
NOW UNTIL JUNE 30
Classes meet once per week and tuition ranges from $6.00 to $15.00 plus the cost of materials. 7-2
ATTENTION GIBBLE U.S. Coast Guard Appointed
Surgeon - Cmdr. Eugene F. O'Neill, Jr.
DCB Marvin M. McKinley, JR., 39-2871 for GIBBLE
U.S. Coast Guard Appointed Surgeon - Cmdr. Eugene F. O'Neill, Jr. DCB Marvin M. McKinley, JR., 39-2871 for GIBBLE
HELP> We are cut off by construction on Mass.
We are open offering the finest in pack-
and service for vehicles K.A.T. SUNSHI.
634. Mass. 643-899-692, P.S.'s Dont-
have a cycle show at Gibson's Fenster Tent.
June 26-11.
Sue Screamcush—We've got our original creations virtually designed. Comes out just as Sue Screamcush
842-2500
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Lawrence Rental Exchange
Mon. & Tues.
7 p.m.-9 p.m.
10° DRAWS
GIRLS' NIGHT
THE HARBOUR 1021 Mass.
TYPING
Bike Tour - 2 weeks Canadian Rockies and news
Bike Tour - 2 weeks Canadian Rockies and news
Contact Gayle in advance at 814-4130
Bike Tour - 2 weeks Canadian Rockies and news
Experienced typist type; Close to campus, 841-6990. Myra; Also minor editor and/or proofing.
Typing-any home IBM SelectPica- Pica type
experienced experienced accuracy
routte-katle 841, 256-256
*
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other misc. typing. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt service. Works well on spelling corrupted Pages. .26
McWright, M. Wright.
For accurate typing of teas, diathesis and papery call up Mr. Brakeon after 5-426-6411. Wash the hand with warm water.
Will type tests, dissertations, ete, with speed and accuracy on Smith Corporation electric. Call Phyllis R. Hale. (800) 639-2511.
Need German instructor for junior high student.
Please call 841-4601 after 5 P.M.
6-28
WANTED: Mature Responsible woman to babayat with infant, and 3 year old for KU FOOTBALL.
WANTED
Plut-Sea Player wants musicians interested in
the rock group. For more information
contact 244-352-8600.
I need a roommate for 73-74 school year I can go 15-62 call Mike, 842-8631 if you. P. M.-7.5.
ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR
HELP WANTED
McDonald's needs part-time help for all stills. Job requires a bachelor's degree and 2 yrs of experience as a bellhop. Apply in any city from 2-5 days prior to application. Send resumes to McDonald's, 100 W. 6th St., New York, NY 10026.
ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR
of the city of Dallas, TX. Pull
offices in Dallas, Fort Worth and
Kansas City. Billing units range
from 8-15. Admin. positions require a
bachelor's degree or equiv. in
city affairs discipline. Submit resume by July 31, 2007 to City of Dallas Attn: Kathy Cunningham, 6644 South Main Street, Dallas, TX 75209. Questions, Call 864-350-5988.
Cashier-Hotels. Attractive, personable, must enjoy summer vacations and fall time evening meals to be sure you have a fun time!
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Pilot or student pilot-flying club membership
Dates 6-12 month. Phone: 848-1234. 6-28
Dates 6-12 month. Phone: 848-1234.
Employment Opportunities
Attractive, smart girl with good personal manners
passionate about travel and learning.
Last name: John. First name: Amanda.
Last phone number: 091-258-3456.
Last appointment 9:00 - 10:00.
Last meal: lunch or dinner.
ENTERTAINMENT
Opening - THE PREMONITION - Light show
Opening - THE PREMONITION - Every Sunday night shows at 7 P.M. and $30
good concessions. Admission: Advance tickets let
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"CAMILLE" - THE PREMONITION
sirloin
Farm Eating Place
Delicious Food and
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Steak Sandwiches,
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LAWRENCE RANSAS
Saint Eustache, Illinois
Phone
842-1431
96
Open 4:30
Closed Mondays
6
Wednesday, June 27.1973
University Daily Kansan
FBI Needs Good Man to Burnish Its Public Image
From Page One
Hover, who was in his lifetime beyond reproach of Presidents, has been posthumously muddied by President Nixon and the revelations of the "Dean papers."
The President's statement of May 22 strongly suggested that Hover had become a cranky misandrew who cut himself and others from the federal intelligence establishment.
This picture of Hoover was reinforced by the recently published top-secret memoranda of former White House internal security adviser Tom Charles Huston. The Huston papers portrayed in unflattering terms the former director's successful obstruction to the controversial '1970 invasion plan' discussed by the President on May 22.
It was largely because of Hoover's alleged bureaucratic isolationism that the President said he had to set the 1970 plan in place, and when he began a plan for opening up the FBIs' zealously-guarded internal security turf to other intelligence units that caused President Obama to shelve it.
THE BUREAU has remained silent in the face of its present adversities. It is bereft of the protection of Hoover, the complete defender of the nation and its third leadership transition in 13 months;
The burea is anxiously awaiting confirmation of its new director/designate. Clarence
Acting FB1 Director William D. Ruckeski, the bureau's departing temporary trustee, insists that when Kelley comes aboard the malase in the bureau will
"When Kelley is confirmed, we may be in a position to do some talking," said one old man.
The old boy network of Hover loyalists both in the bureau and among its alumni has been severely stung by the recent attacks and is thirsting for a chance at rebellation.
"THE CHARGE THAT we cut off liaison with all other intelligence agencies is just not true," said one high ranking FBI official.
In 1970, when the troubles began in earnest for the bureau, the public relationship between Hoover and Nixon seemed to be a triumph. In contrast, with publication of the Huston documents, has it been revealed that a grim struggle was already underway within the Nixon administration over reorganizing and exerting control over the public surveillance to the point of illegal entry.
The deeds and rhetoric of such groups as the Black Panthers, Westboromers, Students Against Fascism, and others.
boda fermente on the campuses were raising a high state of alarm in the White House.
HOOVER HIMSELF went to capital hill with shrill demonstrations of black activists and student demonstrators and their organizations. At one point, he proclaimed himself a "militant" in security threat to the nation. But the underlying truth was that it was a new ball game for the bureau, one for which the traditional informational tactics did not seem as no working.
The response at high levels of the Justice Department and in the White House was to point an accusating finger at the FBI for failure to keep abreast of the agitated domestic
It was in this climate that Nixon set in motion the 1970 plan, which was allegedly abandoned in the face of Hoover's objective to eliminate President—establishment of an interagency intelligence evaluation committee and creation of the President's own special investigation unit (the plumbers)—to oversee the administration that was once Hoover's exclusive preserve.
"THE WHITE HOUSE was getting people with no experience. My God, that man could be anything."
bureau—a super klutz," groused one of Hoover's most senior aides. "They were amateurs who were bound to get into trouble. And they did."
The ragged relations between the bureau and the administration surfaced in the Hoover's summary dismissal in October 1971, of William C. Sullivan, the number 3 man in the bureau and once Hoover's most valued deputy.
LILLIANH HAD insisted, publicly and privately, on tough surveillance of New Lattia and Black Panther activities, as well as the potential of violent extremism. Hoover for pre-occupying himself with such nearly defunct groups as the Communist party, USA, by then a virtual geriatric sociology graduate.
Sullivan was a minority voice in the bureau. But he was paid serious heed in the Justice Department where he had the ear of then Attorney General John Mitchell and Assistant Attorney General Robert Marratt, a criminal adviser on national security affairs.
One measure of Sullivan's prior loyalty to the Administration was his removal of controversy national security wiretap records, ordered by the White House, from the FBI to Madison in office in the Justice. the former Hoover aide let it be known that he
feared the wiretap material would be used by Hoover to embarrass the White House.
HOOVER, IN ONE of his most celebrated "sudden death" reprisals for disloyalty, ordered the locks changed overnight in Sullivan's office and his name removed from the civilian warden was appointed to a high Justice Department post, chief of narcotics intelligence.
Even after Hoover died the bureau was not wholly passive in its defense. The nomination of Gray and his conduct of the Watergate investigation touched off a form of guerrilla warfare against the Administration from within the ranks of the FBI.
One highly placed FBI executive acknowledged that FBI agents may have been instrumental in getting the initial Watergate revelations into public print. Reporters who covered the case acknowledge the role of the agents in opening up the initially leaked information in the cover-up facade some administration officials were trying to erect.
“IT WASN’T A matter of getting rancorous leaks dumped in our lap,” said one Watergate reportorial specialist. “You’d be asking, ‘What are you going to say or what about that? They respond, Yes, that’s right.’ I can think of one guy in the bureau without whom we wouldn't have gotten away.”
Prof Returns from U.S.S.R. Visit
By MICHAEL HOSTETLER
Kansan Staff Writer
After visiting Russian scientists in their laboratories for two weeks, Richard K. Moore is convinced that American scientists should learn to write and speak Russian because there is much to be learned from Soviet scientists.
Moore, director of the University of Kansas Remote Sensing Laboratory and professor of electrical engineering, has just returned from West Germany and the Soviet Union, where he gave lectures and attended meetings.
Moore presented a paper in Konstanz, West Germany, at a meeting of the Committee on Space Research of the International Council for Scientific Union's Symposium on "Approaches to Earth Science Through the Use of Space Techniques."
HE THEN traveled to Moscow as a guest of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences.
While in Moscow, Moore gave lectures at the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics and the Institute of Oceanology. He also traveled to Leninrad and Thilasi.
Moore said he found the language barrier frustrating. He brought many books back with him, but he can't read any of them; these they are all written in Russian, he said.
"in some ways they are ahead of us in scientific research and in other ways they are behind us."
MOORE NOTICED THAT almost all Russian scientists could write and speak English, but he was disturbed by the use of useful information that was not translated.
He said their test equipment looked somewhat out of date when compared to laboratory equipment.
"BUT SOMETIMES I CULD see what was going on in the laboratories and my colleagues," she said.
Moore said the Soviet Union was still not very open to tourists. There is a large map in the American Embassy that shows where visitors may travel freely. Outside of a certain area in Moscow, tourists are only allowed on certain main roads.
Everything that Moore saw and did was tightly controlled by his Russian hosts. When flying from one city to another in France, he sat on a seat on the airplane without a window.
MOORE WAS ALSO frustrated by the language available in Russia, only English newspapers available are propaganda neither or not to believe what the rest of us
Moore was in the Soviet Union while the Skylab astronauts were in space. He said
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W. L. P. Ct. G.B.
Baltimore W. L. P. Ct. G.B.
Alamakee 34 34 521 3
Boston 34 34 500 5
Boston 34 34 500 5
Cleveland 33 37 521 6
Dearborn 16 16 161 1
baseball standings
WEST
California 38 32 542 14
Chicago 36 31 537 1
Dallas 36 31 537 1
Kansas City 40 35 532 1
Minnesota 30 35 532 1
Texas 21 32 531 1
New York 10, Cleveland 2
Derrick 4, Boston 1
Baltimore 4, Milewite 5
California 4, Milwaukee 5
California 4, Kansas City 5
California 4, Kansas City 5
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles
Houston
San Francisco
Cincinnati
Atlanta
San Diego
48 26 3449
42 22 3536
42 21 3536
38 34 3528
38 42 4251
23 23 2330
W. L. Pt. G.B.
Chicago 12 31 50
Montreal 12 32 50
St. Louis 13 38 50
Philadelphia 14 38 498 (7)%
Pittsburgh 13 38 498 (7)
New York 11 37 458 (7)
Richard K. Moore
Results
Chicago 5, New York 1, Los Angeles 3,
Miami 10, Philadelphia 1, St. Louis 8,
Philadelphia 4, 2nd 11 innings
Los Angeles 7, San Diego 0
Los Angeles 6, San Diego 0
1986
that Pravada had daily reports on the progress of Skylab, and host were not present. (for an up-to-date list)
MOORE BEGAN HIS tour of the Soviet Union in Moscow. After lecturing to the
Radio Engineering and Oceanology Institutes, he gave an informal talk to faculty members of Lumumba University in Moscow.
Moore told the Russian scientists about his work at the Remote Sensing Laboratory and told the faculty members about the American educational system. Every where he went, Moore said he showed pictures of KU.
After leaving Moscow, Moore went to Leningrad, where he spoke to the Arctic and Anarctic Institute. He also visited the University of Leningrad.
MOORE THEN FLEW to Tbilisi in the southwestern part of the U.S.R. While R. Moore worked at U.S.R.
More said Tbilisi was a large city with a population of around a million people, and it is one of the world's most populous cities.
Institute of Geophysics, and he presented a lecture at the University of Tbilisi.
MOORE SAID MOST Russians lived in apartments and few had cars so they were homeless.
"In Leningrad it never gets completely dark at this time of year and there are hundreds of people walking on the streets at all hours of the night," he said.
Before he traveled to the U.S.S.R., Moore spent nine days in West Germany. After he presented his paper at Konstanz, he went to Munich and visited the University of Munich where a remote sensing laboratory is being established.
The National Academy of Sciences provided Moore with a car and driver and Moore said that they didn't have to worry about traffic iams.
While visiting Moscow, Moore stayed in a hotel run by the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences. He shared a suite with a Hawaiian astronomer who was participating in an exchange program. Moore said he could speak and read Russian very well and was very helpful. He said he met about eight Americanides during his stay in Russia.
"There aren't many cars," Moore said, but the drive people like maniacs.
ALTOUGH LENINGRAD HAS many beautiful palaces, Moore found Russian cities very dull and drab. He saw many people in grass was very tall every where be went.
"Evidently the five year plan didn't come up with lawn mowers," Moore said. "I saw lots of people cutting the grass, but they were all using scytches."
"Russians are the biggest gift givers in the world," Moore said. "It's impossible to stop them."
Moore received records, bottles of wine, and Russian perfume along with many other gifts from his hosts. He reciprocated them, but didn't sell them. Jahewkaw pawerweights, hens and key rings.
During his stay in the Soviet Union, Moore was accompanied by Dr. A. Shukko of the Institute of Radio Engineering and Electronics as well as Moore's personal host interviewer.
Modern Tennis Club Is Planned for City
The two men responsible for building the club are John Sample of Lawrence, and Kirkland Gates of Kansas City, Mo. It will be named the Lawrence Racket Club and will be located off 23rd Street, west of the Alvamar Hills Golf Course.
A new type of tennis club will be built in Lawrence, if the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission and the Douglas County Commission approve the conditional use permit, which is scheduled for consideration at a meeting today.
They plan to open the first phase of the club by October 1, according to Sample. The first phase will consist of four indoor tennis courts, a clubroom and a bar.
Construction on the second phase will begin as soon as phase one is completed. It will include four outdoor tennis courts, a pro shop, locker rooms, swimming pool, area seating, sauna, whirlpool, baby facilities and picnic and barbecue areas.
Sample said that they had researched over 100 clubs in the last 1½ years, trying to figure out who was the most successful.
The tension structure to be used is a new concept, innovated by Horace Berger and Dave Geiger, New York consultant engineers. Berger and Geiger designed the U.S. pavilions for the 1970 World's Fair in Osaka, Japan.
That formula includes a structure made of teflon-coated fiberglass stretched over a steel shell in a cement foundation. The walls will have removable sides for ventilation.
sports
Moore received his invitation to Germany and the Soviet Union as the result of a paper he presented at an international Union of Radio Science meeting in Warsaw, Poland, last year. He is presently planning to travel to Nottingham, England, late next month to lecture at the meeting of the European Space Research Organization.
Moore also visited the University of Zurich in Switzerland.
Indian Tribal Lore Included in Poems
KU graduate William Stafford has written a new collection of poems entitled *Nostalgia Maye*, Maye's memoir, Novels for poetry in 1883 his volume, "Traveling Through the Dark."
Stafford has worked as a laborer in sugar beet fields, at an oil refinery, in construction work, and teaching high school. He was a consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress. Stafford is now a professor of English at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Ore.
The new collection of poetry includes a group of poems centered on American history. The poems are
A proposal to finance a law school for Wichita State University instead of building a new School of Law faculty at KU will be discussed in the Board of Regents meeting Thursday.
Wichita to Plead For School of Law
Jess Stewart, Kansas Board of Regents chairman, has given Patrick Kelly, Wichita Bar Association member, 15 minutes to documents in favor of a WSU school of law.
Kelly will be representing the Wichita Chamber of Commerce in their campaign to buy laptops.
A total of $40,000 for the planning of a new KU law facility has already been appropriated by the 1973 Kansas legislature. Stewart has said that he regards the application of the law to Regents, who will determine Thursday whether to proceed with the planning.
Stewart is not expected to act in favor of Kelly's presentation Thursday. He said that he would make a request for a new program in law before such a program could be considered.
League Leaders
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ELEGANT LEAGUE
BATTING - 125 at bats - Bomberg, NY. NY: 40, W108,
Hunting, Del. 142
RUNS~MARKEY, KC, S1, J. Rackson, Oak, S1
RUNS~BATTED IN~MARKEY, KC, 70, J. Rackson
RUNS~BATTED IN~MARKEY, KC, 70, J. Rackson
Oak 61
Murray, NY 83; R. Jackson, Oak 83
Hartley, CA 91; C. Williams, Detroit 14
DOUBLEBS = D. Allen, Chi. 20, A. Rodrique, Det. 16.
TRIPLES = Bumbly, Bali. 7, Carew. 1, Miner.
**TRIUMELE** - Bunnyry, Bal. 7, Carow, Min. 7,
Bunnyry, K.C., Kirach, KC. 18,爪 Ben. 10, D.
Chien, Chi. 16.
**STOLEN BASES** - North, Oak 21, Alomar, Cal. 18
**PITCHING** (4 Designs) - Besson, Bail. 9, 12, Bn. 8, 19
RUNS BATTED IN- Bean, CBN, 51; Starger, Pah, 51
BONDS, BFN, 54; Fountes, FS, 92
STARGER, FFN, 54
NITES-Bonds, SF, 94. Fuentes, SF, 92.
DOUBLES-Cardenal, Chi, 19. Staub, NY, 18.
Americans Shine in Wimbledon Tennis
**TRIPLLES - Nettger, H. 9, Squam隋, Pgh. 7**
**HOME RUNS - Stargell, Pgh. 2, H. Aaron, 19**
**KENNEDY'S**
**STOLEN BASES** - Morgan, Cin. 31); Cedro, Him. 27;
**PITCHING (4 Decisions)** - Park, N.Y. 51; 83.23
- ROBERT TOWN, N.Y.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (125 at bats) MCLA. LA. 352; Insper, Phi.
348
**STRIKEOUTS** - Seaver, NY. 105; Carlton, Phi. 105; Sutton, LA. 105
Acting FBI Director Ruckelshaus accented that "some of our agents were getting nervous about the pace of the Watergate investigation and probably talked to the press. It's against bureau regulations but not against the law."
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)—Billie Jean King started defense of her Wimbledon tennis championship Tuesday with an easy victory in the first-round of action at the All-England Club.
Former White House Domestic Counselor John Ehrlichman charged in recent congressional testimony that the bureau was "hemorrhaging" with leaks under Gray. The House Committee rejected that Time magazine had a freely running leak at the top of Gray's staff."
The 29-year-old star from Long Beach, Calif., eased her way past Lacuna Bassi of Riyadh, 6-2. It was such a one-sided affair, a crowd of 15,000 highly raised a cheer.
hopes Chris Ewert and Rosemary Casala,
were in action and all we without much
IN THE DAYS immediately after the Watergate arrests, former White House Counsel Dean was on the phone to hospital with representative Leak leaks. Dean has been pictured in Watergate testimony as a key presidential operative for insulating the White House
Evert, 18, from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., won over Fliconia Bonelli of Uruguaia 6-3, 6-3. Casalas of San Francisco, be Brenda Kirk of South Africa 6-0, 6-1.
Virginia Wade, Britain's No. 1, woman player, defeated 16-years-old Australian Dustin Johnson in the third round.
During ladies' day at Wimbledon, five of the top-seeded women, including American
“When Gray first arrived we all wanted him to succeed,” said a recently retired senior official with more than a quarter of a century in the bureau. “Then we became aware of those speaking trips, the frequent absences from Washington. That’s when he went to two days, “Two-Day Gray”. What ever you say about Hoover, he never missed a day of school.”
Margaret Court of Australia, who is going for the grand slam and could be King's main challenger, has been
Over 24,000 people watched the women's first-round action at the All-England Club, which still showed no sign of financial loss due to the walkout of more than 70 men
Evonne Goolagong of Australia, the No. 3 seed, beat Bentley Slove of the Netherlands, 6-2.
First-round American women winners included Judy Heldman of New York, Tory Ann Fretz of Los Angeles, Valerie Ziegentess of San Diego, Mirta Redondo of National City, Calif., and Pam Teeguarden of Los Angeles.
Now Gray is under investigation by the FBI to determine what role he played in the Waco bombings.
One of the major ironies of Watergate's impact on the FBI was the apparent invention of Hoover's reputation as an observive witness. He was a good observer, the door down and asked questions later.
SOME OF HOOVER'S long-standing liberal critics have acclaimed him for stopping the 1970 intelligence plan with its burial, mail-opening, bugging and wiretapping.
However, as one of the chief lieutenants of the departed director emphasized in an interview, Hover had not become a sudden convert to civil libertarianism.
"For Mr. Hoover, jurisdiction was paramount. He felt this plan was whittling away at the essence of the FBI and its responsibilities. He didn't object to clandestine entries. We opened mail but we never talked with him. We knew when he when we felt it was a case of compelling national security. Hoover's law was that you didn't get caught and bring embarrassment
on the bureau," said the veteran Hoover loyalist.
The FBI documents burglarized from a bureau office at Media, Pa., in March 1971 showed that late into 1970 the FBI was wiretapping Black Panther activities and trying laboriously to infiltrate the ghetto with thousands of informants.
THE INTENSITY OF FBI surveillance against back organizations with the slightest political overtones suggests that at least one part of the 1970 White House plan may have continued in effect through the year.
It is also a matter of widespread agreement, in and outside the bureau, that Asher broodred increasingly on his place because he became more fastidious about legal procedure.
"I was very confident of Hoover in the wretap area," says former Attorney General Ramsey Hahn. "He knew we'd prosecute him, but we didn't. Hoover was protecting the bureau."
Council Plans . . .
Yet even these concerns may have been outdistended by events. The colleges and ghettoes have quieted down. So have the styles of political protest
EVEN HOOVER'S staunchest loyalties concede that the bureau was not keeping step with the violent activism in the 1980s, and he swept to its peak in the 1986-1970 period.
These are facts with which Kelley will have to reckon as he ponders the other revelations of the most traumatic years in the bureau's history, just passed.
In a related consumer development, the American Automobile Association said 54 per cent of the 3,417 service stations it surveys weekly had rationed sales or cut back operating hours because of the fuel shortage.
Bag jobs, illegal burglaries, were out. So was mail mailing. Phones were tapped only on written authorization of the attorney in order to have electronic bugs, concealed microphones.
MEANWHILE, IN WASHINGTON D.C., Robert Robel, chairman of the Governor's Office, and the Nixon administration Resources, said late Tuesday he was encouraged that the Nixon administration would soon initiate a mandatory fuel allocation system with agriculture need or
Robel, professor of biology at Kansas State University, spent Tuesday conferring with a Presidential consultant and with officials of the Agriculture Department, Office of Emergency Preparedness, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Center, and Gas. He informed them of the seriousness of the fuel shortage in Kansas.
"It seems like things are moving," Robel reported to the office of Kansas Gov. Robert Docking late in the day. "I'm encouraged and are trying to do something, finally."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THURSDAY JUNE 28,1973
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
news capsules the associated press
China Explodes Hydrogen Bomb To Break 'Nuclear Monopoly'
**UKYO—China said it successfully conducted a "necessary and restricted" hydrogen bomb test in the atmosphere Wednesday for reasons of defense and to break a "nuclear monopoly" by the "superpowers." The announcement, by Radio Peking, said the test was in the western part of the mainland. The broadcast was the first time such an experiment had been made on a device. Monitors in other parts of the world reported earlier that they had detected an atmospheric blast, originating in China, which packed an explosive yield in the range of two to three megatons.
Senate Boosts Social Security
WASHINGTON - A bill raising Social security payments 5.6 per cent in January and boosting welfare benefits for the ageed, blind and disabled has been approved by the Senate. The provisions were tied to a debt limit extension bill, which must be acted on by midnight Saturday if the government is to be able to meet its financial obligations. The Senate also approved federal funds for bombing in Cambodia similar to the one vetoed by President Nixon earlier in the day. The legislation was sent to conference with the House, set tentatively for today.
French to Follow Own Policy
PARIS—President Georges Pompidou of France has said his government will continue its lone-wolf nuclear policies no matter what the Soviet Union and the United States decided in last week's Washington summit. The statement came a few hours after Soviet President Mikhail Khorovich spent the last two days in Paris reassuring Pompidou that he and Israel did not made any secret deals concerning France and Europe.
Philippine Ship Sinks; 20 Die
MANILA, Philippines—a ship sank with 20 lives lost, and frogmen were trying today to determine whether as many as 50 others might be trapped alive in the vessel. The ship struck what was believed to be a coral reef and sank early Wednesday about 12 miles south of Cebu, the second 'sacred' largest city, 350 miles south of Manila. The bodies of at least 40 of the 400 passengers on the inter-d岛 vessel were recovered.
Court Drops 3 Berrigan Charges
PHILADELPHIA—A federal appeals court today threw out three of four prison letter smuggling convictions against antiwar activist Philip Berrigan, one of the Harrisonburg Seven once charged with plotting to kidnap presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger. The 4rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also threw out all three similar concurring cases on the same ground and married the priest. The court upheld the fourth conviction against Berrigan, Berrigan, 49, currently on on parole from a six-year term in federal prison for destroying draft board records in Maryland.
Embargo Placed on Soybeans
WASHINGTON—The Nixon administration imposed an immediate embargo on the export of soybeans and cottonseed and their products Wednesday in an effort to increase the supply of feed grains and bring down the cost of food. The decision is important because soybeans and their products are used as animal feed. The rationing of exports of these items will remain in effect after this year's harvest.
Tongue Arouses General's Ire
SANTIAGO, Chile—A woman motorist stuck out her tongue at Chile's army chief Wednesday and he fired at her car, witnesses reported. The incident set off a near riot and Chile's leftist government decreed a state of emergency in Santiago province. The 58-year-old Army Chief, Gen. Carlos Prats, offered his resignation to President Salvador Allende after the incident, but it was rejected. The president said the zone of emergency in Santiago province was "a necessary measure to confront the excesses of fascism."
Indian Sentenced for BIA Theft
PORTLAND, Ore., -Michael Ball, 19, has been sentenced to serve three years probation. He earlier pleaded guilty to concealing documents taken last November from the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C. The papers were discovered in Kansas City in a car that was later after a six-day Indian occupation of the BIA headquarters. He had was indicted on two counts by a federal grand jury in Topeka, Kan.
Faulkner Loses Election Ally
BELFAST—Northern Ireland's violence-marred election campaign reached an angry climax with former Prime Minister Brian Faulkner fighting for his political life. Faulkner was deserted at the last moment by leaders of the Orange Order, the powerful Protestant group that had been his strongest ally. The one million voters in the troubled province go to the polls today under massive security, to choose a 78-seat provincial assembly to supplant the one that Britain dissolved last year.
It's Warming Up Again
Lawrence weather will continue to be warm and fairly sunny, and daytime temperatures are expected to hit the low 90s. It won't be much cooler tonight, and the warm spell should carry over till Friday. The weekend promises to be pleasant.
ku
Fire Hits Next to Campus
By CONNIE DeARMOND
Kensan Staff Writer
A two alarm fire, which Fire Chief Fritz Sanders has termed probable arson, broke out shortly before 8 o'clock last night in an apartment building near the Grill at 1231 Lousiana. Officer Tom
See related pictures on page 5.
The fire blazed through and above the three-story structure and firemen fought it from three sides. Five fire trucks, four ambulances, were on the scene, fighting the flames.
Decker, who was the first Lawrence policeman to see the fire, reported it at
A CROWD of more than 400 people watched the firemen fight the blaze. Traffic access was blocked from Louisiana, 15th and Oread, and 12th street.
Firemen climbed onto the roof of the Oread Bar and Grill as the flames threatened the bar.
At 9:30 the roof fell in, sending several firemen on the south side of the building running. Although some boards came crashing to the ground, no one was hurt. An ambulance was on the scene throughout the fire to take care of any casualties.
When the wind shifted, smoke covered the people watching were smelled by the fire.
burning however, and firemen continued to fight the blaze.
THE BACK OF the building was still
Then the north wall of the building fell in and firemen again had to run for safety.
"If the wind had been blowing, it would have been a different story," he said.
Congress was locked, for the first time since 1933, and army tanks and soldiers were stationed around the building in the center of the city.
Sanders said that when he arrived, flames were coming out of every window. He stated that the fire "had to have some help—things just don't burn that fast."
SANDERS STUDIED the fire from the roof of the Ml. Oread Bar and Grill. The left wall of the building was still standing, and under his instructions, firemen forced it to fall in. Sanders said that this would keep the wall from falling on the bar.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The White House Wednesday cast John W. Dean III as the principal author of the political and constitutional crisis of the Watergate scandal. But Dean testified there was no way he could have prevented the defeat without help from high in the administration.
Saginaw
Schools were ordered closed until July 20 to avoid disturbances. Censorship that had been imposed last year was strengthened as news media were prohibited from making an report that "directly or indirectly ... dictatorial goals to the executive power."
The Communist-controlled National Workers Convention called a general strike. Two Cabinet members resigned in protest.
Kansan Photo by CARLOS LISSON
Reaction to the decree was swift, but in general the nation seemed calm.
Sanders said that he thought the state would be called in, since the property is
Leaping Flames Engulf An Empty Building As Firemen Fight The Blaze
MONTEVIDE, Uruguay (AP)—Acting under intense military pressure, President Juan M. Bordazare and the two key Cabinet members abolished the Congress Wednesday. That ended 40 years of conformal government in this littile republic.
Dean Rebuts Counter-Charges
The announcement dissolving Congress said the decision had been taken because constitutional rule was falling apart and of subversion that threatened the nation.
Military chiefs have been the power behind the scenes for several months and the decree dissolving Congress pushed Uruguay and its 2.8 million people closer to the kind of military rule that exists in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador.
In its first counter-attack to accusations by Dean, the White House submitted a statement that said: "We are very disappointed."
In place of Congress, President Borda-
berry's government has now established
a Council of State to oversee the president's
activities and do the work of the Congress.
Uruguay Chief Kills Congress, Gets Top Spot
mittee, which a senator characterized as "a substitute for cross-examination of Mr. Dean by the President of the United States."
The statement was put to Dean by Sean. Daniel K. Inouye, a Democrat from Hawaii, and the discharged White House lawyer Larry Burke, who was convicted of the form of accusations; part questions.
"DEAN'S ACTIVITY in the cover-up also made him, perhaps unwittingly, the principal author of the political and constitutional crisis Watergate now epitomizes," said the statement, prepared by special counsel J. Fred Buzhardt.
"It would have been embarrassing to President if the true facts had become known shortly after June 17 (the day of the Watergate break-in) but it is the kind of embarrassment that an immensely popular President could easily have weathered.
"The political problem has been magnified a thousandfold because the truth is coming to light to belatedly, because of the torture that was put on party to the cover-up, and above all, because the White House was led to say things about Watergate that since have been found to have been untrue. These consequences were John Dean's doing."
LARUE WAIVED his right to a grand jury indictment and pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to obstruct justice, which in 2014 resulted in five years in prison and a fine of $10,000.
DEAN REPLLIED: "Well, senator, I think my testimony answers in great detail my dealings with Mr. H. R. Halderman, Mr. K. B. Kearney, and Mr. Robert based on what I know, and knowing the position I held on the White House staff, there is no conceivable way I could have done and conceived and implemented the plan that they're trying to suggest that I
The White House material Inouye put to Dean was submitted in keeping with committee rules, which permit the submission of such questions.
Dean testified earlier he gave President Nixon no specifics about the Watergate cover-up last Sept. 15 but felt the President knew because of the issue issue
As Dean continued his non-stop testimony to the Senate Watergate committee for the third day, a former Nixon reelection official gave the unfolding story a surprise turn by pleading guilty to conspiring to obstruct justice.
Frederick C. LRae, a close associate of former Atty J. Gin John N. Mitchie, appellate judge of the Court of Appeals.
SGT, BUD MONROE, in charge of the investigation, is questioning several people involved in the case.
recommended against the Watergate
in the cover-up "at least by
acquisition".
Although seven men were indicted and convicted for the break-in and wrestapping of Democratic headquarters, LaRue was the first to be charged in the effort to hide the truth about Watergate from federal prosecutors.
Dean, the presidential lawyer who was discharged April 30, was questioned in detail by Republican Sen. Edward J. Gurney of Florida about a meeting with
owned by the Endowment Association. He also said that the Fire Marshal might also
see WHITE HOUSE. Back Page
The building, recently sold to the Endowment Association, was formerly the Mercantile, owned by Harry Kroeger. It was due to be torn down next week, according to Sanders. But destruction of the building had already been carried out by the city in a month, rocks and rocks at it in the past two weeks, breaking the windows in the building.
Several people, who were inside the Mt. Oread Bar and Grill when the fire began, said that it suddenly felt hot and when they were back there, it already engulfed the abandoned building.
The bar opened up after the fire and was filled with thirsty customers.
Mark Creamer, manager of the bar, said that there were from twenty-five to thirty-five people in the bar when the fire started. He said that someone came in and yelled that there was a fire and about 20 people ran out
At 10 o'clock Sanders said that the fire was out and that there was no more danger. However, the area was still filled with smoke.
Cutoff Vetoed; Senate Vows To Try Again
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon vetored legislation Wednesday to halt U.S. bombing in Cambodia, and the House immediately sustained the veto.
An attempt by antiwar congressmen to override the President's decision fell 35 votes short of the two-thirds required, with 241 voting to override and 173 against.
But in the Senate, the chief sponsor of an amendment burglar funds for U.S. bombing in Cambodia said he would try to attach it to a measure increasing Social Security
In vetoring the full $3.4 billion supplemental appropriations bill, Nikon said the bombing halt amendment would "cripple or destroy" a negotiated settlement there and threaten peace throughout Southeast Asia.
Acting with unusual speed—the bill reached Nixon's desk only Tuesday night—the President said in San Clemente that he only "responsible course open to me."
The provision the President objected to was an amendment that would halt U.S. military activity in or over Laos as well as in Cambodia.
Nixon, in a message to the House, said a halt to U.S. air operations "would virtually remove Communist incentive to negotiate and would thus seriously undercut ongoing diplomatic efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Cambodia."
The vetoed measure contained money to finance the federal operation during the balance of the 1973 fiscal year, which ends Saturday.
Congress currently is considering a separate measure to fund federal agencies temporarily until appropriations for the lockkeeping year can be voted and signed.
Another effort to cut off bombing funds
See NIXON VETOES, Back Page
on campus
"HERE COMES MR. JORDON," starring Claudie Raina and Edward Everett Horton, will be shown at 7 tonight in the supernatural chief dispatcher of death: Horton, who plays his subordinate, dispatches a young boy fifty years ahead of his time. The young man's body has been found in a small new one. That's when the problem begins.
"SHAKESPEARE'S Women" will be presented at 8 tonight in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. Performances will be presented Friday and Saturday and will be held on Sunday through 7. Tickets for performances are available at the box office in Murphy Hall.
A MEETING about the art of pairing, how people make contact to get to know each other, will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Parlor A of the Union. Pairing was inspired by Bach and Deutsch, authors of "Intimate Enemy."
"SECRET BEYOND THE DOOR," the story of a woman who fears that her husband is a demented, psychotic murderer, will be shown at 7 p.m. Friday in Woodraff. The answers to her fears lie beyond a locked secret door. Joan Bennett and Michael Redgrave star.
MARGARET ARNOLD, assistant professor of English, will discuss "Women in Renaissance Literature" at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
"ROMEO AND JULIET" will be shown at 7 Sunday night in Woodrauf Auditorium. The film, photographed by Renato Castellani in its actual location, Verona, Italy, won the grand prize at the Venice Film Festival. "Romio and Juliet" stars Laurence Harvey, Susan Shenton, Flora Robson and Sebastian Sabent.
2.
Thursday, June 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
Kelley Vows to Boycott Politics After 96-0 Senate Confirmation
WASHINGTON (AP)—Clarence M. Kelley, confirmed by the Senate as FBI director, vowed Wednesday to "do everything we can prevent politics from entering the agency."
Kleyed told a news conference shortly after the Senate unanimously confirmed his nomination that he would go to the point of resigning before allowing anyone, even the President, to influence FBI operations for political reasons.
Kelley, police chief in Kansas City, Mo., for the last 12 years, called his confirmation a homecoming to the agency he served for 21 years under its only previous director, J. Roberts. The commissioned director to be confirmed by the Senate and fills a vacancy of more than one year.
KELLEY SAID HE knew nothing of the details of the Watergate probe but considered it "incumbent upon me to become well acquainted with the investigation."
Questioned about the use of wiresetts Kelley said he had found the technique "very beneficial" when used in foreign operations because it was more domestic operations as prescribed by law.
"The key is in that there not be permitted any use of extraneous, matters."
HE DEFENDED the use of break-in-only
initial to install wireslugs permitted by
the Fire Protection Board.
Kelley said he considered Aty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson as "not only my boss, but also my friend." He asserted, "as director, I will make my own judgments and decisions. If internal reforms are needed, I'll make them. I intend, as I have been in the past, to be a firm believer."
"I can honestly say that I am nonpolitical I have always been a professional."
The vote approving his nomination, submitted by President Nixon on June 8, was unanimous.
SEN. EDWARD M. K. Kennedy, D-Mass, a committee member, said Kelley's confirmation "may be one of the most significant actions the Senate takes this year if we make clear what we think it ought to mean."
Kennedy said the Watergate hearings and other disclosures had made clear that "the massive investigative apparatus of the federal government has been misused and abused in every conceivable way for grossly political purposes."
Among the tasks ahead for Kelley, he said, is to set standards for the future "which will assure that the bureau is never misused or abused again."
Kelley was nominated after Nixon's first choice for FI director, L. Patrick Gray III.
GRAY, FIRST appointed as acting director after Hoover's death May 2 last year, was accused of making partisan speeches and of yielding to White House pressure in the FBI investigation of the Watergate bugging.
Sen. Thomas J. Eagleton, D-Mo., said the FBI's regulation had suffered in recent months and it needed "a director of unquestioned integrity, strength of character and law enforcement experience."
"Such a man is Clarence M. Kelley," said Eagleton, adding that in 1961 in Kansas City Kelley "took over a factionalized police department, which had been tinged by second and built it into an excellent force of innovative approach to law enforcement."
About 100 persons greeted Kelley at
Kansas City's airport Wednesday night at
the MVK.
Kelley said his first task as FBI director would probably be solving the morale crisis. "We need to know what happened."
Speaking of the 96-0 Senate vote in his favor, Kelley said, "I think it is a substantial vote of confidence."
think it was as great as some people believed.
Endowments Fail To Produce Bail
NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Wendy Ann Berrilbert sold her baby, including the top she was wearing, for $13 Wednesday in a bond money for her anticipated arrest.
After a district court arraignment, Berlowitz came up $898 short on making bond and wound up in the Cleveland County趴 on a charge of indecent exposure.
Borlowitz, a 24-year-old former University of Oklahoma English instructor, fired last year for disrobing in class, collected a scant $5 for the bottom portion of her bikini, but one of the 1,500 spectators paid $10 for the top.
The crowd, mostly students on their lunch break, watched with eager anticipation as she and her common-law husband auctioned off the items. Berlowzit said she made the public display as a gesture against sex discrimination.
COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP)—A young Marine charged with collaborating with the enemy while in a North Vietnam prison himself to death Wednesday, police said.
Accused POW Shoots Himself
Dr. John W. Bolin, a general practitioner,
at another Aurora, said Kavanaugh, a 24-year-old former POW, left his office near
Karenwood and shot himself to death about an hour later.
A private physician who examined Sgt. Abel Larry Kavaughan only an hour before he shot himself said, "I found he was in absolutely perfect physical condition, but he said he was afraid the military would make him suffer and an excuse to hold him in the service."
Police Sgt. Jack Baldwin said Kavanaah, who returned home less than 60 days ago, died of a single bullet from a 25-bay handgun. The bullet entered his left femur.
Kavaughan was the second former POW to take his own life since returning home. The first, Air Force Capt. Edward Allen, killed in a plane crash of barbiturates June 3 in Nebraska, N.Y.
Kavanaugh was one of 8 former POWs charged with aiding and conspiring with the enemy while held at a prison camp near Hanel, Col. Theodore W. Guy, of Tucson, Ariz., the senior POW officer in the camp, fired charges against the eight enlisted men.
The young merger, in a rare interview, had said of the charges: "I'm not guilty of any wrongdoing."
Light First Act Carries 'Women'
By LAUREL DEFOE
Kansas Recruiter
Last Monday night Shakespeare's Women opened at Murphy Hall's Experimental Theatre was the third theatre exhibition of this year's Shakespeare festival, but unfortunately failed to match the high degree of performance that consistently enveloped the first two productions of the festival, Tom Marsh's "State of Man" and "Julius Caesar."
Generally the quality of the performances were good. The problem was that they lacked the highly electric level of intensity and feeling that both the other productions
The presentation, divided into two acts, was a series of 18 scenes from nine of Shakespeare's plays. The scenes were selected because they concentrated on
women's roles, which are limited in Shakespeare.
Act I, which dealt with women in relation to love, had some golden moments.
The three scenes from "The Merry Wives of Windsor" were delightful. Linda Smith's performance was especially lively, lovable character, was charming and was equally as funny as Davi Wilts' character.
Other commendable performances in the Merry Wives were by Marcia Grund, who played Mistress Page, and by David Lantz, cast as Falstaff.
All of the scenes in Act I tended to be light, humorous and gay.
In the second act, the performers seem to have a harder time getting into the scene; it is more difficult to create a dramatized effect in the text and because of this difficulty, the actors
failed to create the dramatic magic moments.
There were exceptions, of course.
Catherine Corum as both Lady Anne and
review
Volumnia was able to create the feeling of a powerful woman and then immediately reverse her nature to one of vulnerability. Her name is Richard III" was nicely performed.
There were a few other good moments during the second act, but generally the scenes were performed with what seem to be no sense of realism or subtlety, which Shakespeare requires.
Natase, Connors Advance in Wimbledon
**WEST**
Los Angeles 48 26 649
Houston 43 26 649
San Francisco 43 33 66
Cincinnati 38 35 521
Atlanta 31 45 519
San Diego 23 13 112
W. L. Pct G.B.
45 30 19
Chicago 45 30 19
St. Louis 35 34 49 73
Austin 35 34 49 72
Philadelphia 35 34 49 72
New York 35 34 49 72
Pittsburgh 35 34 49 10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Results
Detroit 6, Milwaukee 4,
Detroit 6, Milwaukee 3, 2d
Detroit 6, Milwaukee 3, 2d
Cleveland el Boston, postponed
Oakland City 5, Oakland City 2
Oakland City 5, Oakland City 2
Chicago 6, Montreal 1, 1st
Montreal 3, Chicago 19, innings, sustp.
New York 5, Philadelphia 6, 1st
New York 20, Philadelphia 1, 2nd
Louis 15, Pittsburgh 4
W. L. P. Pt. G.B.
New York 41 52 38
Baltimore 35 30 58, 2
Milwaukee 35 30 28
Boston 34 34 50, 41%
Detroit 35 37 48, 41%
Cleveland 35 37 48, 41%
AMERICAN LEAGUE
California 39 32 549
Oakland 40 34 519
Chicago 36 34 519
Kansas City 40 36 526
Minnesota 36 33 522
Toronto 36 33 522
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
83rd Year, No. 158
Telephone:
Newroom: 844-4810
Advertising-Circulation: 844-4358
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)—Jimmy Connors, America's top hope for the singles' title at Wimbledon, advanced to the third-round Wednesday, as did top-sleeled Ilyase Nastase of Romania and young Bjorn Borg of Sweden.
In women's action, top-ranked Margaret Court of Australia and 18-year-old Chris Evert of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., won straight-set matches.
Published Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semesters, the College offers two majors in marketing and examinations per month. Mail subscription费 is $a   $b each, with a maximum of $6484. Accommodations, goods, services and employment fees are offered to all students without regard to color, creed or other personal characteristics. Needed by those of the University of Kansas or the State University of Oklahoma.
Connors beat Britain's David Lloyd 6-4, 6-2 before a crowd of 18,000 at center field.
baseball standings
**news staff:** Monte Rose Dodd, editor; Zaid Habib, associate editor; C. C. Calcutta, day camp manager; Kary Yussing, marketing manager; Brandon Brandsted, photographer; News advisor; Del Brithamman; Aaron Hildebrun, business manager; Chuck Goodell, classifier; John Hildebrun, business manager; Gav Vattas, guest advertising manager; Rachel Sinclair, guest advertising manager; Circulation manager; Business admin; Mel Adams.
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Nastase, the strong favorite in the depleted past, best Ivam Molina of Carnegie 6-2/4. (20)
Softball Standings
The absence of 70 male stars involved in
Summer Inframural Softball Standings
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the boycott by the Association of Tennis Professionals couldn't keep the fans away. More than 28,000, the biggest crowd yet this week, passed through the gates.
The ATP boycott thrust Connors, a 20-year-old left-hander from Belleville, III, into the No. 5 seeding position, by far the highest among the Americans.
Evert, seeded fourth, easily defeated.
Court, seeking her second Grand Slam, defeated fellow-Australian Karen Krantzche 6-2, 6-3. Court had a bye in the first round.
Joliet Good for Rohanah, 6-1, 9-4.
Virginia Wade, Britain's No. 1 Woman
player, and the sixth seed, beat Pat Bostrom
of Seattle 7-5, 9-2.
sports
Prof to Give Paper
Judith Gohn of Romania, 6-0, 6-1.
sports
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Thursday, June 28, 1973
University Daily Kansan
3
Watergate Tests Judgment, Integrity of Conservatives
By GEORGE WILL
The Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON—Recently I was invited to a university to participate in a panel discussion on Watergate. The man impersonated the president, and he would be "liberal" and that the university wanted me to represent the "conservative position". What, I wondered, is the "conservative" position?
This small episode suggests an enormous
zard confronting conservatives today—a
burden that will affect everyone.
*Alison*
Reflective conservatives know that they must act with special severity against miscreants whose political activities represent a perversion of conservatism in the name of—but contrary to—the essential conservative values. Reflective liberals also know their party's role and their special moments in recent history librarians and conservatives have failed to do this, thereby diminishing their credibility.
IN THE 1930'S many liberals flunked the test posed by Communism, at home and abroad. Seduced by the Stalinists' ability to play upon liberal passions for equality and reform, liberals were "understanding" about the "excesses" of communist onion on liberty in the 1930's when they were "understanding" about civil disorder when they should be indignant.
Like Stalinists in the 1930's, the "kids" attacking the universities in the name of communism were black neighborhoods to punish "white racism" a winner of a flaccid approval from many liberals. Bermudan by rhetoric and class distinctions, liberals tolerated the intolerable.
Conservatives have had a similar failure. In the late 1940's and early 1950's many conservatives failed the test of Joe McCarthy. Because they quite properly understand the concept of detest it, conservatives were "understanding" about McCarthy's cynical, frivolous and cruel rampages. Conservatives could have quarantined McCarthy's lumen-conservation; he was the best way to preserve his conservatives tolerated the intolerable. That is one reason anti-Communism, which should be a categorical imperative for every friend
KU Info Center Compiles Guide To Local Area
The staff of the University of Kansas Information Center is compiling a guide to human resources in the Lawrence area, director Katherine Hoggard said Friday.
Called the "People's Yellow Pages," the guide will be published in booklet form and will be distributed free to students this fall at enrollment.
"We want to make people aware of opportunities in Lawrence and kinds of help offered."
"Often students are at a disadvantage being somewhat isolated from the community. We want to make student awareness of resources available to life-time residents."
The booklet will include sources for counseling in mental health, family planning, birth control and adoption procedures. It will also include sections on continuing education and vocational training opportunities.
The booklet will be organized by subject. For example, under educational opportunities in Lawrence, references in continuing education courses; free schools; university courses; arts and crafts; Lawrence High School adult education courses; Lawrence Parks and Recreation courses; or by the KU Museum of Natural History.
Another section of the booklet will deal with foods.
In this section, comparative prices of stores will be presented. Listings of health stores, salvage stores, orchards and canned foods are unusual ingredients will also be available.
Another section in the booklet will provide information about restaurants in town. Hours, delivery services and check cashing information will be listed.
Preparing the "People's Yellow Pages" has been a cooperative project. The Information Center is compiling data and money for printing will come from the Publicity Department of the Communication Committee of the Student Senate has directed the project.
Hoggard said that she expected research for the booklet to be completed by July 2. She urged anyone who knew of information about her work to contact information Center at 843-306 this week.
SCoRMEBE Gets
$2,000 Mobil Grant
A grant of $2000 was given to Tuesday to the Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating, and Educating Black Engineers (SCoRMEE), by the Mobil Oil Company. Accepting the grant was Charles Lockhart, SCotMEE president.
Henry Pack, corporate recruiter for Mobil who presented the check, said this was the third year that Mobil had given SCoTMEBE money.
The purpose of SCoRMBE is to recruit minority students into engineering. Industry provides 90 per cent of the program's funding.
of freedom, instead today is widely considered fairly disreputable.
NOW THE MISDEEDS of the Nixon administration are similarly testing conservative judgment and integrity. In a statement on Friday, "the responsibility." They rescued him from political oblivion; they gave him the benefit of what seem to have been quite warranted doubts; they superintended his nomination; they prevented the administration strike at what conservatives cherish most: the institutions and procedures that guarantee limited government and prevent ordered liberty from being taken to the licious abuse of uncleared power.
If conservatives are going to remain useful as keepers of the public conscience about such things, they must now do several thins.
First, they must eschew the "so's your own firm" argument, the doctrine that "everybody does" the sort of things the law requires in order to justify its especially must reject the morally-obuse comparison between Watergate and Teapot Dome or Credit Mobilier. Conservatives should be well equipped and eager to argue that the laws are more odious than crimes against the structure of liberty and justice—crimes such as perjury, destroying evidence, attempting to suborn individuals with dangerous vulnerable institutions such as the FBI and CIA, saboting the process of democratic
SECOND, CONSERVATIVES must strenuously reject any institution that legitimate national security concerns and that is not under ministerial supervision. Just as McCarthy helped
choice.
comment
make the noble cause of anti-Communism seem contemptible, the Nixon administration is well on its way to making concern about national security seem ludicrous. (It has already done severe damage.) The president is executive privilege.) Conservatives rightly object to liberal complacency about the profusion of Soviet SS-9 missiles. Conservatives should also object to the notion that in some arcane way the contents of Nixon'sberg's psychiatric file are, like SS-9 missiles, important to national security.
Third, conservatives should lead a chorus of ridicule against the "Haldeman equation" in its many mutations. It is pernicious twaddle to equate loyalty to the Nixon administration with loyalty to the federal government, to government in general, to the Republican Party or to the nation. Already the Nixon administration's
misdemeed have reinvigorated the zany and reinforced all its worst misconceptions about the American "police state." Thanks to the Nixon administration conservatives especially have a sickening feeling of deja vu.
During the 1960's, conservatives labored at refuting preposterous doctrines about the emerging police state, the depredations of the FBI and the CIA, the manipulation of the masses by makefacts of great wealth, and the threat of the "Haldeman equation," is being used to give retroactive legitimacy to the leftist paranoia about "Amerika."
ALREADY THE anti-American Americans are shelving their mabotropic fads and hitting the lecture circuit to become politically trendy again. So conservatives must be about the tiresome mess of reminding people that the particular administration (like those of the Johnson administration) do not vindicate the modish disarrayment of the nation. In fact, the Nixon administration has inadvertently offered conservatives the bittersweet pleasure of demonstrating the truth of some conservative dogmas about the pertinent issues. Now the American Washington power in the white house
The final thing conservatives should do about Watergate is insist that most institutional aberrations have intellectual pedigrees, and the dizzy misadventures of
the Nikon administration are not exceptional to that rule. Nikon's White House was able to run amunck because some foolish ideas already had done their work. In fact, the culprits are the two central ideas of recent American liberalism.
These imperatives comprise an ambitions program of public pedagogy for conservatism. But if conservatives do not talk straight now, no one will listen when next they discourse on the subject of limited government in a lawful society.
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4
Thursday, June 28, 1973
University Dallv Kansan
'Ms.Ery' Thrives in Liberated Company
By JACK SMITH
The Los Angeles Times
After stacking the dishes in the rollin Saturday night, I drove out to Rollins Hills on the Palais Verdes Peninsula to a women's club given by the peninsula Women's Coalition.
I had been invited as an honorary member of the coalition, a status which, as far as I know, was quite unofficial and perhaps precarious. Evidently it was a reward for my recent suggestion that we should be on the same Liberation day instead of Labor day.
The party was held in a home at the crest of the peninsula. I reached it after a long twisting climb through wooded hills and rustic estates lightly only by a crescent in the air of scent and horses and eucalyptus. The lights of the city glittered far below.
I THOUGHT WOREN ironic it was that women who a gracious fortune had placed in this bosky elysium could wish to be liberated. But my consciousness had been raised some months ago on a visit to the coalition's center in Palos Verdes Village. I lived there for a sainterhood lives on both sides of the tracks, a lesson I was soon to encounter again.
It was a wine and cheese party in honor of author Anne Wittels and illustrator Ivy Bottini, who had recently completed a new softcover book. The book, "Ms.Ery.", was published by Wellstonecraft, a local firm organized and run by women.
Wittels and Bottini sat at a table in the kitchen autograph copies of the book. The rooms were crowded with women and their men, sipping wine and talking. The conversation had reached that high pitch, just short of a shout, at which it always
seems to stabilize at literary parties.
I bought a copy of "Ms. Ery," which Wittels and Bottin amitably autographed, and backed up against the sink to look at it at the edge of a drifting tide of quests.
IT WAS A BOOK that could be read in
IT WAS, even by me; only a couple of
hundred words, with pictures in shocking pink. In brief, though, it seemed to answer my question again—what was there to liberate these women from?
comment
The first half of the book was subtitled
"When . . . after living in a house cump-garden with your husband, two children, a barnaster, a tortoise, two cats, an ever-greening hedgehog, a care of all of them; as well as being a Girl Scout leader, doing the P.T.A. bit, going back to college half time, and still keeping it all together . . . your 5-year-old asks, how come you don't do any real work?"
"It's Time For Liberation When . . . " I skimmed through the of the wheres—
The pardon will be effected July 4 to coincide with the 10th anniversary of the suspension of the 22nd amendment and Nixon's appointment as President-for-life.
"WHEN," YOU tell Harry you are
voting on the zoning plan, and he uses a
SPEAKING FROM THE WHITE House in San Clemente, Nixon said that he had been arrested and questioned.
When... you apply for a job with your newly earned Ph.D. and are asked, Can you
The move will free all 2200 prisoners, most of whom were found guilty in the late 1970's of violating the sodium penthalide clause of the Sunshine Voting Act.
The director of the Federal Mental Health
Glaucoma Institute, Dick Gray
II, confirmed Nixon's remark.
WASHINGTON, June 28, 1984--President Richard M. Nixon today announced a general pardon for all persons currently in prison for violations of the 41st amendment.
"These people were never of a criminal ilk," Gray said. "They ended up here because they were unable to adjust to the principles of the New Democracy.
"My first reaction was one of great surprise," Liddy said. "But in my heart I know that if he (Nixon) made the final decision, it must be the right thing to do," he said.
Nixon and the Watershed Pardon
"THEY SAW THE Sunshine Voting Act as a negation of their constitutional rights. During their years of confinement here and in the W. Clement Stone Memorial Center in Chicago, we've been able to help them cure their problem.
"When. . you hear people saying hens, birds, ladies, gals, frails, breads, darnes, chicks, tomatoes, girls. . but never women."
"They are now able to understand how once well-serving voting practices had been perverted to the extent that they had acquired societies to the implementation of true liberty.
parootees would not present any problems whatsoever when they re-entered society.
Kansan Staff Writer
LIDDY SAID, "I only hope that when these people are released to join their fellow Americans, they will be guided by His God's wisdom."
"Wouldn't you like some more wine?" she asked me.
"I remember how everyone questioned his (Nixon's) decision to back the IRA-iceland alliance," Liddy said with a chuckle, "and we all know how that turned
At a press conference immediately following the announcement Nixon was asked if the pardon indicated a loosening of federal reins.
By ALAN HURLBUT
Nixon replied, "Let me make this perfectly clear. It will remain the function of this office to prosecute who violate the laws of the land. This pardon would not have been granted if I didn't have complete confidence in Pat's (Grav)'s judgment.
I knew how he felt. It was better to have a wife with a broken leg than one who turned out a widow.
"People who lament the passing of the closed voting booth, the closed jury room, closed caucuses, closed Congressional meetings, and failing to confess sentimentality with patriotism.
Senate majority leader, Gordon Liddy,
NR-N.C., expressed guarded dismay.
"THE IDEA THAT a person should feel compelled to conceal his political activities at any level is aberrant to us. It that kind of level that caused all the trouble back in the 70s.
husband. I'm the man in the book."
The second half was sutitled "It Is Women's Liberation When . . ."
The hostess moved toward us
"No thanks," I said. "I'd better be getting on home. I still have the dinner dishes to
"I would describe their rehabilitation as complete," Gray said.
"I believe the American people will back me per 100 per cent when I say our country is weak."
comment
"Harry, you hear yourself saying, 'No,
'Harry, I'm not going backpacking again'
with you."
"WHEN," YOU ask Harry how he's going to vote, the school tax, he tells you, "to get into the city."
WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY Jr., mouthpiece for the liberal wing of the New Republican Party, said that he fully believed the candidate's victory in a primary indicated a return toward normality.
In her irreverent illustrations Botini's people were eggshaped. She indicated sex by letting it hang out, but with a remarkable economy and purity of line.
On the way home I hope to feel less sorry for Harry. So his wife was a librarian. She would have been much happier.
perience like that."
A young man drifted up to me with a glass of pink wine, as if cast off from the mainstream of the crowd. He looked friendly and interested at the moment, like an extra gear.
FIREWORKS
5% Discount
with K.U. I.D.
July 2, 3, 4
DON'S STEAK HOUSE
2176 E. 23rd Street
(Editor's note: The President was obviously referring to the 14-month Senate hearing known as the "Watergate Follies," which ended in June 1974. At that time the country barely escaped the disgrace of a presidential impeachment.
We were saved only by a dramatic, last-minute confession by a high official of the now-defunct Democratic Party, saying that he had forged the Presidential seal and signature to fraudulent orders authorizing the Watergate break-in. )
Planning Commission Approves Rock Quarry, Rezoning of Iowa
Approval of a controversial rock quarry near Big Springs was given last night following extended debate at the monthly meeting of the Board of Trustees-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Ralph King, attorney for the petitioning landowners, said they felt that no real need was ever shown for the removal of rock from the particular area selected.
The commission, after hearing reassurances that partial maintenance of the road would be supplied by the rock company and that other areas located near quarries had not experienced extreme problems, approved the request 5-3.
"It's a sad day in our society when a more handful of people can deprive the rest of us of something."
"I'm Harry," he explained. "The author's
920 West 23rd
Representing JH & J Rock Company was Jack Hurdblurn, owner of the company, who expressed concern over the possible effect of the proposed landowners on the outcome of his request.
Emphasizing that the quality of life existing in the proposed area could be jeopardized by increased traffic, noise and being called for the rejection of the request.
11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sun. - Thurs.
The commission approved a request to rezone approximately 52 acres along South Iowa from a residential district to an area opened to limited commercial construction. A representative of the Civic Responsibility Committee, objected to the rezoning and requested approval of the request, and because of existing ordinances regulating building in such areas, a "hodepodge of unrelated buildings could develop."
Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sat.
The commission approved the request 6-2. In other requests before the planning committee permission was granted for the construct a club on the north side of West 32rd Street.
MR.SEAK
THAT'S RIGHT—AT MR. STEAK FROM 11:00 A.M. TO 4
P.M.! JUST TWENTY PUNCHES (MINIMUM $1.00 PER
LUNCH) EARNS ONE FREE LUNCH UP TO AND
INCLUDING MR. STEAK'S FAMOUS LUNCHEON STEAK
AND BEVERAGE.
Mr. Steak
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
MRSHEAK
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TRY MR. STEAK'S NEW
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The AMS
Come and Enjoy FRIDAY AFTERNOON 3:00-4:00 p.m. 60¢ pitchers at the STABLES "Originator of Bargain Prices"
The AMS Stereo System
without
THE FULL STEREO SYSTEM PRICE
JVC VR 5505 (40 W. IHF) List Price Value Price 192.38 192.38
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Total 359.95 291.95
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189.95 189.95
90.00 pr. 50.00
80.00 52.00
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System Warranty of 3 years parts and labor Save $68
1407 W. 7th — Open 2: 00-12: 00 p.m. Mon., Sat., V13:9144
RMS electronics
10-6 M-S 724 Mass.
till 8 Thurs. 841-2672
"Walking Tall"
ROGER MOORE
P as
JAMES BOND
"Walking Tall"
Weekdays at 2:15, 7:20 & 9:45
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:10, 7:20, 9:45
Twilight Price at 4:40 Only
Hillcrest
Reader's Digest Presents
"Tom Sawyer"
Weekdays at 1:30, 7:20 & 9:30
Sat Sun 3:10, 4:10, 7:20, 9:30
Twilight Price at 4:30 Only
Hillcrest
ROGER MOORE
AS JAMES BOND
Weekdays at 2:15, 7:20 & 9:45
Sat Sun 3:15, 4:10, 7:20, 9:45
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Granada
THEATRE—Impact VI-3-STAGE
LIVE AND LET DIE"
Weekdays at 2:15, 7:20, 9:40
Sat Sun 3:10, 4:10, 7:20, 9:40
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Varsity
MIDLAND — Joseph N. F. Mason
Peter O'Toole
THE RULING CLASS
Weekdays at 2:15, 7:10, 9:40
Sat Sun 1:00, 4:10, 7:10, 9:40
Twilight Price at 4:15 Only
Hillcrest
John Wayne
PG and George C. Scan in Sunset
Box Opens 8:00 Show Starts 1:30
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Peter O'Toole
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North of Old TPC, next to Highway 172
Peter O'Toole PG
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and get a taste
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M
FREE COPY OF DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
WITH PURCHASE OF SHAKE!
McDonald's red, white and blue shakes are just about as patriotic as the Declaration of Independence! And right now, we are giving a copy of this historical document to every customer who buys a patriotic shake now through September 2016. It's a nice way to celebrate and blue's for blueberry, our new fun flavor! Get a taste of history and a great shake at McDonald's today!
McDonald's
SALE
The Country House, as always, is doing something special! We're having a fantastic PROGRESSIVE REDUCTIONS SALE this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The beginning reductions are clearly ridiculous and we'll progressively reduce these prices by 20% each week until we reach this unique sale. All items must be sold by Saturday eve. Selections are good to begin with and the opening prices are great so stop in right away and select your new outfit, or gamble with us . . . but someone may beat you to it. It's exciting and lots of fun.
Here's where the reductions begin:
Blouses to $ 24^{00} $ $ 8^{00} $
Shorts to 900
Long dresses
to 60°0° 25°0°
to 42°0° 20°0°
Dresses
5°00
16°00
10°00
to $ 42^{00} $ $ 16^{00} $
to $ 26^{00} $ $ 10^{00} $
Slacks to 23°0 11°00
Tops to 8 $ ^{0 0} $
Country House
Country House
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Massachusetts St. Downtown
entire stock not included
at the back of the Town Shop
839 Massachusetts St. Downtown
entire stock not included
Thursday, June 28, 1973
5
LAWRENCE CITY FIRE DEPT.
THE BROADWAY MUSEUM
Budweiser
Budweiser
Kansan Photos by Pris Brandsted and Carlos Lisson
POLICE
With This Coupon Buy 2 Tacos Get 1
1
TACO GRANDE
Good Every Day Except Wednesday
TACO FREE!
Offer Expires July 31
9th and Indiana 1720 W.23rd
1973-Year of the Taco
University Daliv Kansan
Acme Tunes, a creative jazz trio, will perform at The Fiery Furnace in the basement of Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana St., after 9 p.m. Friday. They will perform original instrumental music. Admission will be free.
Jazz Trio to Play Friday
acoustic and electric piano and John Rockefeller, percussion. They plan to perform at various times throughout the summer.
Group member Bob Mendenade plays acoustic and electric bass, Alan Klebnaw
The group has played for schools and at concerts in the Lawrence area to share live jazz with those who have not previously had the opportunity to experience it.
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One Day
25 words or fewer; $1.50
each additional word; $ 8
Three Days
25 words or fewer: 6
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. 2 days before publication
Associates, good, service and employ-
ment in the development of the
JRNG RMG ATM. Requires a masters
degree in computer science or related.
Excellent written and oral skills in
JRNG RMG ATM. Required for job
application.
FOR SALE
NORTH DISTICE SHOW-3a bliks. No. of the
furniture, tables, chairs, kitchen
furniture, cellars, gas heating,
building show, bottles including 10 speedes, old pot belly
baskets, 2 tubs, 2 basket bowls & wooden crates.
Fireplace wood pieces tainted almonds, bread and wheat
treasure ware tainted almonds, bread and wheat
desserts. Open 9 to 5, day 7, 842-3159. Herb Albersen
Western Civilization Notes—Now On Sale!
There are two ways of looking at it.
1. If you use them, you're at an advantage.
Either way it comes to the same thing—"New Analysis of Western Civilization."
We have arrived to meet the same thing—
*New Analysis at Campus Madison, Town Crier*
*Available now at Campus Madison, Town Crier*
PIZZA HIEROS MUSCARDIAT
PIZZA HIEROS MUSCARDIAT All the pizza you
Monday... 11:30-1:30 1066 W 23rd only T-768
11:30-1:30 1066 W 23rd only T-768
Saint Borned Pupus - ACR Registered, Chem-
ist, Borned Pupus - ACR Registered, Cham-
piers, Borned Pupus - ACR Registered, New
Young pups and older dogs available.
Mother pups only.
Motorcycle—1965 Bridgewater 30 cc, won't start
Bicycle—1965 Bridgewater 30 cc, Call Wary. 6:28
029 or letter request. 6:28
For sales: 37 Qquev, $100. Runns good, bad body.
For meals: 42 Qquev, $85. Runns good, after 5 weeks or and 6847 during 5 days.
Guitar, F-20 Conn, like new must ask best offer takes Kill 811-2848, for chuck. To 763-2850.
1945 CADILAC, 2, Dr. for sale, call B41 842-5522
after noon, and on午, will talk wikie.
Also for sale in New York.
10 x 55 Mobile Home with 10 x 10 extension, 3 bedrooms, dishwasher, good appliances. Partially furnished. Carpeted, A/C; Shipped. Fenced lot. Desk, aed, garden, asking $1368. 82-7099.
Ford 1962 Galaxie 500XL, mtu, P.Engine and
Sportback. Certified for 8-Passenger
48-210 riders 6 P.M. or come to
the dealership.
For sale. Guitar, Yamaha PG-75 and case.
Also 10-speedpeed Petrol $99 Call Chuck: 855-232-2644
For Sale (Near Money Bank) 1990 JEJC CS,
P.O. Box 2450, Nashville, TN 37201
her canvas-Canvas Carpet - Carpet 1190, Call
843-622-5288
NOTICE
"PITZA FOR LUNCH BUNCH!" Small Pizza at 845 & 15 at 848 lowe-7
only. Mon, Fri, Sat, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun
STRANGER IN TOWNS! As an Agent represent-
ers of the Muster Bonds and make good money lo-
cal in the inner boroughs and make good money lo-
cal in the outer boroughs.
RAY AUDIO-have you heard the H-750
stove? You might well wish you could listen to
stevens in a brave way. You can do that.
You can at RAY AUDIO, where how
are our things 750 H Island Beach. Nt. 182-
2047?
115 Michigan St. Bar-B-Q, We Bar-B-Q in
Lakewood. A 38' side cabin on base, $420.
A slab in front, here $420. Large rib pile
in back. Balcony with pool, $690. Sound of best $120 Beef
sandwich on Ham Sandwich, $790. Sound of best $120
You may not be able to believe all you read.
You should refrain from diagnosing in CANDLES at WAXMAN
CANDLES at WAXMAN.
DANCE WITH SANCTUARY, Friday, June 29.
CERATEARLY GIBBER Meeting
MEDIA Meeting: Room 614,
RAP. 863-358 for referrals; SOCIALIZING. 842-
843; MEDIA Meeting: Box 424 Lawrence.
GY LIBERATION
For the lowest prizes on all pets and pet needs
441-652-8110 or 441-652-8121 Monday through Friday.
Popsugar.com
Good home for 10 month old black male Cocker-PoC Gochio storage, House trained and 2 years old.
SEEKING A RATIONAL ALTERNATIVE to colonization, he asserted the philosophy of Azalea Hand, at 830 or 831 or 842. He called for a new civilization, a "new world."
FOR RENT
**FREE RENTAL SERVICE**
**GARAGE PARKING GARAGE PARKING** in rental for the latest up to $10,000 Lawrence Rental Exchange, 2500 N. Lawrence Ave., Suite 340.
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? FRIED OF STEEP
TOO FAR FROM CAMPUS? FRIED OF STEEP
LOTS? Try 2 a bedroom suite, diving pool,
from stadium. Easy walking distance of major
campus buildings, parking lot free. Free: Cab
room, private bathroom, furniture, rate
furniture available. ideal roommates
to rent. Suites Apts, 1125 Ind, Apt. 9 or
call 853-2116
Apartment, furnished, clean, quiet, six
bedroom, three bathrooms, laundry,
and near downtown. No pets. 832-756-701
Rooms for men, furnished, with or without cook-in-
spired kitchen RU and near downtown.
nets 845-787-3521
Summer-Pall-Riding in a Friendly Group, Unique
Parking, Private Rooms for $53. Call 844-9541 for Cars
or Trucks.
Apt for rent for summer. Excellent location near campus. Fully furnished. 1/2 mo. /jmo. Will negotiate. Call 845-388-6886.
THE HID in the WALL
DELICATESEN & SANDWICH SHOP
Open 8am to 2pm — Phone Order
843-7685—We Deliver—9th & III
Lawrence Rental Exchange
842-2500
The number to call for up-to-the-minute listings of rental housing available in Lawrence, Kansas
Five Days
15 words or fewer: $2.50
each additional word: $3.00
EAST HILL Manor has had 1 and 2 bedroom manors. We available, now at reduced summer rates. The manors are fully furnished with spacious apts it is fully carpeted with central air, dishwasher, dining room, dressing room, Parking and laundry facilities. There are 3 blocks southwest of campus with bus pass. See us at 1741 W. Irwin, Apt. 58 or call 843-8200.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
KAW VALLEY SCHOOL OF CRAFTS AND PERFORMING ARTS
17 West 14th, Lawrence, Kansas
summer session
HOUSE and ENROLL
NOW UNTIL JUNE 3
Classes meet once per week and tuition ranges from $8.00 to $15.00 plus the cost of materials. 7-
A unique educational experience offering loosely structured classes in music, language and environmental open to the entire community for creative involvement. Music classes include piano, recorder, bathing, drawing, painting, macrane, creative writing, children's theatre, and drama. For those of us unable to attend classes of available skills, you are invited to attend the class.
Cream Creme Chocolate. We've got original creation,
a creamy sweet chocolate cream, with a vanilla
verditely designed. Come see us! See Cream Creme.
Click here to visit our store.
Bike Tour-3 week Canadian Rockies and more.
Bike Tour-10 week August, Canada. In August, Contact Joris Björk 841-4190 for details.
HEL3-We are cut off by construction on Mass. but we are not open on the fixed in part of the campus. We can visit K.A.T. Suzuki, 634 Mass. 844-999-9, P.S. Dantz K.A.T. Suzuki, 634 Mass. 844-999-9, P.S. Dantz June 26-31.
TYPING
Typing-ya my home IBM SelectPica-Plea type
experienced experienced ac24
*Call Keily 841-252-8244*
Experienced thesis typist. Close to campus. 841-
890. Myra. Minor editing and/or proofing.
Experienced in typing these, dissertations, term papers, other mite, type mis. Have electric typewriter with pica tape. Accurate and prompt keyboarding with spelled appenced correcting. P26-8354-9554. Mrs. Wright
Will type thesis, dissertations, etc. with speed and
magnificence. Corneae电机. Coryele电机. Cell Population
845-7010.
WANTED
For accurate typing of these dissertations and for accurate reading of the 5-4-612-641. Wait, is it "dissertations" or "dissertation"? It's "dissertations".
Let's re-read line 4: "distance from..."
It looks like "distance from..."
Need German instructor for junior high student.
Please call 841-4611 after 5 P.M.
6-28
I need a roommate for 73-74 year old. If you can go 75-80 call Mike, 842-8631 for 6 P.M.-7 P.M.
Flute-Back Player wants musicians interested in backing stock group. For more information call 294-3231.
WANTED: Mature Responsible woman to babysit with infant, and 3 year old for KU football. Must be a certified child care provider.
HELP WANTED
if the Customer Protection Asst. at KU, Pull
requests to the Admin. Department 8-10-7,
Admin. abilities/experience report Back-
ground information. Admin. ability to
munity offers desirable Submit reason by July
4, 2016. Questions call 844-2506, Keith
Kamora, 6004. Questions call 844-2506, Keith
Kamora, 6004. Questions call 844-2506, Keith
Kamora, 6004. Questions call 844-2506, Keith
Kamora, 6004. Questions call 844-2506, Keith
McDonald's needs part time help for all shifts.
Starting pay $1.60 per hour, hours flexible. We are interested in people who will work through the holidays.
McDonald's of Lawrence. 601 W. 23rd St. S-75
MISCELLANEOUS
PIZZA HOT DELIVERS
A hot pizza right to
dine and Saturday
1:25 p.m.-3:00 p.m. #439-7044.
T:28
Pilot or student pilot-flying club membership
Dues 60 monthly. Phone 843-1234. 6-28
Dues 65 monthly. Phone 843-1234. 6-28
ENTERTAINMENT
Opening: THE PREMONITION—Light show and 20-minute Evening night shows at 7 P.M. and 9 P.M. Every Sunday night shows at 7 P.M. and 9 P.M. good concessions. Admission: Advance tickets at CAMILLE, THE PREMONITION or SHOOTER CAMILLE, THE PREMONITION
ROBERT ROSS CARPENTRY
Remodeling
842-1609 after 5:30 p.m.
甲
THE Sirloin
LAWRENCE KANSAS
famous local food
Delicious Food and
Superb Service with
Complete Menu.
Steak Sandwiches,
Shrimp to K.C. Steaks
Our menu is and has always been
there is no substitute for quality
good food!
11. Milk North of the
Kaw River Bridge
Open 10
Stirling
96
6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 28, 1973
White House Breaks Silence to Put Blame on Dean
From Page One
Nixon Sept. 15, when indictments of the Watergate seven were handed down.
GURNEY ALSO pressed Dean about the $4,850 campaign funds Dean used to finance his wedding and honeyman last October and brought out there was only $1,625.12 in Dean's account when he replaced the money with a check.
Dean said he didn't consider using the funds embezzled since "1" was quite prepared to make the money while at all times and in bank previous had honored overcharges.
Asked why he didn't use credit cards, Dean replied: "As my wife well knows, I try to use my credit cards as infrequently as possible because I don't like to live on credit."
HE SAID NIXON'S chief of staff H. R. Bob Haldeman and domestic adviser John D. Ehrlichman were at the Sept. 15 meeting with the President.
Dean testified that Nixon said at the time that he was pleased no one higher than campaign finance lawyer G. Gordon Liddy had received the President had expressed appreciation.
"Did you tell him anything about what Haldenkman knew, what Ehrlichman knew?"
"GIVEN THE fact that he told me I had done a good job I assumed he was very pleased with what had been going on," Dean said.
Jeb Stuart. Magngrader was deputy to campaign director Mitchell at the time of
Q. Did you discuss what Magruder knew about Watergate and what involvement he
A. No, I did not. I did not give him a report at that point in time.
Q. DID YOU discuss the cover-up money that was being raised and paid?
A. No, sir.
Dean testified he suggested to Haldeman and Ehrlichman that Mitchell had suggested "we should explore the possibility of the CIA providing some assistance" in buying the silence of the seven Watergate conspirators.
When the agency's officials dashed that
Questioned by Gurney, Dean said he knew there had been no CIA involvement in the burglary but "it was sort of a hope that this would be a solution."
James Ralston, conductor of the concert choir, said that the first concert of the five-week series would consist of a variety of styles. The unique thing about the camp, he said, was that high schools had to be located in the country and within one week were ready to do a concert.
The first of the Music Camp concerts will be held at the Auditorium in the University Theater at Performing Arts Hall.
The afternoon concert will begin with a concert march and overture by the Red Band conducted by Robert Foster, KU band director, Throughout the rest of the tour the band directed by the conductor George Bober, assistant professor of music.
Camp Concerts to Begin Sunday
Boberg will conduct the Red Band in several works, including "American Folk Songs" arranged by Elegi Sieglemann and "Suit," Suite1, a suite for band, by Edward Griefer.
The Concert Choir, directed by Ralston,
will present seven selections. Two are
"Hava Nagelia," an Israeli folk song,
"Oldman, oldman, and 'Sing
Uto God' by Handel."
Among the Symphony Orchestra's presentations will be "An Irish Tune From County Derry" by Percy Grainger and an overture by Gioacchino Rossini. Gerald McNaughton, the conductor and George Lawrence, professor of orchestra, will be guest conductor.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Top White House officials plotted a nationwide campaign of harassment to discredit and destroy President Nixon's political foes, it was reported Wednesday at the Senate Watergate hearings.
Dean Produces Memos Listing Citizens Singled Out as Foes
A series of memoranda turned over to the committee by fired White House counsel Thomas McConnell, a former member of the press, business and union leaders as enemies. The memoranda also discussed "how we can use the available federal machinery to screw our political systems."
Among the tactics mentioned was the use of harassing tax audits by the Internal Revenue Service. That allegation prompted Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Aark., to order a criminal investigation into the possibility that IRS had been used for political nurseries.
One list included 10 United senators; birch Bayh, D-Ind.; J. W.
From Page One
Nixon Vetoes Cutoff
★ ★ ★
was attached to this second piece of legislation by the House Tuesday and is expected to win Senate approval later in the week.
PHNOM PENH (AP)—Insurgent forces overran a district town 30 miles north of Phnom Penh Wednesday. The commander of Cambodia's government forces vowed to keep fighting the rebels even if American air support was cut off.
"We shall fight with knives and axes if necessary," declared LT. Gen. Susen Fernandez. "For us it is a question of life. We cannot live under communism."
From Saigon came a promise of aid to
keep the army under government of
Pakistan 1 on No.1 front column.
South Vietnamese spokesman Bui Sao
said no formal request for aid to Cambodia
with the exception of humanitarian aid.
"If the U.S. air support in Cambodia was stopped and if this created a serious situation that could harm the security of Vietnam, we certainly would respond to the attack," Cambodia was going to collapse, then the security of Vietnam would be affected."
Fulbright, D-Ak; Harold Hughes, D-Iowa; Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass; George McGovern, D-S-D; Walter Mondale, D-Minn; Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine; Gaylord Nelson and William Proxmire, D-Wis.; and Fred Harris, then D-Okla.
The political list also included Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, New York Mayor John Lindsay, former Sen. Eugene McCormick, former members of the House of Representatives.
Other prominent people listed were Leonard Bernstein, former director of the New York Philarmonic; New York Jets head coach Mike McCarthy with the New York Giants; former Defense Secretary and anti-Vietnam War spokesman Clark M. Clifford; another defense Secretary, Robert McNamara, and former NBC newsman Chet
Columnist Jack Anderson headed a list of 44 members of the news media who were on a list all their team. Dean testified earlier in the week that Nixon had ordered ades to keep a list of newsmen giving the aid and trouble for action after the 1972 election.
Twelve black members of the House of Representatives were on one list. The names included Stirley Chisholm, D.N.Y., and Ronald Dellums, D-Calif.
Names on another list were Ed Guthman, national editor of the Los Angeles Times; Maxwell Dane of the advertising firm of Doyle, Bernach; Howard Stein of the Dreyfus Corp.; Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers; Sidney Hawk, aide to Lindsay R. Mott of Moffet and Schorr, CBS correspondent; actor Paul Newman and Washington Star-News columnist Mary McGrory.
Show business personalities on a list of their own included Carol Channing, Bill Cosby, Jane Fonda, Steve McQueen, Michael Jackson, Barbra Streisand and Dick Gregory.
He recalled that he said of President Nikon in a 1960 book: "He is the only major American politician in our history who came to prominence by techniques which, if generally adopted, would destroy the whole fabric of mutual confidence on which democracy rests." Wednesday he added, "I didn't know how right I was."
Author Arthur Schlesinger Jr., a former associate to President F. Kennedy, said he
★ ★
The Sunday evening concert will consist of selections by the Concert Orchestra, the Chamber Orchestra and the Ensemble.
hope, Dean said, he went back to Halderman and Ehrlichman and they agreed he should try to get Herbert W. Kalmbach, Nikon's chief campaign fundraiser, to help.
Lawyer and Cleo Rucker of Wichita will be the guest conductors of the Concert Orchestra. Carney is the teaching conductor of the orchestra.
CHRISTOPHER STREET DANCE
with SANCTUARY
Fri.
June 29
KU Union
8:30 to 12:30
$1.50
BYO 3.2 Beer
Sponsored by Gay Liberation
The Blue Band is conducted by Foster with guest conductor David Bushouse, assistant professor of wind and percussion, will play contemporary music with the "Psalm for Bain" by Vincent Persichetti, selections from "Mary Poppins" and the last movement of a Russian symphony, Kalinnikov No. 1.
Selection from the Concert B and, conducted by Russell Wiley, professor of music, and guest conductor, Foster, will include Richard Wagner's Overture to "Die Meistersinger" and Claude Smith's "Citation."
All five of the Music Concerts will be held at the University and are open to students in grades 6 through 12.
ALL CAMPUS DANCE
Pay Parity Issue In District Court; Struggle Continues
Frederick C. Lakue, former White House aide and Nixon campaign official, pleaded guilty Wednesday to conspiring to obstruct justice. He was the first person charged with trying to cover up the Watergate scandal.
The action was filed on Monday in Douglas County District Court, and asked for a ruling on the legality of a referendum requested by the firemen.
The city claims the subject of pay parity between employees of different departments is an administrative topic and not subject to legislative referendum.
On behalf of Fire Fighters Local Union 1596, John W. McArdle, secretary-treasurer of the organization, filed an answer in a judgment action requested by the city in the continuing battle concerning the pay parity referendum.
McArdle, filing for the local, was surprised to read Monday that, "he is the only individual named as a defendant in the case," and said he was going to be "looking into that."
The union contends that pay parity is a legislative matter since a good part of the fire fighters' salaries come from the $/cent tax sales and the public votes on the tax.
Several former White House aides and officials of President Nixon's re-election committee are expected to be indicted this summer as a result of the cover-up.
The petition was submitted to the city commission on June 12 and asks for a vote on equal pay for firemen and policemen. No such declaration the declaratory judgment has yet been set.
In a surprise appearance in U.S. District Court, LaRue accepted an offer from special prosecutor Archibald Cox to cooperate with the government in return for being allowed to plead guilty to a single charge.
LaRUE, 44, TOLD the court that he knew in advance and opposed a plan to wiretap Democratic national headquarters, helped to buy the silence of the seven original Watergate conspirators who were tried in October to part in the general Watergate cover-up.
"I joined in that cover-up, at least by acquiescence," LaTure told Judge J. John.
The judge postponed sentencing until after expected Watergate trials. The conspiracy charge carries a maximum penalty five years' imprisonment and a 100,000 fine.
COXSAID IN a letter to LaLute's attorney that the wealthy Mississippi oilman and close associate of former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell would be required to testify as a witness to the government in all cases on which he may have relevant information.
2nd kansas Shakespeare Festival & Institute
1973 Present
'SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN'
A Collage of Scenes by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
The single government count alleged that LaRue conspired with unnamed individuals to impede the investigation of the June 17, 1972, Watergate break-in at Democratic headquarters by giving false testimony and paying the original defendants to keep quiet.
June 28,29,30
July 2,3,5,6,7
Murphy Hall Curtain 8:00 p.m.
Experimental Theatre
On July 19, LaRue allegedly delivered a sum of cash to Kalmibau at an office in the Old Executive Office Building. The amount was not designated. A second delivery to
Refreshments and Entertainment in New Murphy Courtyard at 7:30 p.m. *Ticket Prices* 52.00-$100.00 *Reservations:* Telephone: 846-2993
Kalmbach of an undesigned sum of cash allegedly was made on July 16.
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LaRue was in charge of the South during Nikon's 1968 campaign which Mitchell ran nationwide. Later, he joined the White House and unpaid consultant with unspecified duties.
In January 1972, he became an unpaid senior advisor to the campaign committee of his late wife.
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The government information gave no further details of the cash transactions.
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Bunny Blacks Royal
College/ Shop
837 Mass. 843-4255
GO TO CHURCH UN-SUNDAY
GO TO CHURCH
on monday
8:30 p.m.
of course sunday at 11 is operative also
EXTRA DELICIOUS! 1/4 lb. Deluxe Sandee
1/4 pound chopped beefsteak
Sandwich lovers start here
Sesame bun
Melted cheese
Shredded lettuce
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Secret sauce
Not just meat, but chopped beef flock!
Apply one to your appetite.
Sandy's
Across from Hillcrest